Defendants were prosecuted and convicted of conspiring to engage in horserace bookmaking and related offenses. The police had secured evidence of defendants\u27 activities by concealing a listening device in premises occupied by them and also by unauthorized and forcible searches. The trial court admitted the evidence so obtained, notwithstanding the fact that the police action in securing it was clearly in violation of both federal and state constitutions and statutes. After conviction, the trial court denied defendants\u27 motion for a new trial. On appeal, held, reversed, three justices dissenting. Evidence obtained in violation of the defendants\u27 constitutional rights is inadmissible in a criminal prosecution. People v. Cahan, (Cal. ...
Petitioner was arrested without a warrant on suspicion of larceny. He was held without commitment fo...
Local police officers entered the private office of petitioner, a practising physician, without a wa...
Acting on information that defendants were engaged in the numbers racket in violation of the Michi...
In response to a call from a citizen whose suspicions had been aroused by the actions of the defenda...
Two federal narcotic officers accompanied by two state officers went into the defendant\u27s residen...
Federal customs enforcement officers suspected plaintiff of theft from a waterfront pier. In the cou...
Petitioner was convicted of bookmaking under the anti-gambling laws of California by the use of evid...
In this case the Supreme Court of the United States in a five to three decision revised its earlier ...
At common law, illegally seized evidence was admissible on the theory that the nature of the seizure...
In this case the Supreme Court of the United States in a five to three decision revised its earlier ...
Petitioners, suspected of carrying on an illegal lottery, had been under police observation for seve...
The most radical departure of the new California doctrine from federal precedents, however, lies in ...
Prosecution of petitioner in federal court for the unlawful acquisition of marihuana failed when the...
Following the decision in People v. Cahan, in April of 1955, California adopted as a judicially decl...
Following the decision in People v. Cahan, in April of 1955, California adopted as a judicially decl...
Petitioner was arrested without a warrant on suspicion of larceny. He was held without commitment fo...
Local police officers entered the private office of petitioner, a practising physician, without a wa...
Acting on information that defendants were engaged in the numbers racket in violation of the Michi...
In response to a call from a citizen whose suspicions had been aroused by the actions of the defenda...
Two federal narcotic officers accompanied by two state officers went into the defendant\u27s residen...
Federal customs enforcement officers suspected plaintiff of theft from a waterfront pier. In the cou...
Petitioner was convicted of bookmaking under the anti-gambling laws of California by the use of evid...
In this case the Supreme Court of the United States in a five to three decision revised its earlier ...
At common law, illegally seized evidence was admissible on the theory that the nature of the seizure...
In this case the Supreme Court of the United States in a five to three decision revised its earlier ...
Petitioners, suspected of carrying on an illegal lottery, had been under police observation for seve...
The most radical departure of the new California doctrine from federal precedents, however, lies in ...
Prosecution of petitioner in federal court for the unlawful acquisition of marihuana failed when the...
Following the decision in People v. Cahan, in April of 1955, California adopted as a judicially decl...
Following the decision in People v. Cahan, in April of 1955, California adopted as a judicially decl...
Petitioner was arrested without a warrant on suspicion of larceny. He was held without commitment fo...
Local police officers entered the private office of petitioner, a practising physician, without a wa...
Acting on information that defendants were engaged in the numbers racket in violation of the Michi...