• NotWearingPants (edited 5 years ago)
    +3

    No. This is much more like "what'sin that safe we found?"

    I don't know, and I don't have the key/combo".

    With a warrant, they drill the safe. It's harder to do with a smartphone,but tough shit. You can't (shouldn't be able to) put people in jail for knowledge they possess, particularly if that knowledge is self-incriminating. It's the 5th amendment in play here.

    • achekulaev (edited 5 years ago)
      +3

      Your situation completely drops the context of drugs being found around the "safe" and a sticker "The Stuff" that was put on top of the "safe". For me it justifies the attempt to forcibly and with a warrant open the "safe".

      • NotWearingPants
        +6

        So get a "safe cracker" to open it, then if there's evidence of human trafficking, video selfies of robberies, or anything else in that "safe", you don't have a 5A problem.