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"Search and Seizure" and the Fourth Amendment
The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects personal privacy, and every citizen's right to be free from unreasonable government intrusion into their persons, homes, businesses, and property -- whether through police stops of citizens on the street, arrests, or searches of homes and businesses. Lawmakers and the courts have put in place legal safeguards to ensure that law enforcement officers interfere with individuals' Fourth Amendment rights only under limited circumstances, and through specific methods.
What Does the Fourth Amendment Protect?
In the criminal law realm, Fourth Amendment "search and seizure" protections extend to:
- A law enforcement officer's physical apprehension or "seizure" of a person, by way of a stop or arrest; and
- Police searches of places and items in which an individual has a legitimate expectation of privacy -- his or her person, clothing, purse, luggage, vehicle, house, apartment, hotel room, and place of business, to name a few examples.
The Fourth Amendment provides safeguards to individuals during searches and detentions, and prevents unlawfully seized items from being used as evidence in criminal cases. The degree of protection available in a particular case depends on the nature of the detention or arrest, the characteristics of the place searched, and the circumstances under which the search takes place.
When Does the Fourth Amendment Apply?
The legal standards derived from the Fourth Amendment provide constitutional protection to individuals in the following situations, among others:
- An individual is stopped for police questioning while walking down the street.
- An individual is pulled over for a minor traffic infraction, and the police officer searches the vehicle's trunk.
- An individual is arrested.
- Police officers enter an individual's house to place him or her under arrest.
- Police officers enter an individual's apartment to search for evidence of crime.
- Police officers enter a corporation's place of business to search for evidence of crime.
- Police officers confiscate an individual's vehicle or personal property and place it under police control.
FAQs
- What about the Fourth Amendment?
- I'm not a hacker, but what if I accidentally find myself on a computer site I have no business being on?
- May the police search me without a warrant?
- How does the criminal justice system work?
- If a judge or a jury convicts me, how and when will the court sentence me?
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