(Excerpt) This Note proceeds in three parts. Part I begins by explaining what no-knock warrants are and why they are used. Part I then addresses recent state legislative efforts to reform no-knock warrant use and argues that these efforts, however well-intentioned, are insufficient. Part I will also provide a brief history of how no-knock warrant use developed and gives an overview of the current status of state law regarding no-knock warrants. Part II argues that, contrary to the arguments of no-knock proponents, elimination of no-knock warrants and strict adherence to the knock-and-announce requirement is a more effective way to ensure the safety of both law enforcement officers and civilians. Part III proposes comprehensive legislation t...
This note will examine the Supreme Court\u27s decision in United States v. Knights. Part II presents...
This article seeks to contribute to the national conversation on reforming police practices by evalu...
The Fourth Amendment, as decided by the Supreme Court in Payton v. New York, forbids police from arr...
(Excerpt) This Note proceeds in three parts. Part I begins by explaining what no-knock warrants are ...
The Supreme Court has set out a roadmap for challenging one of the most common and insidious police ...
Woven into the western world\u27s legal fabric by English courts over four centuries ago, the knock-...
On March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor was fatally shot when officers of the Louisville Metro Police Depa...
The procedure known as “knock and talk” allows police to approach a dwelling, knock on the door, and...
This Note argues that the courts should reject a home-business distinction in the application of ann...
First, this paper constructs the background on search warrants, including the legal precedent, polic...
This Issue Brief summarizes some of the traditional mechanisms for holding police accountable for mi...
(Excerpt) Imagine you are on your way home from work and driving your usual route. You hear police s...
The Supreme Court has cast judicial warrants as the Fourth Amendment gold standard for regulating po...
No-knock and quick-knock warrants have been used by American police in a way that has created danger...
The purpose of this Note is to analyze the limitations of the criminal legal system when faced with ...
This note will examine the Supreme Court\u27s decision in United States v. Knights. Part II presents...
This article seeks to contribute to the national conversation on reforming police practices by evalu...
The Fourth Amendment, as decided by the Supreme Court in Payton v. New York, forbids police from arr...
(Excerpt) This Note proceeds in three parts. Part I begins by explaining what no-knock warrants are ...
The Supreme Court has set out a roadmap for challenging one of the most common and insidious police ...
Woven into the western world\u27s legal fabric by English courts over four centuries ago, the knock-...
On March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor was fatally shot when officers of the Louisville Metro Police Depa...
The procedure known as “knock and talk” allows police to approach a dwelling, knock on the door, and...
This Note argues that the courts should reject a home-business distinction in the application of ann...
First, this paper constructs the background on search warrants, including the legal precedent, polic...
This Issue Brief summarizes some of the traditional mechanisms for holding police accountable for mi...
(Excerpt) Imagine you are on your way home from work and driving your usual route. You hear police s...
The Supreme Court has cast judicial warrants as the Fourth Amendment gold standard for regulating po...
No-knock and quick-knock warrants have been used by American police in a way that has created danger...
The purpose of this Note is to analyze the limitations of the criminal legal system when faced with ...
This note will examine the Supreme Court\u27s decision in United States v. Knights. Part II presents...
This article seeks to contribute to the national conversation on reforming police practices by evalu...
The Fourth Amendment, as decided by the Supreme Court in Payton v. New York, forbids police from arr...