The use of search–dogs in schools raises fundamental constitutional questions concerning the objects being searched and the reliability of the dog used in the search. Where school officials have been alerted to the presence of drugs by informants, these officials have faced legal challenges to the reliability of the information received. Courts have reasoned that a search dog\u27s alert to lockers, cars, and other locations or objects in schools easily satisfies the higher law enforcement probable cause standard and, thus, T.L.O.\u27s lower reasonable suspicion standard as well. However, little, if any attention, has been drawn to whether a sniff dog\u27s alert to the presence of drugs can be challenged in terms of the reliability of the se...
This commentary previews an upcoming Supreme Court case, Florida v. Jardines, in which the Court wil...
In the endless and seemingly futile government war against drugs, protections afforded by the Fourth...
In Who’s a Good Boy? U.S. Supreme Court Considers Again Whether Dog Sniffs Are Searches (Justic, Jan...
The use of search–dogs in schools raises fundamental constitutional questions concerning the objects...
As drugs and other contraband made their way into schools starting in the 1960s, education leaders t...
Trial courts often uphold searches of cars at traffic stops when the grounds for the search are that...
Jardines v. Florida deals with the issue of using dogs in the collection of evidence and whether it ...
In a matter of first impression, the Ninth Circuit in Powers v. Plumas Unified School District addre...
Drugs plague our nation’s schools. Since traditional methods of fighting the problem are proving in...
abstract: An important question that needs to be discussed is whether drug detection dogs can be use...
This Article discusses Florida v. Harris and Florida v. Jardines, the two Fourth Amendment drug dog ...
Suppose the government was capable of detecting criminal conduct by some method or device that would...
The use of drug dogs in the United States began in 1970 when the United States Customs started using...
Historically, courts have given great deference to the anatomical scent detectors from which the can...
We present here a complement to Judge Wayne Gorman’s article on the law of sniffer-dog searches in C...
This commentary previews an upcoming Supreme Court case, Florida v. Jardines, in which the Court wil...
In the endless and seemingly futile government war against drugs, protections afforded by the Fourth...
In Who’s a Good Boy? U.S. Supreme Court Considers Again Whether Dog Sniffs Are Searches (Justic, Jan...
The use of search–dogs in schools raises fundamental constitutional questions concerning the objects...
As drugs and other contraband made their way into schools starting in the 1960s, education leaders t...
Trial courts often uphold searches of cars at traffic stops when the grounds for the search are that...
Jardines v. Florida deals with the issue of using dogs in the collection of evidence and whether it ...
In a matter of first impression, the Ninth Circuit in Powers v. Plumas Unified School District addre...
Drugs plague our nation’s schools. Since traditional methods of fighting the problem are proving in...
abstract: An important question that needs to be discussed is whether drug detection dogs can be use...
This Article discusses Florida v. Harris and Florida v. Jardines, the two Fourth Amendment drug dog ...
Suppose the government was capable of detecting criminal conduct by some method or device that would...
The use of drug dogs in the United States began in 1970 when the United States Customs started using...
Historically, courts have given great deference to the anatomical scent detectors from which the can...
We present here a complement to Judge Wayne Gorman’s article on the law of sniffer-dog searches in C...
This commentary previews an upcoming Supreme Court case, Florida v. Jardines, in which the Court wil...
In the endless and seemingly futile government war against drugs, protections afforded by the Fourth...
In Who’s a Good Boy? U.S. Supreme Court Considers Again Whether Dog Sniffs Are Searches (Justic, Jan...