Being Stopped by Police in Utah

Police searched me or my car — here's what Utah law says and what to do next.

Utah Law

Statute: Utah Const. Art. I, section 14 (unreasonable searches and seizures); Utah Code section 63G-7-401 (tort claims — 1 year)

Deadline: 365 days

Penalty: Utah requires tort claim notice within 1 year under the Governmental Immunity Act. Constitutional protections parallel the Fourth Amendment

What is being stopped by police?

The 4th Amendment protects you from unreasonable searches and seizures. In most cases, police need a warrant signed by a judge before they can search your home, car, phone, or belongings.

There are exceptions — police can search without a warrant if you give consent, if evidence is in plain view, or in certain emergency situations. But the default rule is: no warrant, no search.

What to Do If Police Want to Search You

Step 1: Say clearly: "I do not consent to any searches." Say it calmly and repeat it if needed. This preserves your rights even if police search anyway.

Step 2: Ask: "Do you have a warrant?" If police say yes, ask to see it. A valid warrant must specify the place to be searched and the items to be seized.

Step 3: Do not physically block or resist a search, even if you believe it's illegal. Your remedy is in court, not on the scene.

Step 4: Document everything afterward. Write down what happened, what was searched, what was taken, and the names/badge numbers of officers involved.

Step 5: If evidence was obtained through an illegal search, your attorney can file a motion to suppress it (the "exclusionary rule" from Mapp v. Ohio, 1961).

How Utah differs from federal law

Utah protects against unreasonable searches under both state and federal constitutions:

  • Utah Constitution, Art. I, § 14 protects against unreasonable searches and seizures
  • Utah courts have in some cases provided broader search protections than federal law
  • DUI checkpoints are allowed in Utah
  • Utah has enacted the Electronic Information or Data Privacy Act (Utah Code § 77-23c) providing strong digital privacy protections
  • Cell phone and electronic device searches generally require a warrant

Additional steps in Utah

Contact a criminal defense attorney. ACLU of Utah: (801) 521-9862 or acluutah.org.

What you should NOT do

Don't consent. Police may ask "mind if I take a look?" or "you don't have anything illegal, right?" These are requests for consent. You can say no.

Don't leave your door open. If police knock on your door, you can speak through the door or step outside and close it behind you. An open door can give police a "plain view" argument.

Don't unlock your phone. Police cannot force you to unlock your phone with a passcode (5th Amendment). Biometric locks (fingerprint, face) have less protection — consider disabling them during an encounter.

Don't destroy evidence. If police are approaching, do not throw away or destroy anything. That creates new charges and implies guilt.

Don't wait — the clock is ticking.

Answer a few questions. We generate a personalized unlawful search citing Utah's exact statute, deadline, and penalties — ready to print and send in minutes.

Lawyers charge $350+. Your letter: $19.

Generate your unlawful search

This page is general legal information for Utah, not legal advice for your specific situation. Laws change, and how a statute applies depends on facts we don't know. For advice on your matter, consult a licensed attorney in Utah.

You came here to know your rights — help someone else know theirs.

Support This Mission