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Exigencies, Not Exceptions: How To Return Warrant Exceptions To Their Roots, Michael Gentithes
Exigencies, Not Exceptions: How To Return Warrant Exceptions To Their Roots, Michael Gentithes
Con Law Center Articles and Publications
When a police officer interacts with an individual, the encounter is subject to myriad exceptions to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement that lack a coherent justifying theory. For instance, officers can warrantlessly search if an automobile was involved in the interaction, an arrest occurred, or a protective sweep was necessary to prevent a third-party ambush. Officers and individuals struggle to understand the breadth and complexity of these exceptions. The resulting confusion breeds widespread distrust and raises the tension in millions of interactions across the country.
There is an easier way. The Supreme Court has recently reaffirmed its support for a …
Suspicionless Witness Stops: The New Racial Profiling, Michael Gentithes
Suspicionless Witness Stops: The New Racial Profiling, Michael Gentithes
Con Law Center Articles and Publications
Young men of color in high-crime neighborhoods are surrounded by poverty and crime, yet distrustful of the police who frequently stop, frisk, and arrest them and their friends. Every encounter with the police carries the potential for a new arrest or worse, fostering a culture of fear and distrust of law enforcement. That culture exacerbates the problems facing the officers patrolling these neighborhoods as more crimes go unsolved because witnesses are unwilling to come forward.
In the past several decades, officers have responded by using a stop-and-frisk technique of dubious constitutionality to control crime. Despite its disastrous implications for the …
App Permissions And The Third-Party Doctrine, Michael Gentithes
App Permissions And The Third-Party Doctrine, Michael Gentithes
Con Law Center Articles and Publications
Apple’s trademarked catchphrase “there’s an app for that”1 suggests that every app on a modern digital device is perfectly tailored to provide a specific, necessary convenience. Whether the user wants to check the weather, get updates on her favorite baseball team, find a coupon for her next purchase, or track her fitness and activity levels, she can use an app to fill gaps in her life that she may not have known existed. What the user might also not know, however, is that “permissions” either she or the phone’s operating system have granted to the app allow it to access …