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Evidence

Golden Gate University School of Law

Discovery

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Full-Text Articles in Law

Limits Of The Inevitable Discovery Doctrine In United States V. Young: The Intersection Of Private Security Guards, Hotel Guests, And The Fourth Amendment, Lauren Young Epstein Oct 2010

Limits Of The Inevitable Discovery Doctrine In United States V. Young: The Intersection Of Private Security Guards, Hotel Guests, And The Fourth Amendment, Lauren Young Epstein

Golden Gate University Law Review

This Note analyzes the Young court’s opinion and the potential consequences of the majority’s cursory rejection of the government’s inevitable discovery argument. This Note also reconciles the differing applications of the inevitable discovery doctrine by the Young majority and dissent and highlights the speculative nature of employing the inevitable discovery doctrine based on the facts of Young. Part I of this Note presents the background of the case and the historical development of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence, focusing on the inevitable discovery doctrine as articulated by the Supreme Court in Nix v. Williams. Part II outlines the Young decision and analyzes …


San Francisco V. Superior Court Of San Francisco [Dissent], Jesse W. Carter Dec 1951

San Francisco V. Superior Court Of San Francisco [Dissent], Jesse W. Carter

Jesse Carter Opinions

City and employer was entitled to writ prohibiting order for the inspection of certain documents because the right to inspection could be curtailed where it was outweighed by the public interest in preserving confidential information.