CrimP 3 - 4A Ev search and seizure Flashcards
FOURTH AMENDMENT—EVIDENTIARY SEARCH AND SEIZURE
Like arrests, evidentiary searches and seizures must be reasonable to be valid under the Fourth Amendment, but here reasonableness requires a warrant except in six circumstances.
Evidentiary search and seizure issues should be approached using the following analytical model:
Evidentiary search and seizure issues should be approached using the following analyt- ical model:
• Does the defendant have a Fourth Amendment right (seizure by the government concerning a place or thing in which defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy) or does the search involve a physical intrusion into a constitutionally protected area?
• Did the police officers have a valid warrant (issued by a neutral and detached magistrate on a showing of proba- ble cause and reasonably precise as to the place to be searched and items to be seized)?
• If the police officers did not have a valid warrant, was the search or seizure within one of the six exceptions to the warrant requirement?
ANALYSIS: Evidentiary search and seizure issues should be approached using the following analyt- ical model:
- is there governmental conduct?
- Is there standing
- Is there a valid warrant? TWO Ps for a valid warrant.
- If no warrant, or warrant invalid…. - Are there exceptions to the warrant requirement.
fifth amendment right to counsel, sixth amendment right to counsel
Step 1: Governmental Conduct
- Police officers
- Government agents
- Private individuals acting at direction of police***: Police ask roommate to search your room, he is acting at the direction of the police.
BUT, does not protect against privaetly paid police unless they are deputized and have power to arrest (campus security, mall cops).
GOVERNMENTAL CONDUCT
The Fourth Amendment generally protects only against governmental conduct (that is, police officers, other government agents, or private individuals acting at the direction of the public police).
It does not protect against searches by privately paid police unless they are deputized as officers of the public police.
Examples of privately paid police include store security guards, subdivision police, and campus police.
Step 2: Standing
Standing = Reasonable expectaion of privacy with resepct to place searched or item seized. = standing.
Determined under totality of circumstances.
Standing
A person must have standing to object to a governmental search.
To have a Fourth Amendment right, a person must have their own reasonable expectation of privacy with respect to the place searched or the item seized.
The determination is made on the totality of the circumstances, but a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy any time:
• The person owned or had a right to possession of the place searched
• The place searched was in fact their home, whether or not they owned or had a right to possession of it (for example, a grandchild living at a grandparent’s home); or
• The person was an overnight guest of the owner of the place searched
There is an important “sometimes” category of standing: The person owns the property seized. If a person owns the property seized, they have standing only if they have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the item or area searched.
REASONABLE EXPECTATION OF PRIVACY
There are two ways in which searches and seizures can implicate an individual’s Fourth Amendment rights:
(1) search or seizure by a government agent of a constitutionally protected area in which the individual had a reasonable expectation of privacy; or
(2) physical intrusion by the government into a constitutionally protected area to obtain information.
Automatic standing: When person has reasonable expectation of privacy
- Person owned or had right to possess place searched
- Place searched is person’s home
- Person is overnight guest of owner.
Important “sometimes” category of stanidng:
The person owns the the property seized. If a person owns the property seized, they have standing ONLY if they have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the item or area searched.
No reasonable expecation of privacy in something that you tried to throw away.
If u try to get rid of something, u lose your exp of privacy
Objects held in pulbic
A person does not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in objects held out to the public.
Generally, this includes information in the hands of third parties (such as bank account records).
BUT, a person does have REP in cell-site location information (personal location info from cell-site location info) which is stored in the hands of third parties - the cops need a warrant for this.
List of things held out to the public, the seizure of which implicates NO right to privacy
List of things held out to the public, the seizure of which implicates no right to privacy:
1. The sound of your voice
2. the style of your handwriting
3. The paint on the outside of your car
4. Account records held by a bank
5. The location of your car on a public street or in a driveway
• In Jones, the installation of a GPS device on a suspects car constitutews a search within the fourth amendment.
•• BUT, tailing you is fine.
6. Anything that can be seen across the open field.
7. Anything that can be seen from flying over public airspace.
8. The ODORS emanating from your luggage or car; AND
9. GARBAGE set out on the CURB for collection. BUT, garbage still against the house is NOT ALLOWED.
Note; use of sense-enhancing tech that is NOT in public use to obtain info from inside suspects home (thermal imager) that could not otherwise by obtained without physical intrustion violates the usspects leg expectation of privacy.
And police officers may not covertly and trespassorily place a GPS tracking device on a person’s automobile without a warrant.
Step 3: Valid search warrant.
2 P’s of Step 3:
There are two core requirements for a facially valid search warrant: probable cause and particularity.
2 Ps of Step 3:
- PROBABLE CAUSE
- PARTICULARITY
SEARCHES CONDUCTED PURSUANT TO A WARRANT
Generally, criminal law enforcement officers must have a warrant to conduct a search unless it falls within one of the six exceptions to the warrant requirement.
There are two core requirements for a facially valid search warrant: probable cause and particularity.