Issue 3: Search and Seizure Flashcards
Is the warantless search through which the criminal evidence was gathered valid under any of the eight exceptions to the warrant requirement?
ESCAPIST
- Exigent circumstances
- Search incident to arrest
- Consent
- Automobile
- Plain view
- Inventory
- Special Needs
- Terry stop and frisk
Exigent Circumstances
- Evanescent Evidence: evenidence that would disspiate or disappear in the time it would take to get a warrant.
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Hot Pursuit of a Fleeing Felon:
- hot pursuit allows police to enter a suspects home or that of a third party to search for a fleeing felon
- During hot pursit, any evidence of a crime discovered in plain view while searching for the suspect is admissible
- Emergency Aid Exceptoin: Police may eneter a residence without a warrant when there is an objectively reasaonble basis for believe that a person inside is in need of emergency aid to address or prevent injury
Search Incident to Arrest
- Arrest must be lawful
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Justifications:
- officer safety AND
- the need to preserve evidence
- Timing: search msut be contemporenous in time and place with the arrest
- Geographic scope: the wingspan, which includes the body, clothing and any continaers within the arrestee’s immediate control without regard to the offense for which the arrest was made
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Automobiles searched incident to a custodial arrest:
- Permissible scope–the interior, including closed contianers, but not the trank.
- Secured versus unsecured arrestees: Once an officer has secured an arrestte, the officr can search the arrestee’s vehicle only if she has a reasonbe to believe the vehicle may contain evidence relating to the creim for which the arrest was amde.
Consent
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Standard: consent must be voluntary and intelligible.
- do not need to tell somone that she has the right to refuse consent.
- Scope: an officer’s consent to search extends to all areas for which a reasonable officer would believe permission to search was granted.
- Apparent Authoirty: if a police officer obtains consent to search from sone who lacks actual authoirty to grant it, the cosent is still valid provided the officer reasonably believed the consent party has actual authority
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Shared Premises: when adults share a residence, any resident can consent to a serach of common ares within it
- if co-tenants disagree regarding consetn to search common areas, the objective party prevails, as to areas over which they share dominion and control
Automobile Exception
- Justification: vehicles’s are readily mobile and individuals lesser expectation of privacy in vehicles
- standard: police officers need probable cause to believe that contrabnd or evidence of crime will be found in a vehicle
- Where can they search: the entire vehicale AND they may open any package luggage that may reasonable contain the items for which there was probable cause to search.
- Traffic Stops and Auto Searches: sometimes what begins as a routine traffic stop results in searches. For it to be lawful, officer does not need probable cause to search the vehical at the time the car is pulled over povided he acquires it before initating the search.–Sequence of events matter.
Plain View
Three requirements for seizing an item in plain view:
- lawful acess to the place from which the item can be seen
- lawful access to the item itself AND
- Criminality of the item must be *immediately apparent *
Inventory Searches
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Most common occurrence:
- 1) arrestees: when they are booked into jail
- 2) vehicles: when they are impounded
- **Constitutional provided that: **
- regulations governing them are reasonable in scope
- the search itself complies with those regulations AND
- the search is conducted in good faith, that is, it is motviated solely by the need to safeguard the owner’s possessions and or to ensure officer safety
Special Needs
special needs of law enforcement, governmental employers and school officials beyond a general interest in law enforcement.
- Drug testing
- parolees
- school searches
- border searchers
- non-law-enforcement primary purpose
Special Needs: Drug Testing
approved warrantless, supscionless durg tests in various circumstances including:
- Railroad employees follwing an impact accident
- custom agents responsible for drug interdiction
- students who participate in any extracurricular activity
Special Needs: Parolees
warrantless, suspicionless searches of a parolee and his effects are permissible as a condition of parole
Special Needs: School Searches
- warantless searches of the person and the effects of public schoolchildren are permissible to investigate violations of school rules such as the prohibition of somking on school grounds, provided the search is
- reasonable at its inception and
- is not excessively intrusive in light of the agen and sex of the student and the nature of the infraction
Special Needs: Border searches
neither citizens nor non-citizens have any 4th Amendment rights at the border with respect to routine saerches of persons and effects
Special Needs: non-law-enforcement primary purpose test
the special needs doctrine does not include law enforcement programs or practices whose primary purpose is to gather criminal evidence for general use by law enforcement
Terry Stops: What is a Terry STop?
- a brief detention or seizure for the purpose of investigating suspicous conduct.
- can take place anywhere (on the street, in a car, in an airport concourse, or on a bus)
Terry Stops: WHen are you seized for 4th Amendment purposes
- an individuals is seized based on
- a totality of the circumstances,
- a resaonble prson would not feel free to leave OR
- to decline an officers reuqest to answer questions
- Consider
- whether an officer brandishes a weapon
- the officer’s tone and demeanor when interacting with the stopped person
- whether the invidiual was told she had the right to refuse consent