Part I of this Note explores the Texas constitutional right of privacy and the right of privacy guaranteed by the United States Constitution as well as the relationship between the two. Part II reviews the facts in Henry, the Texas Supreme Court\u27s decision, and concurrences of both Justice Owen and Justice Spector. Part III analyzes the court\u27s reasoning in Henry and determines that the decision fails to safeguard the constitutional right of privacy guaranteed by the Texas Constitution. Part IV proposes two potential solutions available to Texas courts to protect police officers and other public employees from unreasonable intrusions into their private lives, thus ensuring the effectiveness of the right of privacy guaranteed by the Te...
Occasionally a judgment of our Supreme Court, delivered in a superficially petty case, suddenly befo...
In Richardson v. State, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted Richardson’s second petition for...
In New York v. United States, the Supreme Court set forth the rule that any federal law which direct...
Part I of this Note explores the Texas constitutional right of privacy and the right of privacy guar...
Although invasion of privacy tort law has existed for more than a century in the United States,1 in ...
The constitutional right to privacy has been a conservative bugaboo ever since Justice Douglas intro...
After the watershed 2003 U.S. Supreme Court decision Lawrence v. Texas, courts are faced with the da...
This Note argues that the Texas Court should adopt the Supreme Court\u27s holding in Cobb on state c...
In State v. Hobbs, the Texas Fourth Court of Appeals held a warrantless intrusion by police onto pri...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees freedom from unreasonable searches...
The government regularly outs information concerning people\u27s sexuality, gender identity, and HIV...
This article explores the problems that can arise when laws protect the privacy of some individuals ...
This report presents the findings of a student-faculty research team that studied citizen opinions a...
This article examines the progress of the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on a right to privacy. In La...
The right of privacy is an aggregate of many separate rights, each of which is guaranteed in the Bil...
Occasionally a judgment of our Supreme Court, delivered in a superficially petty case, suddenly befo...
In Richardson v. State, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted Richardson’s second petition for...
In New York v. United States, the Supreme Court set forth the rule that any federal law which direct...
Part I of this Note explores the Texas constitutional right of privacy and the right of privacy guar...
Although invasion of privacy tort law has existed for more than a century in the United States,1 in ...
The constitutional right to privacy has been a conservative bugaboo ever since Justice Douglas intro...
After the watershed 2003 U.S. Supreme Court decision Lawrence v. Texas, courts are faced with the da...
This Note argues that the Texas Court should adopt the Supreme Court\u27s holding in Cobb on state c...
In State v. Hobbs, the Texas Fourth Court of Appeals held a warrantless intrusion by police onto pri...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees freedom from unreasonable searches...
The government regularly outs information concerning people\u27s sexuality, gender identity, and HIV...
This article explores the problems that can arise when laws protect the privacy of some individuals ...
This report presents the findings of a student-faculty research team that studied citizen opinions a...
This article examines the progress of the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on a right to privacy. In La...
The right of privacy is an aggregate of many separate rights, each of which is guaranteed in the Bil...
Occasionally a judgment of our Supreme Court, delivered in a superficially petty case, suddenly befo...
In Richardson v. State, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted Richardson’s second petition for...
In New York v. United States, the Supreme Court set forth the rule that any federal law which direct...