Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Institution
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Search And Seizure Of Private Papers: Fourth And Fifth Amendment Considerations, Steven H. Shiffrin
The Search And Seizure Of Private Papers: Fourth And Fifth Amendment Considerations, Steven H. Shiffrin
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
There is a recognizable factual distinction between the search and seizure of private papers and the search and seizure of non-documentary items. It is difficult, however, to decide when such a distinction should assume constitutional dimensions. Specifically, are there circumstances under which private papers should be immune from search and seizure? In a 1967 landmark case, Warden v. Hayden, the United States Supreme Court raised doubts concerning the continued validity of decades of settled law on this important issue. Warden's reopening of this problem aroused the curiosity of commentators, spurred new policy arguments in the American Law Institute, divided …
Stark V. Connally: Defining The Bank Customer's Right Of Privacy, Michael Kurt Guest
Stark V. Connally: Defining The Bank Customer's Right Of Privacy, Michael Kurt Guest
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Viable Substitute For The Exclusionary Rule: A Civil Rights Appeals Board, John L. Roche
A Viable Substitute For The Exclusionary Rule: A Civil Rights Appeals Board, John L. Roche
Washington and Lee Law Review
No abstract provided.
Fact Style Adjudication And The Fourth Amendment: The Limits Of Lawyering, Roger B. Dworkin
Fact Style Adjudication And The Fourth Amendment: The Limits Of Lawyering, Roger B. Dworkin
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Arson Investigations And The Fourth Amendment
Arson Investigations And The Fourth Amendment
Washington and Lee Law Review
No abstract provided.
Probable Cause: Veracity Of Underlying Facts, Randolph W. Hunter
Probable Cause: Veracity Of Underlying Facts, Randolph W. Hunter
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.
Political Surveillance And The Fourth Amendment, Alan Meisel
Political Surveillance And The Fourth Amendment, Alan Meisel
Articles
The United States District Court case has left the scope of the warrant protection of the fourth amendment considerably clearer and broader. The door left ajar in Katz has been firmly fastened shut by the Court leaving only the traditional exceptions to the warrant requirement, which are based upon practical necessity, and the still unconfronted question of the power of the executive to conduct warrantless surveillances of foreign agents in national security cases." It is also clear that courts are no less competent to evaluate the appropriateness of a search and seizure in an internal security case than in a …