Vocabulary #1
Vocabulary #2
Amendments
Court Cases
Scenario
100

The physical location where a crime occurred or where evidence related to a crime is found.

Crime Scene

100

Taking a person into custody, in a case and in the manner authorized by law, to answer for a crime.

Arrest

100

Protects citizens from unreasonable search and seizure.

4th amendment

100


Established that school officials only need "reasonable suspicion" (not probable cause) to search students on school grounds.


New Jersey v. T.L.O.

100

A cop is patrolling a bad neighborhood and sees someone looking through windows and pacing back and forth. The building is clearly locked. RS or PC?

RS

200

A specialist responsible for processing a scene: documenting, collecting, and preserving physical evidence.

Crime-Scene Investigator

200

A set of facts and circumstances that would induce a reasonably intelligent person to believe a specific person has committed a crime.

Probable Cause

200

Right to a fair and speedy trial in the U.S.

6th amendment

200

Determined that interrogation cannot involve sophisticated trickery or manipulation

Arizona v. Fulminante

200

During a domestic call, a suspect grabs a baseball bat and swings it at the officer's head. Which use of force is an acceptable reaction by the cop?

4. Less lethal (taser, spray)

300

The process of legally gathering evidence of a crime that has been or is being committed.

Criminal Investigation

300

Allows officers to seize evidence without a warrant if it is in plain view and they are legally in a position to see it.

Plain-View Doctrine

300

Grants citizenship to anyone born on U.S. soil and provides rights of U.S. citizens to have due process

14th amendment

300

Physical abuse cannot be used to obtain a confession or elicit information from a suspect

Brown v. Mississippi

300

A student in school comes up to a teacher and notifies them they saw Brendan with a vape and that he stuck it in his bag. Though the teacher's did not see this happen, can they search Brendan?

Yes, they have reasonable suspicion. The bar for searching is lower in school.

400

The initial inquiry by the first officer at the scene to establish if a crime occurred and identify witnesses/suspects.

Preliminary Investigation

400

A legal doctrine that excludes evidence from trial if it was gained through an illegal search or interrogation.

Fruit of the Poisonous Tree

400

This term in the 5th amendment explains how someone cannot be tried twice for the same crime. (2 words)

Double Jeopardy

400

1990 case. Ruled that once a suspect requests counsel, interrogation must cease and cannot resume without an attorney present.

Minnick v. Mississippi

400

A person ran a red light. They started giving the officer a hard time and eventually began swinging at the officer. They begin to get arrested. Can they search the person and can they search their car without a warrant? I am looking for both answers. 

person getting arrested yes, car = no

500

A low ____________ of a crime means that the crime has little chance to be solved. Perhaps the bodies were found too late, the person may have escaped, the police force has little resources, etc. 

Solvability Factor

500

A legal concept where the government’s interest (like public safety) outweighs an individual's constitutional rights.

Compelling Interest

500

Protects citizens' right to remain silent during and arrest and to have their rights read during arrest. Provide the amendment # AND the name of the warning that is read to the person being arrested.

5th amendment & Miranda Warning/Rights

500

Ruled that confessions obtained through prolonged mental coercion and sleep deprivation are inadmissible.

Ashcraft v. Tennessee

500

What can the police do to someone when they have reasonable suspicion? I am looking for 2 things cops can do and 1 they CANNOT.

Talk to them and/or stop and frisk. They CANNOT conduct a search.

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