The Fourth Amendment Original Understandings and Modern Policing
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: University of Michigan Press 2023Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (430 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780472056330
- 9780472076338
- Society and Social Sciences
- Politics and government
- Political control and freedoms
- Human rights, civil rights
- Law
- Jurisprudence and general issues
- Laws of specific jurisdictions and specific areas of law
- Constitutional and administrative law: general
- Local government law
- Anti-Federalists
- Automobile Inventory Searches
- Bill of Rights
- Black Codes
- Common Law
- Convict Leasing
- Democratic Policing
- Excessive Force
- Federalism
- Fourteenth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- George Mason
- Implied-Consent Laws
- Incorporation
- J Society and Social Sciences
- JP Politics and government
- JPV Political control and freedoms
- JPVH Human rights
- Jacob Howard
- John Bingham
- Judiciary Act of 1789
- Justice of the Peace Manuals
- L Law
- LA Jurisprudence and general issues
- LN Laws of specific jurisdictions and specific areas of law
- LND Constitutional and administrative law
- LNDU Local government law
- Melancton Smith
- Militia Act of 1792
- Nondelegation
- Original Public Meaning
- Original Understanding
- Originalist
- Patrick Henry
- Police Violence
- Policing
- Privileges or Immunities Clause
- Probable Cause
- Reasonable Expectation of Privacy
- Reconstruction
- Reverse Incorporation
- Search Warrants
- Search and Seizure
- Sobriety Checkpoints
- Special Needs Doctrine
- States Rights
- Stop and Frisk
- Supreme Court
- Terry Stops
- Townshend Act
- Traffic Stops
- Tresp
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
Police are required to obey the law. While that seems obvious, courts have lost track of that requirement due to misinterpreting the two constitutional provisions governing police conduct: the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Fourth Amendment forbids ""unreasonable searches and seizures"" and is the source of most constitutional constraints on policing. Although that provision technically applies only to the federal government, the Fourteenth Amendment, ratified in the wake of the Civil War, has been deemed to apply the Fourth Amendment to the States. This book contends that the courts' misinterpretation of these provisions has led them to hold federal and state law enforcement mistakenly to the same constitutional standards. The Fourth Amendment was originally understood as a federalism, or "states' rights," provision that, in effect, required federal agents to adhere to state law when searching or seizing. Thus, applying the same constraint to the States is impossible. Instead, the Fourteenth Amendment was originally understood in part as requiring that state officials (1) adhere to state law, (2) not discriminate, and (3) not be granted excessive discretion by legislators. These principles should guide judicial review of modern policing. Instead, constitutional constraints on policing are too strict and too forgiving at the same time. In this book, Michael J.Z. Mannheimer calls for a reimagination of what modern policing could look like based on the original understandings of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments.
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eng
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