Class Thirteen: Warrant Exceptions; Race and Cultural Factors - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 12
About This Presentation
Title:

Class Thirteen: Warrant Exceptions; Race and Cultural Factors

Description:

RS of crime or violation of probation/parole sufficient for search of person, vehicle, or home ... search is valid if police gain consent of a person who ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:73
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 13
Provided by: georgeb5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Class Thirteen: Warrant Exceptions; Race and Cultural Factors


1
Class Thirteen Warrant Exceptions Race and
Cultural Factors
2
Probation and parole searches
  • Probation post-conviction but before prison
    suspended sentence
  • Parole post-prison
  • Probation and parole search conditions
  • RS of crime or violation of probation/parole
    sufficient for search of person, vehicle, or home

3
Inventory Searches
  • To protect owners property, avoid lawsuits,
    protect public from dangerous instrumentalities
  • Cars (SD v. Opperman CO v. Bertine)
  • Individuals (IL v. Lafayette)
  • Broad limitations on discretion enough (CO v.
    Bertine FL v. Wells)

4
Problem 4-23
  • Was the inventory search pretextual?
  • If so, does it matter? (US v.Whren)
  • Adequate limits on police officer discretion?
  • What kinds of evidence (formal discovery,
    depositions, subpoenas, investigation and
    interviewing other arrestees)?

5
Consent
  • What is a valid consent? (Schneckloth v.
    Bustamonte)
  • Who may grant consent? (US v. Matlock IL v.
    Rodriguez)
  • What is the scope of a consent search? (FL v.
    Jimeno)
  • Refusal or withdrawal of consent?

6
Schneckloth v. Bustamonte
  • Voluntary consent authorizes a search of a
    person, place, or vehicle
  • Officers do not need to admonish re right to
    refuse (cf. Ferguson)
  • Voluntariness judged case-by-case , totality of
    circumstances (interrogation cases)
    coercionthreats or promises, but only from police

7
Determining voluntariness?
  • Case-by-case, totality of circumstances
  • Was the individuals will overcome by police
    action?
  • Coercion threats or promises
  • Objective factors considered force, verbal
    intimidation, length and place of detention, etc.
  • Fundamentally subjective inquiry (age, education,
    race, experience, physical state, right to refuse)

8
US v. Matlock (1974)
  • A warrantless search is valid if police gain
    consent of a person who possesses common
    authority over the premises, and the evidence is
    admissible against an absent, non-consenting
    party
  • Any cohabitant has the right to permit inspection
    of common areas others assume the risk

9
Illinois v. Rodriguez (1990)
  • Would the facts available to the officer at the
    moment warrant a person of reasonable caution in
    the belief that the consenting party had
    authority over the premises? (Apparent
    authority)
  • The reasonableness requirement demands not that
    police always be correct, but reasonable

10
Florida v. Jimeno (1991)
  • Scope of consent search is measured by what a
    typical, reasonable person would have understood
    by the exchange
  • Scope is defined by its espressed object

11
Race and the Fourth Amendment
  • Disparate impact of law enforcement on minorities
  • Intentional or conscious racial discrimination
  • Institutional racism (profiling)
  • Classism

12
Next time
  • Terrorism, Surveillance, etc. 461-507
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com