The meaning of the rights enshrined in the Constitution provides a critical baseline for understanding the limits of government action—perhaps nowhere more so than in regard to the Fourth Amendment. At the time it was adopted, the Fourth Amendment prohibited the government from entering into any home, warehouse, or place of business against the owner\u27s wishes to search for or to seize persons, papers, or effects, absent a specific warrant. Consistent with English common law, the notable exception was when law enforcement or citizens were pursuing a known felon. Outside of such circumstances, search and seizure required government officials to approach a magistrate and, under oath, to provide evidence of the suspected offense and to parti...
The Supreme Court has made the body of Fourth Amendment law too complicated, inconsistent, and confu...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution protects the right of an individual to be fre...
The FourthAmendment protects the right of the people—us—against unreasonable searches, seizures, and...
The meaning of the rights enshrined in the Constitution provide a critical baseline for understandin...
Claims regarding the original or intended meaning of constitutional texts are commonplace in constit...
For at least the past 40 years, police and prosecutors have had free reign in conducting illegal sea...
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence governing the Fourth Amendment’s “threshold”—a word meant to refer...
Three quarters of a century ago, the Supreme Court expressed some thoughts on constitutional interpr...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution states that The right of the people to be se...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution, applicable to the states through the fourtee...
The Fourth Amendment today is an embarrassment. Much of what the Supreme Court has said in the last ...
The fourth amendment to the Constitution has two basic clauses. The first, the reasonableness clause...
Conventional wisdom suggests that a constitutional right will constrain government actors. But a rig...
The home enjoys omnipresent status in American constitutional law. The Bill of Rights, peculiarly, h...
Fourth Amendment doctrine has been home to two competing models: the Warrant Model and the Reasonabl...
The Supreme Court has made the body of Fourth Amendment law too complicated, inconsistent, and confu...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution protects the right of an individual to be fre...
The FourthAmendment protects the right of the people—us—against unreasonable searches, seizures, and...
The meaning of the rights enshrined in the Constitution provide a critical baseline for understandin...
Claims regarding the original or intended meaning of constitutional texts are commonplace in constit...
For at least the past 40 years, police and prosecutors have had free reign in conducting illegal sea...
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence governing the Fourth Amendment’s “threshold”—a word meant to refer...
Three quarters of a century ago, the Supreme Court expressed some thoughts on constitutional interpr...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution states that The right of the people to be se...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution, applicable to the states through the fourtee...
The Fourth Amendment today is an embarrassment. Much of what the Supreme Court has said in the last ...
The fourth amendment to the Constitution has two basic clauses. The first, the reasonableness clause...
Conventional wisdom suggests that a constitutional right will constrain government actors. But a rig...
The home enjoys omnipresent status in American constitutional law. The Bill of Rights, peculiarly, h...
Fourth Amendment doctrine has been home to two competing models: the Warrant Model and the Reasonabl...
The Supreme Court has made the body of Fourth Amendment law too complicated, inconsistent, and confu...
The fourth amendment to the United States Constitution protects the right of an individual to be fre...
The FourthAmendment protects the right of the people—us—against unreasonable searches, seizures, and...