Issue One: Fourth Amendment Applicability Flashcards
Four Key questions to Consider whether the fourth amendment governs the search and seizure
- Was the search or sezirue exectued by government agent
- was the search of an a area or item protected by the fourth amendment
- did a government agent (a) physically intrude on a protected area or item to obtain information; or (b) violate an individual’s reasonable expectation of privacy in a protected area or item?
- Did the individual subjected to the search or seizure have standing to chanllenge the govenrment agent’s conduct
Was search conducted by a government agent
If Yes, then move onto question 2.
Categories of Government Agent:
- Publicly paid police, on or off duty
- Private citizens if they are acting at the direction of the police
- Private security guards only if htey are deputized with power to arrest (campus security at public univiersities)
- Public school administrators
Was the search of a protected area or item?
- **Protected Areas **
- Persons
- Houses (includes hotel rooms)
- includes the curtilage which is the area adjacent to the home to hwich the activity of home life extends
- Papers (correspondeance) AND
- Effects
Unprotected Items
Sufficiently public b/c they have knowing exposure to third parties.
PAAGVOHO
- Paint scapings on the outside of your car
- Account records held by a bank
- Airspace–anything that can be seen below when flying in public airspace
- Garbage left at curb for collection
- Sound of your Voice
- Odors such as those that emanate from your car or luggage (drug sniffing dogs)
- handwriting
- open fields/anything that can be seen in them
did a government agent (a) physically intrude on a protected area or item to obtain information; or (b) violate an individual’s reasonable expectation of privacy in a protected area or item?
Two ways:
- Agent physicall intruded on a constitutionally protected area in order to obtain information (e.g. putting a GPS tracker on car) OR
- Violates an indviduals reasonable expection of privacy. Must show:
- an actual or subjective expection of privacy in the area searched or items seized: AND
- the privacy expectionat was one that society recognizes as reasonable
- police search presumptively unreasonabe when uses a device that is not in public use to explore details of the home that officers could not have known without phys intrusion (thermal imaging device)
Did the individual subjected to the search or seizure have standing to chanllenge the govenrment agent’s conduct
TO have authority or standing, an individuals personal privacy rights must be invaded. NOT A THIRD PARTY
- Always:
- if they own the premises
- if they reside in the premises
- overnight guests in areas that can be expected to access
- Never
- using someone elses area solely for business purposes
- searches of a car when you are a passenger
- Sometimes
- owned property that resides in an area with a reasoanble epxection of privacy