Originalist analyses of the Framers’ views about governmental search power have devoted insufficient attention to the civil search statutes they promulgated for regulatory purposes. What attention has been paid concludes that the Framers were divided about how accessible search remedies should be. This Article explains why this conventional account is mostly wrong and explores the lessons to be learned from the statutory choices the Framers made with regard to search and seizure law. In enacting civil search statutes, the Framers chose to depart from common law standards and instead largely followed the patterns of preceding British civil search statutes. The overwhelming tendency was to link official immunity with probable cause and displa...
This article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups- an...
One of the major problems in the law of search and seizure today is the increasing scope of search i...
This Article examines the Supreme Court’s application of the special needs principle, which is par...
Originalist analyses of the Framers\u27 views about governmental search power have devoted insuffici...
Originalist analyses of the Framers\u27 views about governmental search power have devoted insuffici...
Originalist analyses of the Framers’ views about governmental search power have devoted insufficient...
A detailed analysis of the common law during the Framers’ era, and of how it reflected the Fourth Am...
A detailed analysis of the common law during the Framers’ era, and of how it reflected the Fourth Am...
This article, the first of a two-part series, argues that during the Framers’ era many if not most j...
At the nation’s founding, search warrants and the concept of suspicion were well entrenched as a mea...
article published in law reviewCourts and scholars have devoted considerable attention to the defini...
Davies exposes a story that has been almost entirely overlooked: that the now-accepted doctrine that...
This Article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups—an ...
We often assume that those who wrote the Constitution understood its terms in a way that bears at le...
This article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups- an...
This article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups- an...
One of the major problems in the law of search and seizure today is the increasing scope of search i...
This Article examines the Supreme Court’s application of the special needs principle, which is par...
Originalist analyses of the Framers\u27 views about governmental search power have devoted insuffici...
Originalist analyses of the Framers\u27 views about governmental search power have devoted insuffici...
Originalist analyses of the Framers’ views about governmental search power have devoted insufficient...
A detailed analysis of the common law during the Framers’ era, and of how it reflected the Fourth Am...
A detailed analysis of the common law during the Framers’ era, and of how it reflected the Fourth Am...
This article, the first of a two-part series, argues that during the Framers’ era many if not most j...
At the nation’s founding, search warrants and the concept of suspicion were well entrenched as a mea...
article published in law reviewCourts and scholars have devoted considerable attention to the defini...
Davies exposes a story that has been almost entirely overlooked: that the now-accepted doctrine that...
This Article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups—an ...
We often assume that those who wrote the Constitution understood its terms in a way that bears at le...
This article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups- an...
This article examines the constitutional status of suspicionless searches and seizures of groups- an...
One of the major problems in the law of search and seizure today is the increasing scope of search i...
This Article examines the Supreme Court’s application of the special needs principle, which is par...