In this Article, I suggest that, while the Warren Court provided a needed tool to police, it failed to achieve its stated purpose of tying the practice to the Fourth Amendment reasonableness standard. First, the Court failed to adequately define an investigatory stop, leading later courts to harden the definition, eliminating the Fourth Amendment from most on-the-street police-citizen encounters. Second, the facts in Terry failed to meet the reasonableness standard Chief Justice Warren purported to apply and which subsequently has been further weakened in later cases. Finally, the decision in Terry failed to strike a meaningful Fourth Amendment balance between effective law enforcement and individual freedom
Reason to believe a person may be involved in criminal activity is not necessarily also reason to be...
This article analyzes Torres v. Madrid, in which the Supreme Court ruled an officer seized a person ...
Supreme Court decisions regarding the Fourth Amendment are arbitrary, unpredictable and often border...
In this Article, I suggest that, while the Warren Court provided a needed tool to police, it failed ...
This article discusses the current status of police in the United States--police can undertake any a...
Fifty years ago, the United States Supreme Court issued their opinion in Terry v. Ohio. The underpin...
Perhaps no decision of the United States Supreme Court concerning the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition...
Saltzburg lists four main points to this thesis: 1. Terry itself failed to provide a clear enough ya...
Terry v. Ohio changed everything. Before Terry, Fourth Amendment law was settled. The Fourth Amendme...
Thirty years after the Supreme Court\u27s landmark decision in Terry v. Ohio and almost seven-times-...
The standard story taught to American lawyers, purporting to describe the Warren Court’s criminal pr...
The Supreme Court has made the body of Fourth Amendment law too complicated, inconsistent, and confu...
The Fourth Amendment to the Federal Constitution protects individuals against unreasonable searches ...
The Supreme Court\u27s Fourth Amendment jurisprudence has been oft criticized. The criticism is not ...
This Article proposes that the Mendenhall-Royer standard, as presently interpreted, should be discar...
Reason to believe a person may be involved in criminal activity is not necessarily also reason to be...
This article analyzes Torres v. Madrid, in which the Supreme Court ruled an officer seized a person ...
Supreme Court decisions regarding the Fourth Amendment are arbitrary, unpredictable and often border...
In this Article, I suggest that, while the Warren Court provided a needed tool to police, it failed ...
This article discusses the current status of police in the United States--police can undertake any a...
Fifty years ago, the United States Supreme Court issued their opinion in Terry v. Ohio. The underpin...
Perhaps no decision of the United States Supreme Court concerning the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition...
Saltzburg lists four main points to this thesis: 1. Terry itself failed to provide a clear enough ya...
Terry v. Ohio changed everything. Before Terry, Fourth Amendment law was settled. The Fourth Amendme...
Thirty years after the Supreme Court\u27s landmark decision in Terry v. Ohio and almost seven-times-...
The standard story taught to American lawyers, purporting to describe the Warren Court’s criminal pr...
The Supreme Court has made the body of Fourth Amendment law too complicated, inconsistent, and confu...
The Fourth Amendment to the Federal Constitution protects individuals against unreasonable searches ...
The Supreme Court\u27s Fourth Amendment jurisprudence has been oft criticized. The criticism is not ...
This Article proposes that the Mendenhall-Royer standard, as presently interpreted, should be discar...
Reason to believe a person may be involved in criminal activity is not necessarily also reason to be...
This article analyzes Torres v. Madrid, in which the Supreme Court ruled an officer seized a person ...
Supreme Court decisions regarding the Fourth Amendment are arbitrary, unpredictable and often border...