Part I of this Article defines searches and seizures of property and person, discussing the Supreme Court\u27s initially broad interpretation of the Fourth Amendment and its subsequent narrowing in later decisions. Part II discusses several police chase cases leading up to the elimination of accidental and attempted seizures from Fourth Amendment protection in Brower v. County of Inyo and California v. Hodari D. Part Ill analyzes the Brower decision and its effect on accidental seizures, concluding that the analysis set forth therein should be abolished and advocating an alternate test. Part IV confronts the Court\u27s elimination of attempted seizures from Fourth Amendment protections and suggests that physical restraint cannot be the on...
Three quarters of a century ago, the Supreme Court expressed some thoughts on constitutional interpr...
This Article is about the misunderstood relationship between the Fourth Amendment and the positive l...
This article argues that the Supreme Court\u27s original view of the history and meaning of the four...
The first section of this article considers whether the police officer\u27s intent is an indispensab...
During the 1975 term the Supreme Court handed down nine opinions which involved the fourth amendment...
This Article attempts to answer such questions by examining the evolution of search-and-seizure law ...
Part I of this Article establishes that the government has a right to search for and seize evidence ...
Protections for criminal defendants and suspects have undergone a steady erosion with the increasing...
The history of liberty, Justice Felix Frankfurter once noted, has largely been the history of obse...
The Florida v. Bostick decision raises important Fourth Amendment questions regarding police encount...
The fourth amendment protects the security of people\u27s persons, houses, papers, and effects in ...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution, applicable to the states through the fourtee...
There is a well-recognized lack of consistency and clarity in fourth amendment decisions. At times, ...
This is the published version.This article surveys significant trends in search and seizure law. Rec...
The Fourth Amendment\u27s protections against unreasonable searches and seizures have resulted in a ...
Three quarters of a century ago, the Supreme Court expressed some thoughts on constitutional interpr...
This Article is about the misunderstood relationship between the Fourth Amendment and the positive l...
This article argues that the Supreme Court\u27s original view of the history and meaning of the four...
The first section of this article considers whether the police officer\u27s intent is an indispensab...
During the 1975 term the Supreme Court handed down nine opinions which involved the fourth amendment...
This Article attempts to answer such questions by examining the evolution of search-and-seizure law ...
Part I of this Article establishes that the government has a right to search for and seize evidence ...
Protections for criminal defendants and suspects have undergone a steady erosion with the increasing...
The history of liberty, Justice Felix Frankfurter once noted, has largely been the history of obse...
The Florida v. Bostick decision raises important Fourth Amendment questions regarding police encount...
The fourth amendment protects the security of people\u27s persons, houses, papers, and effects in ...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution, applicable to the states through the fourtee...
There is a well-recognized lack of consistency and clarity in fourth amendment decisions. At times, ...
This is the published version.This article surveys significant trends in search and seizure law. Rec...
The Fourth Amendment\u27s protections against unreasonable searches and seizures have resulted in a ...
Three quarters of a century ago, the Supreme Court expressed some thoughts on constitutional interpr...
This Article is about the misunderstood relationship between the Fourth Amendment and the positive l...
This article argues that the Supreme Court\u27s original view of the history and meaning of the four...