Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
I think the mind is articulable and the heart probably knowable.
Thus, an officer must have one of these articulable facts in order stop someone and question their citizenship.
"You have to have some articulable reason or basis to do that."
To justify the stop, a law enforcement officer must be able to point to "specific and articulable facts"
No articulable cause justified the detention in this case.
It requires a determination based on articulable facts, not just a belief of suspicion.
Have you ever heard anyone articulate the adjective articulable?
Reasonable grounds to believe, like articulable cause, is based on objective criteria which form the foundation for the belief.
A police officer can stop a vehicle if he has a reasonable articulable reason to suspect that "criminal activity is occurring."
Police officers must be cautious of their use of common law powers, particularly in relation to articulable cause.
Court of Appeal decision on articulable cause.
In arriving at the position that the police did have such a power if they had articulable cause, the Court referred to the following principles:
He maintained that the agency needs "reasonable articulable suspicion" before it gets a warrant to look more closely at data.
The government may not detain an individual even momentarily without reasonable and articulable suspicion, with a few exceptions.
The agency won't search the archive "unless we have some reasonable articulable suspicion about a terrorist organization," he said.
Patefield asked if the officer had any "reasonable, articulable suspicion" to justify him giving his details.
The White House said its proof was based on "specific and articulable facts," which it did not describe publicly.
Ever since, “reasonable articulable suspicion” has popped up in court decisions, usually justifying a police pat-down of a suspect’s clothing.
But these are only the articulable justifications.
The court said that before asking a driver's permission to search, an officer must have "reasonable and articulable suspicion" of criminal activity.
If the Coast Guard has "an articulable suspicion" of a violation it may search the ship.
Until now, the government could query the database for any reason, but had settled on a so-called standard of "reasonable articulable suspicion."
The decisive turning point for proprioceptive protection is clearly evidenced in the evolution of an articulable skeleton.
But to examine a specific phone number it must have "reasonable, articulable suspicion" that the number is connected to terrorism.
The problem is with articulable.