In Mapp v. Ohio, the U.S. Supreme Court extended the due process protections of the exclusionary rule to include all constitutionally unreasonable searches that were done without a basis of probable cause. In the seven years after Mapp, when homicide rates in the U.S. nearly doubled, riots broke out in at least forty-seven U.S. cities. During the same era, a heroin epidemic gripped the nation\u27s urban centers, giving rise to street drug markets and associated violence and pressures on law enforcement to curb those markets. As violence increased, a turn in the nation\u27s political culture questioned Mapp\u27s restraints on police discretion to stop and search criminal suspects. Indeed, some writers wondered if the Mapp standard, with it...
In May 1957, Cleveland Police forced entry into Dollree Mapp\u27s home without a warrant. They were ...
Removing laws to pursue the lawbreaker may be well intentioned, but the result is that society is su...
The plethora of law review articles and cases on search and seizure demonstrates the confusion and f...
In this Article, I suggest that, while the Warren Court provided a needed tool to police, it failed ...
This Article argues that it is time to overrule Mapp v. Ohio. It contends that the exclusionary rule...
Book review of "Mapp v. Ohio: Guarding Against Unreasonable Searches and Seizures" by Carolyn N. Lon
The rule announced in Mapp v. Ohio will not be used to overturn any conviction finally adjudicated b...
Any judicial reversal of the Mapp rule threatens to have just the opposite effect. Law enforcement o...
[U]ntil the [exclusionary rule] rests on a principled basis rather than an empirical proposition, [t...
Although Earl Warren ascended to the Supreme Court in 1953, when we speak of the Warren Court\u27s ...
The exclusionary rule is back under the judicial magnifying glass. Recent opinions, most notably by ...
State v. Andrews, 57 Ohio St. 3d 86, 565 N.E.2d 1271 (1991), cert. denied, 111 S. Ct. 2833 (interim ...
Reports on Louis Stokes argument that upholding Terry\u27s frisking by Detective Martin McFadden wou...
Terry v. Ohio’s “reasonable suspicion” test was created in the context of domestic law enforcement, ...
Back in 1968, Justice William O. Douglas warned in a dissenting opinion in Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1...
In May 1957, Cleveland Police forced entry into Dollree Mapp\u27s home without a warrant. They were ...
Removing laws to pursue the lawbreaker may be well intentioned, but the result is that society is su...
The plethora of law review articles and cases on search and seizure demonstrates the confusion and f...
In this Article, I suggest that, while the Warren Court provided a needed tool to police, it failed ...
This Article argues that it is time to overrule Mapp v. Ohio. It contends that the exclusionary rule...
Book review of "Mapp v. Ohio: Guarding Against Unreasonable Searches and Seizures" by Carolyn N. Lon
The rule announced in Mapp v. Ohio will not be used to overturn any conviction finally adjudicated b...
Any judicial reversal of the Mapp rule threatens to have just the opposite effect. Law enforcement o...
[U]ntil the [exclusionary rule] rests on a principled basis rather than an empirical proposition, [t...
Although Earl Warren ascended to the Supreme Court in 1953, when we speak of the Warren Court\u27s ...
The exclusionary rule is back under the judicial magnifying glass. Recent opinions, most notably by ...
State v. Andrews, 57 Ohio St. 3d 86, 565 N.E.2d 1271 (1991), cert. denied, 111 S. Ct. 2833 (interim ...
Reports on Louis Stokes argument that upholding Terry\u27s frisking by Detective Martin McFadden wou...
Terry v. Ohio’s “reasonable suspicion” test was created in the context of domestic law enforcement, ...
Back in 1968, Justice William O. Douglas warned in a dissenting opinion in Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1...
In May 1957, Cleveland Police forced entry into Dollree Mapp\u27s home without a warrant. They were ...
Removing laws to pursue the lawbreaker may be well intentioned, but the result is that society is su...
The plethora of law review articles and cases on search and seizure demonstrates the confusion and f...