This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sanctions the government\u27s authority to insert secret spies and informants into our lives, is misguided. Part I highlights the historical background of the Fourth Amendment to show why its procedural safeguards are relevant when considering whether the government should be free of constitutional restraint when deploying informants and spies in our homes and offices. Part II will explain and critique the Court\u27s cases on informants. Part III contends that the Court\u27s doctrine on informants rests on a fallacious conception of privacy. As an alternative to the current approach, I argue that the government\u27s authority to use informants and ...
This thesis analyses Supreme Court cases on the Fourth Amendment and Foreign Intelligence Supreme Co...
Fourth Amendment law is sorely in need of reform. To paraphrase Justice Sotomayor\u27s concurrence i...
The threat of future terrorist attacks has sped the proliferation of random, suspicionless searches ...
This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sancti...
Part I of this article offers a brief history of the development of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence a...
Recent Supreme Court search and seizure cases are the harbingers of a new conceptual way of analyzin...
This Article does not endeavor to engage in a debate over the efficacy or deterrent effect of the ex...
For fifty years, courts have used a “reasonable expectation of privacy” standard to define “searches...
The United States District Court case has left the scope of the warrant protection of the fourth ame...
This Article examines the central role that knowledge plays in determining the Fourth Amendment’s sc...
When criminal justice scholars think of privacy, they think of the Fourth Amendment. But lately its ...
For almost twenty years the Supreme Court has used the reasonable expectation of privacy formula i...
Supreme Court doctrine protects two seemingly distinct kinds of interests under the heading of priva...
Part I of this Article establishes that the government has a right to search for and seize evidence ...
This Article rehearses a response to the problems posed to and by the Supreme Court\u27s attempts to...
This thesis analyses Supreme Court cases on the Fourth Amendment and Foreign Intelligence Supreme Co...
Fourth Amendment law is sorely in need of reform. To paraphrase Justice Sotomayor\u27s concurrence i...
The threat of future terrorist attacks has sped the proliferation of random, suspicionless searches ...
This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sancti...
Part I of this article offers a brief history of the development of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence a...
Recent Supreme Court search and seizure cases are the harbingers of a new conceptual way of analyzin...
This Article does not endeavor to engage in a debate over the efficacy or deterrent effect of the ex...
For fifty years, courts have used a “reasonable expectation of privacy” standard to define “searches...
The United States District Court case has left the scope of the warrant protection of the fourth ame...
This Article examines the central role that knowledge plays in determining the Fourth Amendment’s sc...
When criminal justice scholars think of privacy, they think of the Fourth Amendment. But lately its ...
For almost twenty years the Supreme Court has used the reasonable expectation of privacy formula i...
Supreme Court doctrine protects two seemingly distinct kinds of interests under the heading of priva...
Part I of this Article establishes that the government has a right to search for and seize evidence ...
This Article rehearses a response to the problems posed to and by the Supreme Court\u27s attempts to...
This thesis analyses Supreme Court cases on the Fourth Amendment and Foreign Intelligence Supreme Co...
Fourth Amendment law is sorely in need of reform. To paraphrase Justice Sotomayor\u27s concurrence i...
The threat of future terrorist attacks has sped the proliferation of random, suspicionless searches ...