The Supreme Court of the United States has held that the fourth amendment of the United States Constitution establishes a preference for searches under warrant. There are, however, constitutionally recognized exceptions to this requirement. The most recent of these exceptions is the plain view doctrine. Under this doctrine, a law enforcement officer\u27s seizure of objects does not constitute a search for purposes of the fourth amendment\u27s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures when the officer, after a prior valid intrusion, inadvertently views an object immediately apparent as evidence. Rather, the seizure is held as having come about as the result of a mere observation. State v. Holloman is the most recent Nebras...