The text of the Fourth Amendment provides no guidance about what makes a search unreasonable or when warrants are required to make a search reasonable. The Supreme Court has had to craft a doctrine based on intuition, policy goals, and halfhearted stabs at history. This Article argues that the Court’s Fourth Amendment doctrine is stable when it roughly tracks the eighteenth-century common law protection of property, privacy, and liberty. When the Court has sought to provide more protection than the common law provided, the result has been an erratic doctrine that has gradually receded almost back to the common law contours. The most recent move away from a robust Fourth Amendment has been to reduce the application of the exclusionary rule. ...
The advent of new technology has presented courts with unique challenges when analyzing searches and...
In the legal academy it is widely believed that the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s orthodox (post-Katz, pre...
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence governing the Fourth Amendment’s “threshold”—a word meant to refer...
The text of the Fourth Amendment provides no guidance about what makes a search unreasonable or when...
The Fourth Amendment remains one of the most vital and relevant areas of constitutional law, since t...
This Article attempts to answer such questions by examining the evolution of search-and-seizure law ...
Supreme Court decisions regarding the Fourth Amendment are arbitrary, unpredictable and often border...
This article argues that the Supreme Court\u27s original view of the history and meaning of the four...
This Article considers the role of property rights in defining Fourth Amendment searches. Since Unit...
This article will demonstrate the Supreme Court\u27s inability to develop an objective methodology t...
The Fourth Amendment today is an embarrassment. Much of what the Supreme Court has said in the last ...
During the 1975 term the Supreme Court handed down nine opinions which involved the fourth amendment...
Perhaps no Constitutional amendment gets tried and tested more than the Fourth Amendment. Each year,...
In this article I examine to what extent Indianapolis v. Edmond is in keeping with the original unde...
The Supreme Court has made the body of Fourth Amendment law too complicated, inconsistent, and confu...
The advent of new technology has presented courts with unique challenges when analyzing searches and...
In the legal academy it is widely believed that the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s orthodox (post-Katz, pre...
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence governing the Fourth Amendment’s “threshold”—a word meant to refer...
The text of the Fourth Amendment provides no guidance about what makes a search unreasonable or when...
The Fourth Amendment remains one of the most vital and relevant areas of constitutional law, since t...
This Article attempts to answer such questions by examining the evolution of search-and-seizure law ...
Supreme Court decisions regarding the Fourth Amendment are arbitrary, unpredictable and often border...
This article argues that the Supreme Court\u27s original view of the history and meaning of the four...
This Article considers the role of property rights in defining Fourth Amendment searches. Since Unit...
This article will demonstrate the Supreme Court\u27s inability to develop an objective methodology t...
The Fourth Amendment today is an embarrassment. Much of what the Supreme Court has said in the last ...
During the 1975 term the Supreme Court handed down nine opinions which involved the fourth amendment...
Perhaps no Constitutional amendment gets tried and tested more than the Fourth Amendment. Each year,...
In this article I examine to what extent Indianapolis v. Edmond is in keeping with the original unde...
The Supreme Court has made the body of Fourth Amendment law too complicated, inconsistent, and confu...
The advent of new technology has presented courts with unique challenges when analyzing searches and...
In the legal academy it is widely believed that the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s orthodox (post-Katz, pre...
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence governing the Fourth Amendment’s “threshold”—a word meant to refer...