CHAP 14, SEC 3 Rights of the Accused. I. Searches and Seizures A. Fourth Amendment B. Probable Cause C. Felony Cases Payton v. New York Florida v. J.L.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 14. This ensures citizens fair treatment under the law.
Advertisements

Chapter 14, Section 3 THE RIGHTS OF THE ACCUSED
Bill of Rights the first 10 amendments
Gitlow vs. New York Background Information  Gitlow v. New York was a Supreme Court decision which ruled that the Fourteenth Amendment had extended.
Civil Liberties: Due Process Rights of Accused Persons.
Cases and Terms – Chapter 8 – Rights of the Accused Module 8 Amendments 4 -7.
Miranda v. Arizona. First Amendment [Religion, Speech, Press, Assembly, Petition] Second Amendment [Right to Bear Arms] Third Amendment [Quartering of.
AP GOVERNMENT COOKBOOK Unit VI: Civil Rights and Liberties.
15.3 The American Legal System
CIVIL LIBERTIES. THE POLITICS OF CIVIL LIBERTIES Civil liberties: protections the Constitution provides individuals against the abuse of government power.
1 Disclosing and Suppressing Evidence Chapter 12.
Objective 29L Analyze he rights of the accused as set forth in the 4 th,5 th,6 th,8 th, and 14 th Amendments, including but no limited to such cases as.
Civil Liberties. The Politics of Civil Liberties Civil liberties: protections the Constitution provides against the abuse of government power State ratifying.
Winning, until proven guilty …. Searches and Seizures The Fourth Amendment protects from unreasonable searches and seizures Searches must be conducted.
Objective 29l-Analyze the rights of the accused Kelsey McLaughlin and Kelsey Bois Kelsey McLaughlin and Kelsey Bois.
Rights of the Accused Chapter 5, Theme D. Incorporation  Until the Warren Court of the 1960s, most rights of accused found in BOR only applied to the.
The Rights of Individuals Analyze court cases that demonstrate how the U.S. constitution and the bill of rights protect the rights of individuals.
Last Unit: Due Process Everyone must be treated fairly under the law Substantive Due Process – “The What” –Laws must be fair Procedural Due Process – “The.
Rights of the Accused and the Imprisoned Unit 6: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights, Lesson 4 What is the appropriate balance between protecting due process.
Korematsu Writ of Habeas Corpus Executive Order 5 th amendment due process.
Writ of Certiorari-petition filed with the Supreme Court to request a review of a case. Rule of 4 Conference-Full Consideration Oral Arguments: Lawyers.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4  4 th -8 th Amendments Edwards, Wattenberg,
Civil Liberties. In the Bill of Rights, find the following: The right to join the communist party The right to make fun of the president The right to.
Rights of the Accused 4 th, 5 th, 6 th and 8 th Amendments to the Constitution.
Gitlow v. New York – incorporated the first amendment to the states Tinker v. Des Moines – students do have symbolic speech rights in school unless speech.
Rights of Criminal Defendants Are the due process rights and the procedural guarantees provided by the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Eighth Amendments.
THE 4 TH AMENDMENT The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall.
Crime and Due Process. There is always a question as to how we should deal with “improper evidence” in the courtroom; different nations approach the question.
Police and the Constitution: The Rules of Law Enforcement.
How have the decisions of the Supreme Court protected people accused of crimes? What rights are accused people guaranteed? Landmark Supreme Court Cases.
Rights of Criminal Defendants
The following Supreme Court Cases were used to interpret the 4 th Amendment 39.Weeks v. U.S., Mapp v. Ohio, Payton v. New York, Florida.
AP U.S. GOVERNMENT & POLITICS – Civil Liberties Civil Liberties part 3.
Essential Question How does the Constitution protect the rights of the accused?
BELLWORK What are the three types of crime? (Page 430)
Aim: How are defendants’ rights part of Civil Liberties? Chap 4, Day 4 Do Now: PAIR/SHARE 1.Put the following actions in chronological order. trial, prosecution,
How have the decisions of the Supreme Court protected people accused of crimes? What rights are accused people guaranteed? Landmark Supreme Court Cases.
How have the courts expanded due process rights?.
“Ryan Rose, you are under arrest!” What rights do you have? Look it up.
DUE PROCESS. Procedural Due Process v. Substantive Due Process Procedural follows a set procedure, the same for all the accused Such as counsel, unreasonable.
Rights to Life, Liberty, & Property  Property Rights Contract Clause Police Powers- “health, safety, and welfare” Eminent Domain & the Takings Clause.
Defendants’ Rights Characterize defendants’ rights and identify issues that arise in their implementation.
Rights of Criminal Defendants The 4 th, 5 th, and 6 th Amendments.
Civil Liberties and Civil Rights
Civil Liberties in the Criminal Justice System
Civil Liberties.
Civil Liberties.
Crime and Due Process There is always a question as to how we should deal with “improper evidence” in the courtroom; different nations approach the question.
Due Process Activity Complete both sides of the paper you were given when you came in.
CHAPTER 20: INDIVIDUAL FREEDOMS
Rights of Criminal Suspects
Right to Bear Arms: Second Amendment
Civil Liberties.
Constitutional Right to a Fair Trial
US Bill of Rights USH-1.5.
DUE PROCESS.
Rights of the Accused Amendments 4, 5, 6, 8.
15.3 The American Legal System
Agenda- 1/25 Grab a chrome book and the worksheets!
2.2 Civil Liberties 4th 5th, 6th, and 8th Amendments.
Chapter 5 Policing: Legal Aspects
FOURTH AMENDMENT “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures,
Modern Issues in the U.S. Agenda:
Critical Thinking Question
Warm Up – February 12 Answer the following questions on a post it:
Civics & Economics – Goals 5 & 6 The us legal system
Defendants’ Rights Edgenuity Lessons 3.4 and 3.5.
Civil Liberties & Civil Rights
Do Now: a) Finish up Rights Movement Packet b) Earl Warren Background
DUE PROCESS.
Presentation transcript:

CHAP 14, SEC 3 Rights of the Accused

I. Searches and Seizures A. Fourth Amendment B. Probable Cause C. Felony Cases Payton v. New York Florida v. J.L. Whren v. United States Atwater v. City of Lago Vista

II. The Exclusionary Rule Weeks v. United States Mapp v. Ohio United States v. Leon Nix v. Williams III. Fourth Amendment in High Schools New Jersey v. T.L.O. Verononia School District v Acton

Wiretapping and Electronic Eavesdropping Violation of Fourth Amendment-Search and Seizure Olmstead v. United States Katz v. United States

IV. Guarantee of Counsel A. Sixth Amendment B. Powell v. Alabama C. Betts v. Brady D. Gideon v Wainwright

V. Self Incrimination A. Fifth Amendment B. Escobedo v. Illinois C. Miranda v Arizona

VIDouble Jeopardy A. Fifth Amendment B. Hudson v. United States VII. Cruel and Unusual Punishment A. Eighth Amendment B. Rhodes v. Chapman C. Furman v. Georgia D. Woodson v. North Carolina E. Gregg v. Georgia