It is not . . . easy to see what the shock-the-conscience test adds, or should be allowed to add, to the deterrent function of exclusionary rules. Where no deterrence of unconstitutional police behavior is possible, a decision to exclude probative evidence with the result that a criminal goes free to prey upon the public should shock the judicial conscience even more than admitting the evidence. So spoke Judge Robert H. Bork, concurring in a ruling that the fourth amendment exclusionary rule does not apply to foreign searches conducted exclusively by foreign officials. A short time thereafter, when an interviewer read back the above statement and invited him to comment further on the subject, Judge Bork responded: [One of the reasons] somet...
At its inception, the exclusionary rule was relatively straightforward: The use at trial of evidence...
Most contemporary discussions of the exclusionary rule assume or assert that this rule is not pa...
[U]ntil the [exclusionary rule] rests on a principled basis rather than an empirical proposition, [t...
It is not . . . easy to see what the shock-the-conscience test adds, or should be allowed to add, to...
The exclusionary rule, which bars from admission evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendm...
Can we live with the so-called exclusionary rule, which bars the use of illegally gained evidence in...
More than 50 years have passed since the Supreme Court decided the Weeks case, barring the use in fe...
Several prior studies have demonstrated that police sometimes, if not often, lie in an attempt to av...
In three recent decisions, Hudson v. Michigan, Herring v. United States, and last Term\u27s Davis v....
This Article discusses the Supreme Court’s use of the concepts of culpability and deterrence in its ...
The Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule provides that a criminal defendant may suppress the fruits of...
The fourth amendment guarantees the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, pape...
The exclusionary rule is being flayed with increasing vigor by a number of unrelated sources and wit...
This Article examines the legitimacy of the criticism of the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule. In ...
The exclusionary rule itself is not very complicated: if the police obtain evidence by means that vi...
At its inception, the exclusionary rule was relatively straightforward: The use at trial of evidence...
Most contemporary discussions of the exclusionary rule assume or assert that this rule is not pa...
[U]ntil the [exclusionary rule] rests on a principled basis rather than an empirical proposition, [t...
It is not . . . easy to see what the shock-the-conscience test adds, or should be allowed to add, to...
The exclusionary rule, which bars from admission evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendm...
Can we live with the so-called exclusionary rule, which bars the use of illegally gained evidence in...
More than 50 years have passed since the Supreme Court decided the Weeks case, barring the use in fe...
Several prior studies have demonstrated that police sometimes, if not often, lie in an attempt to av...
In three recent decisions, Hudson v. Michigan, Herring v. United States, and last Term\u27s Davis v....
This Article discusses the Supreme Court’s use of the concepts of culpability and deterrence in its ...
The Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule provides that a criminal defendant may suppress the fruits of...
The fourth amendment guarantees the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, pape...
The exclusionary rule is being flayed with increasing vigor by a number of unrelated sources and wit...
This Article examines the legitimacy of the criticism of the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule. In ...
The exclusionary rule itself is not very complicated: if the police obtain evidence by means that vi...
At its inception, the exclusionary rule was relatively straightforward: The use at trial of evidence...
Most contemporary discussions of the exclusionary rule assume or assert that this rule is not pa...
[U]ntil the [exclusionary rule] rests on a principled basis rather than an empirical proposition, [t...