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Can drug charges be dropped if the search was illegal?
Quick answer: Yes. Under the Fourth Amendment, police need a lawful reason to stop you and a warrant, valid consent, or a recognized exception to search. If the stop was unjustified, the search exceeded its limits, or your “consent” was coerced or never given, we can move to suppress the drugs. When the evidence is thrown out, the State usually has no case left.
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Former Prosecutors · Law Enforcement · Public Defenders
When you call Tamou Law Group, you reach a firm that handles criminal defense exclusively, with serious experience defending drug charge cases across Arizona. Our team includes former prosecutors and law enforcement officers, so we know exactly how the State builds these cases, and where they fall apart.
At many large firms, the name on the building is a marketing figurehead, you rarely get them on the phone and your case goes to a junior associate. When you hire Tamou Law Group, your case is handled by a full team of attorneys, not associates, including Michael Tamou.
The Search Is Usually the Whole Case
In most drug cases the only real evidence is the drugs themselves. Take the drugs out of the case, and there is nothing left.
Drug prosecutions are different from most crimes: the evidence is physical, and it almost always comes from a stop, a search, or a warrant. That means the case rarely turns on what you did, it turns on what the police did, and whether they followed the Constitution when they found the drugs.
The Fourth Amendment protects you from unreasonable searches and seizures. When police violate it, Arizona courts apply the exclusionary rule: the illegally obtained evidence is suppressed and cannot be used against you. In a drug case, that evidence is the entire prosecution, so a successful motion to suppress usually ends in a dismissal.
Was the Stop Even Legal?
A search can only be as good as the stop that led to it. An unlawful stop taints everything that follows.
Most drug cases start with a traffic stop, and police need reasonable suspicion of a violation to make one. We examine whether there was any real basis for the stop, or whether it was a pretext to go fishing for drugs. Common problems include:
- No actual traffic violation, or one invented after the fact and not supported by the video.
- Prolonging the stop, holding you past the time needed for the ticket to wait for a drug dog or dig for consent.
- A questionable K-9 alert, where the dog’s reliability, handler cues, or timing do not hold up.
- An unlawful detention, where you were held without reasonable suspicion of a crime.
Under Rodriguez v. United States, police cannot extend a routine stop, even briefly, to investigate drugs without independent reasonable suspicion. When they do, the search that follows is unlawful, and the drugs go with it.
Warrant, Consent, or Nothing
Once you are stopped, police still need a legal basis to search. There are only a few, and each one has limits.
A search of your car, home, or person is presumptively illegal unless it fits a recognized category. We test which one the State is relying on and whether it actually applies:
“Consent” That Was Not Really Consent
Police love to claim you “consented.” But consent must be voluntary, not the product of a show of authority, threats, or a claim that they will “get a warrant anyway.” You have the absolute right to refuse, and refusing is not evidence of guilt. We scrutinize the body-cam to see whether real, voluntary consent was ever given.
Warrantless Vehicle and Home Searches
The “automobile exception” allows a warrantless car search only with probable cause, not a hunch. Homes get the highest protection: absent consent or true emergency, police need a warrant. Searches that exceed these limits are suppressible.
Defective Warrants
When there is a warrant, we attack it too: a warrant built on a stale, thin, or misleading affidavit, or one that is overbroad, can be invalidated, throwing out everything it produced.
How a Motion to Suppress Works
Suppression is not automatic, we have to build and win it. Here is how.
A motion to suppress is a formal request asking the judge to exclude illegally obtained evidence. Winning one takes preparation:
- We obtain everything, the police reports, dash-cam and body-cam, the warrant and affidavit, and dispatch and K-9 records.
- We reconstruct the timeline, often to the second, to show when the stop’s purpose ended and the fishing began.
- We brief the law, applying Arizona and U.S. Supreme Court precedent to the exact facts of your stop.
- We litigate the hearing, cross-examining the officers, whose testimony often does not match the video.
If the judge agrees the search was unlawful, the drugs are suppressed. In most drug cases, that means the charges are dismissed. This is the core of our Top 10 drug defenses, and it is why you should never consent to a search and should call a lawyer before saying a word.
The Experts We Bring to Drug Cases
Drug cases are built on searches, lab reports, and informants. We bring the specialists who take each one apart, click any to see how.
Forensic Chemists
Independent Lab Testing
Re-test the substance by GC-MS and audit the State lab’s calibration, quality-control, and analyst notes to challenge the drug’s identity. They also re-weigh the sample, excluding packaging and moisture, because a weight pushed over the statutory threshold is what triggers mandatory prison, and an error there can drop a case to probation.
