This paper comments on recent Supreme Court opinions that have used phrases such as reasonable belief and reason to believe when analyzing intrusions that generally require proof of probable cause. Historically, the Court used these terms as shorthand references for both probable cause and reasonable suspicion. While this lack of precision was unobjectionable when the concepts were interchangeable, that has not been true since Terry v. Ohio created a distinction between the two standards. When the Justices then resurrect these terms without situating them in the dichotomy between probable cause and reasonable suspicion, it is not clear whether they are adopting the reasonable suspicion standard (which the phrases more closely resemble),...
A detailed analysis of the common law during the Framers’ era, and of how it reflected the Fourth Am...
Probable cause to arrest is an exceedingly difficult concept to objectify.\u27 The traditional defin...
The Fourth Amendment\u27s probable cause requirement is not about numbers or statistics. It is about...
For decades, the United States Supreme Court opinions articulating the standard of exigency necessar...
Although the United States Supreme Court’s approach to issues governing application of the probable ...
Police officers sometimes need flexibility to respond appropriately to a variety of factual situatio...
This article will demonstrate the Supreme Court\u27s inability to develop an objective methodology t...
This piece argues that the Supreme Court\u27s April 2014 decision in Navarette v. Calfornia, like la...
Courts are proudly resigned to the fact that the probable cause inquiry is “nontechnical.” In order ...
The Court began its opinion in Winston by putting to one side the procedural protections of the war...
Reasonable belief. The Supreme Court’s ambiguous use of this term in Arizona v. Gant transformed wha...
Part I of this article reviews Gates\u27s actual holding. Although one can view much of the Court\u2...
The definition of a reasonable search has bedeviled the United States Supreme Court for some ninety ...
Removing laws to pursue the lawbreaker may be well intentioned, but the result is that society is su...
Taslitz defines probable cause as having four components: one quantitative, one qualitative, one tem...
A detailed analysis of the common law during the Framers’ era, and of how it reflected the Fourth Am...
Probable cause to arrest is an exceedingly difficult concept to objectify.\u27 The traditional defin...
The Fourth Amendment\u27s probable cause requirement is not about numbers or statistics. It is about...
For decades, the United States Supreme Court opinions articulating the standard of exigency necessar...
Although the United States Supreme Court’s approach to issues governing application of the probable ...
Police officers sometimes need flexibility to respond appropriately to a variety of factual situatio...
This article will demonstrate the Supreme Court\u27s inability to develop an objective methodology t...
This piece argues that the Supreme Court\u27s April 2014 decision in Navarette v. Calfornia, like la...
Courts are proudly resigned to the fact that the probable cause inquiry is “nontechnical.” In order ...
The Court began its opinion in Winston by putting to one side the procedural protections of the war...
Reasonable belief. The Supreme Court’s ambiguous use of this term in Arizona v. Gant transformed wha...
Part I of this article reviews Gates\u27s actual holding. Although one can view much of the Court\u2...
The definition of a reasonable search has bedeviled the United States Supreme Court for some ninety ...
Removing laws to pursue the lawbreaker may be well intentioned, but the result is that society is su...
Taslitz defines probable cause as having four components: one quantitative, one qualitative, one tem...
A detailed analysis of the common law during the Framers’ era, and of how it reflected the Fourth Am...
Probable cause to arrest is an exceedingly difficult concept to objectify.\u27 The traditional defin...
The Fourth Amendment\u27s probable cause requirement is not about numbers or statistics. It is about...