Police across the nation have long been accused of using the broad discretion afforded to them in traffic enforcement as a pretext for criminal investigation. Despite this widely held belief, there is little evidence to suggest that courts have put forth any effort, or have even considered remedying or reducing the wide spread abuse of police discretion in traffic stops, with the exception of racial profiling. This Article addresses the apparent gap in the legal and social science literature concerning the unequal enforcement of traffic laws. How extensive do the police abuse the discretionary powers they are afforded in enforcing traffic offenses? And what, if any, legal remedies exist, or should exist, to address the abuse of police discr...
The legal problem of policing is how to regulate police authority to permit officers to enforce law ...
This article explores discretionary decision-making in a specific traffic police unit. This study wa...
A routine traffic stop turns into a “sticky wicket” when charges are made that customary professiona...
Police across the nation have long been accused of using the broad discretion afforded to them in tr...
In 1981, the U.S. Supreme Court held in New York v. Belton that police officers could lawfully searc...
American states and municipalities have so many minor traffic regulations that every time a driver g...
This Article addresses a series of situations in which the exercise of police discretion, while pass...
Abstract In the United States, police officers often decide to give drivers they stop for traffic vi...
This Article empirically illustrates that legal doctrines permitting police officers to engage in pr...
The advent of community and problem-oriented policing – the so-called quality-of-life policing phi...
In this paper we consider some of the ethical challenges inherent in the regulation of discretionary...
It has long been recognised that discretion is vital to good police work. However, in Britain (and m...
The discretionary authority in making a decision taken by the police officer must be within the scop...
Discretion is a ubiquitous and legitimate aspect of modern policing, though its scope and limits are...
In this paper we consider some of the ethical challenges inherent in the regulation of discretionary...
The legal problem of policing is how to regulate police authority to permit officers to enforce law ...
This article explores discretionary decision-making in a specific traffic police unit. This study wa...
A routine traffic stop turns into a “sticky wicket” when charges are made that customary professiona...
Police across the nation have long been accused of using the broad discretion afforded to them in tr...
In 1981, the U.S. Supreme Court held in New York v. Belton that police officers could lawfully searc...
American states and municipalities have so many minor traffic regulations that every time a driver g...
This Article addresses a series of situations in which the exercise of police discretion, while pass...
Abstract In the United States, police officers often decide to give drivers they stop for traffic vi...
This Article empirically illustrates that legal doctrines permitting police officers to engage in pr...
The advent of community and problem-oriented policing – the so-called quality-of-life policing phi...
In this paper we consider some of the ethical challenges inherent in the regulation of discretionary...
It has long been recognised that discretion is vital to good police work. However, in Britain (and m...
The discretionary authority in making a decision taken by the police officer must be within the scop...
Discretion is a ubiquitous and legitimate aspect of modern policing, though its scope and limits are...
In this paper we consider some of the ethical challenges inherent in the regulation of discretionary...
The legal problem of policing is how to regulate police authority to permit officers to enforce law ...
This article explores discretionary decision-making in a specific traffic police unit. This study wa...
A routine traffic stop turns into a “sticky wicket” when charges are made that customary professiona...