Fourth Amendment Specialists
Search & Seizure
Reconstruct the stop, the search, and the warrant second by second to expose Fourth Amendment violations: an unjustified stop, one prolonged past its purpose (Rodriguez), an unreliable K-9 alert, coerced “consent,” or a warrant built on a thin or stale affidavit. Any one can suppress the drugs and end the case.
Private Investigators
Informants & Witnesses
Dig into the confidential informant and the controlled buy, the deal the CI received, their pending charges and prior lies, and whether the buy was actually searched, monitored, and recorded. They also locate witnesses and establish who else had access, exposing the bias and gaps that collapse sale and trafficking cases.
Digital Forensics Examiners
Phones & Access
Examine device extractions, metadata, and access logs to answer the question the State glosses over: who actually knew about and controlled the drugs. In shared cars, homes, and phones, that access data, and the absence of your prints or DNA, is what defeats a “constructive possession” theory built on mere presence.
Chain-of-Custody Analysts
Evidence Handling
Trace the evidence from the roadside through the property room to the lab and the courtroom, documenting every transfer and signature. Gaps, mislabeled bags, broken seals, and contamination raise real doubt about whether the substance tested is even what was seized from you, and unreliable evidence gets excluded.
Treatment & Diversion Advocates
Prop 200 / TASC
Build the treatment and mitigation record that moves eligible cases off the prison track: screening for TASC diversion (which ends in dismissal), documenting Prop 200 eligibility, and lining up assessment and counseling. On personal-possession cases this record is often what secures a dismissal or probation instead of a conviction.
Awards & Recognition
Our recognition for Phoenix drug crime defense is independently verified, click any award to confirm it:
- National Trial Lawyers Top 100
- National Trial Lawyers Top 40 Under 40
- Elite Lawyer 2026 – Criminal Defense
- Super Lawyers – Southwest
- National College for DUI Defense (NCDD)
Together, these place Tamou Law Group among the best Phoenix drug crime lawyers, led by Founding Attorney Michael Tamou and a full team of attorneys, including former prosecutors.
Phoenix Drug Crime Defense FAQs
Quick answers to the questions we hear most.
Do I have to let the police search my car in Arizona?
No. You can and should refuse consent to a search. Police may only search with a warrant, probable cause under the automobile exception, or another recognized exception. Refusing is your right and is not evidence of guilt.
What happens if the police searched me illegally?
The evidence they found can be suppressed under the exclusionary rule, meaning it cannot be used against you. In a drug case, where the drugs are the whole case, suppression usually leads to dismissal.
Can police search my phone during a drug stop?
Generally no, not without a warrant. Phones receive strong Fourth Amendment protection. A warrantless phone search, or one on coerced consent, can be challenged and suppressed.
Does a drug dog alert let police search my car?
Only if the dog is reliable and the alert is valid, and only if the stop was not unlawfully prolonged to bring the dog. We challenge the dog’s reliability, handler cues, and the timing of the alert.
Is it too late to challenge the search if I already talked to police?
No. Even if you made statements, the search itself can still be challenged, and your statements may be suppressible too. Call 623-321-4699, 24/7, before doing anything else.
Key Takeaways
- Most Phoenix drug cases begin with a stop, a search, or a warrant, and that is where they are won.
- Police need reasonable suspicion to stop you and a warrant, probable cause, or valid consent to search.
- Illegally obtained drugs can be suppressed under the exclusionary rule, which usually ends the case.
- You never have to consent to a search, and refusing is not evidence of guilt.
- Call a lawyer before you talk to police or agree to anything. 623-321-4699, 24/7.
What Clients Say About Tamou Law
Real Google reviews from clients we have defended across Phoenix and Maricopa County. Every review is from a criminal defense client, never padded with non-legal work.
Two Arizona Offices, One Team
We serve all of Maricopa County and the surrounding area, with free, confidential consultations 24/7 by phone and in-person meetings at either office by appointment.
Case Results Disclaimer: The results described on this page are based on specific facts and circumstances and do not guarantee or predict a similar outcome in any future case. Every case is different. Past results do not guarantee future results. No attorney-client relationship is formed by viewing this page or submitting a contact form until a written fee agreement has been signed. Tamou Law Group, PLLC is licensed to practice law in the State of Arizona. This website is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.






