Memorization
Consent I
Consent II
Administrative I
Administrative II
100

Recite the Fourth Amendment

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.

100

Schneckloth v Bustamonte

Consent to a search must not be coercive by explicit or implicit threats of force.  Police need not tell the person that they can refuse consent.  Voluntariness is determined by the totality of the circumstances.

100

Georgia v. Randolph

If one spouse consents to home search but the other objects, police must get a warrant (only if both are present).

100

Michigan v. Clifford

An administrative warrant is needed for secondary arson searches (similar to Mincy v. Arizona).

100

Delaware v. Prouse

Checkpoint for general auto inspection for routine matters is not allowed.

200

Recite the Justices of the Indiana Supreme Court

Goff, Rush, Massa, Slaughter, and David

200

Factors which might deem consent improper (6).

1.  Persistent Questioning (in IN need Pyrtle rights)

2.  Aggressive claim of authority

3.  Threat of Incarceration

4.  Mental / Emotional state of the person / person in hospital

5.  If person is placed in police custody

6.  Deception / trickery

200

Fernandez v. California

If spouse objects but is then arrested on other charges and the remaining spouse now consents, the search is proper.

200

Rules (4) and Types (3) for safety inspections.

Rules:  1)  Allows limited invasion to accomplish its purpose;  2)  Regulatory scheme must have a substantial interest;  3)  Must be Necessary;  4)  Reasonable inspection


Types:  Fire, Housing, and Health

200

TLO

Search of student lockers and students is ok.

300

Recite the Justices of SCOTUS

Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, Kagan, Roberts, Alito, Thomas, Gorsuch

300

Bumper v. North Carolina

Faking a search warrant is improper to gain consent.

300

Bus Cases (3)

Bond; Drayton; Florida v. Bostick

300

Michigan v. Sitz

Allows checkpoints for alcohol.  Court holds intrusion is slight; limited discretion; guidelines for checkpoints; government need to curb drunk driving.

300

Board of Education v. Earls

Drug testing permissible for students in extracurricular activities.  Don't forget to mention policy of the need to curtail drug epidemic.

400

What is the standard for measuring the totality of consent?

"What would the typical reasonable person have understood by the exchange between the officer and the suspect."

400

Pyrtle v. State

Persistent questioning by police officer in Indiana to gain consent is improper.  Must advise of Miranda rights and right to refuse consent.

400
McNeely and Birchfield cases

Implied consent laws for breathalyzers are ok, but blood draws are not automatically ok.

400

Indianapolis v. Edmunds

Checkpoint to look for drugs held unconstitutional.  Primary purpose of checkpoint was to detect evidence of ordinary criminal behavior.

400

Norris v. Premier

Ok to have direct observation of urine testing.

500

Quon v. Ontario, California

Search based on data overages of pagers between two SWAT team members is ok.

500

Illinois v. Rodriguez

Third party can grant consent to search as long as actual and apparent authority exists.

500

Can a parent who rents a room to their grown son consent to a search of that room while their son is away?

No.  Parents can consent to a search of a child's room, but once the son begins paying for that room, this is more of a landlord-tenant relationship and the search will not be permitted.
500

Illinois v. Lidster

Roadblock ok for police to ask motorists questions about a prior accident at that location the day before.  Brief; minimal stop; public concern.

500

Chandler v. Miller

Drug testing is not ok for politicians.

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