This Article looks at the intersection of the Fourth Amendment, which protects Americans\u27 personal security against arbitrary and oppressive searches by law enforcement officials, and the Eighth Amendment, which proscribes excessive bail. The focus is on the validity and effectiveness of an arrested person\u27s agreement to relinquish some or all of her Fourth Amendment rights as a means of gaining freedom from pre-trial detention. In other words, can an arrested person validly consent to waive some of her Fourth Amendment rights to avoid pre-trial detention? Recently, in a case of first impression in the federal courts of appeal, the Ninth Circuit invalidated a search of a home that rested on such a waiver. In United States v. Scott, ...
American constitutional jurisprudence has long accepted the notion that the exercise of certain righ...
(Excerpt) This Article’s disagreement with the courts is over a serious issue. Granting bail to a pe...
Incarceratingdefendants prior to trial was designed to bethe exception, not the norm. Many state and...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This Article looks at the intersection of the F...
Bail reform is happening. Across the country, jurisdictions are beginning to recognize that contempo...
This Article examines the history and judicial interpretation of the Eighth Amendment\u27s Excessive...
(Excerpt) This Article analyzes each of those decisions and, by way of two hypothetical cases, addre...
This article, echoing Highmore\u27s treatise of 1783, maintains that neither a legitimate nor a very...
There are few issues in criminal law with greater momentum than bail reform. In the last three years...
During the 1975 term the Supreme Court handed down nine opinions which involved the fourth amendment...
In its opinion in McDonald v. City of Chicago, 130 S.Ct. 3020 (2010), concerning the incorporation o...
In Hudson v. Palmer, the United States Supreme Court, by a 5–4 majority, adopted a bright-line rul...
This Article shows how the application of a takings paradigm to pretrial detention can mitigate the ...
Part I of this Article defines searches and seizures of property and person, discussing the Supreme ...
This Article submits that any meaningful discussion of bail reform at the state level must be jurisd...
American constitutional jurisprudence has long accepted the notion that the exercise of certain righ...
(Excerpt) This Article’s disagreement with the courts is over a serious issue. Granting bail to a pe...
Incarceratingdefendants prior to trial was designed to bethe exception, not the norm. Many state and...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This Article looks at the intersection of the F...
Bail reform is happening. Across the country, jurisdictions are beginning to recognize that contempo...
This Article examines the history and judicial interpretation of the Eighth Amendment\u27s Excessive...
(Excerpt) This Article analyzes each of those decisions and, by way of two hypothetical cases, addre...
This article, echoing Highmore\u27s treatise of 1783, maintains that neither a legitimate nor a very...
There are few issues in criminal law with greater momentum than bail reform. In the last three years...
During the 1975 term the Supreme Court handed down nine opinions which involved the fourth amendment...
In its opinion in McDonald v. City of Chicago, 130 S.Ct. 3020 (2010), concerning the incorporation o...
In Hudson v. Palmer, the United States Supreme Court, by a 5–4 majority, adopted a bright-line rul...
This Article shows how the application of a takings paradigm to pretrial detention can mitigate the ...
Part I of this Article defines searches and seizures of property and person, discussing the Supreme ...
This Article submits that any meaningful discussion of bail reform at the state level must be jurisd...
American constitutional jurisprudence has long accepted the notion that the exercise of certain righ...
(Excerpt) This Article’s disagreement with the courts is over a serious issue. Granting bail to a pe...
Incarceratingdefendants prior to trial was designed to bethe exception, not the norm. Many state and...