Title: The Fourth Amendment
1The Fourth Amendment
2The Fourth Amendment
What are Your Rights?
3The Fourth Amendment
- The right of the people to be secure in their
persons, houses, papers and effects, against
unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon
probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation,
and particularly describing the place to be
searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
4Analytical Model
Used to determine if a search and/or seizure has
occurred, and if it has occurred, was it
reasonable (legal)
- WHO conducted the search/seizure?
- WHAT has been searched/seized?
- Was there a SEARCH/SEIZURE?
- If so, was it REASONABLE
51) WHO conducted the search and/or seizure?
-
- Under the Fourth Amendment a search or seizure
must involve action by an agency or official of
the government
62) WHAT has been searched and/or seized?
-
- Was it a person, house, paper and/or effect
(other possesion)
73) Was there a SEARCH and/or SEIZURE?
-
- The Supreme Court has defined Search as any
governmental intrusion into something in which a
person has a reasonable expectation of privacy. A
seizure is any taking into possession, custody
or control
84) If there was a search and/or seizure, was it
REASONABLE?
-
- Was there a valid search or seizure warrant?
- Or, did one of the exceptions to the warrant
requirement apply?
9Cases Search and/or Seizure?
- Lucy breaks into her ex boyfriends apartment and
steals some of her old love letters to him. - The police order Joe to have a blood test to
determine how much alcohol he has in his
bloodstream
10Cases Search and/or Seizure?
- Officer Jones stops Tim and asks him what he is
doing, then looks through the suitcase Tim is
carrying. - Tim is arrested and taken to jail.
- The FBI puts a wiretap on Ellens telephone and
listens to her conversations.
11Reasonable vs Unreasonable
- For a search/seizure to be reasonable there must
be a warrant issued by a judge or magistrate - The police must have probable cause to convince a
judge to sign a warrant - There are also some exceptions to the warrant
requirement.
12Probable Cause
- There must be good reason to believe that that a
crime has been, is being, or is about to be
committed, and that the person, place or thing
which is to be searched or seized is involved in
some way.
13Exceptions to the Warrant Requirement
- Search Incident to a Lawful Arrestextends to
everything w/in arrestees immediate control - Stop and Friskcan frisk outer layer of clothing
with articulable suspicion of crime - Emergency SituationsBomb threats, burning
buildings, etc. - Hot PursuitWarrant not required for places
police follow suspect into. - Items connected with crime in Plain ViewIf
police had a right to be there in the first place
14Exceptions to the Warrant Requirement
- ConsentA person may knowingly and voluntarily
let police search w/o a warrant. Fraud and
deception are excepted. Must be that persons or
common property. In some case eg. parent/child,
teacher/student, a person may legally let police
search someone elses property - Abandoned PropertyOnce you abandon something you
give up the expectation of privacy. - Border Airline SearchesCustoms Agents may
search w/o warrant OR probable cause. Airline
personnel may search passengers and carry on
luggage with metal detectors and/or x-rays - Vehicle SearchesPolice may search a vehicle WITH
Probable Cause W/O Warrant
15Cases Search and/or Seizure?Reasonable or
Unreasonable?
- Customs agents spend an entire day going through
Vivians luggage on her return from Istanbul.
They have no Warrant. - After Suzanne checks out of her hotel room the
police come in and find receipts from illegal
gambling in the wastebasket. They have no Warrant.
16Cases Search and/or Seizure?Reasonable or
Unreasonable?
- The police sneak into Gails yard and see 200
stolen Christmas turkeys through her kitchen
window. - The police go to Joes house, his girlfriend (and
roommate) agrees to let them search the house for
marijuana. - Carols neighbors hear screams from her house and
call the police. The police arrive, hear the
screams, enter the house to investigate. They
find stolen goods on the dining room table.
17United States vs Ross, 1982
18United States vs Ross, 1982
- 1) Did Detective Marcums opening of Bandits
car trunk constitute a search? What about the
paper bag? The cellophane envelopes? Explain your
answers. - 2) Assume that that opening the trunk, the brown
bag and cellophane envelopes were searches. Do
you think that they were reasonable under the
circumstances or should the officers have secured
a warrant first? Why or why not? - 3) Was the unzipping of the red leather pouch at
the police station a search? If so, was it
reasonable under the circumstances or should
the officers have obtained a warrant first? Why
or why not?
19United States vs Ross, 1982
- In a 6-3 decision the United States Supreme Court
ruled that the searches and seizures were
reasonable and did not violate Mr. Ross Fourth
Amendment rights. - Cars are easily moved and evidence can easily be
removed, concealed or destroyed - Justices White and Marshall wrote dissenting
opinions.
20Group Work on Cases
- Work in groups of four
- Use the Analytical Model to work through the
cases on the handout - Write down your answers
- Be prepared to present your answers to the class
and discuss
21New Jersey vs T.L.O., 1985
- Read the facts of the case involving high school
students faced with search and seizure - Be prepared to discuss and answer questions about
the case at our next meeting. - Be prepared for a quiz on your Fourth Amendment
Rights in the near future.