4th Amendment: Warrants
4th Amendment: Warrant Exceptions
5th Amendment
Miranda Rights
6th and 8th Amendment
100

The 4th Amendment protects the American people from unreasonable _______ and _______.

Searches and Seizures

100

This exception allows police to search if a person clearly says yes.

Consent

100

This right means you do not have to answer police questions or questions on the witness stand.

Right to Remain Silent

100

The warnings that police must read to you when you are arrested and questioned are named after the landmark case ________v. Arizona.

Miranda

100

This amendment gives you the right to a lawyer.

6th Amendment

200

To be valid, a warrant MUST have the signature of one of these.

A Judge

200

This exception allows police to enter a home without a warrant if they believe someone may be seriously hurt.

Exigent or Emergency Circumstances

200

This right, which is found in 5th Amendment, states that you cannot be charged twice for the same crime.

Double Jeopardy

200

You have the right to remain ______.

Silent

200

This amendment protects you from cruel and unusual punishment.

8th Amendment

300

Warrants need probable cause, an oath, and one other thing to be valid.

Specificity/Particularity/Specific Location

300

This exception allows police to seize illegal items that are left out and they can clearly see without a warrant.

Plain View/Plain Sight

300

This right protects the people from the government taking away their life, liberty, or property without a fair legal proceeding.

Right to Due Process
300

You have the right to speak to a _______. If you cannot afford one, one of these will be provided for you.

Lawyer/Attorney
300

This right, found in the 6th Amendment, makes sure that you receive a trial 6 months after you plead not guilty.

Right to a Speedy Trial

400

This level of suspicion is required before a judge can issue a warrant.

Probable Cause

400

This exception allows officers to search a person and the area they can reach after an arrest.

Search Incident (after) To Arrest

400

True or False: Police can threaten a suspect with harsher charges or punishment to make them stop using their right to remain silent.

False

400

If the police do not read your rights, and you confess during questioning, the court may do this with your confession.

Exclude or throw out

400

This amendment protects you from having bail set unreasonably high.

8th Amendment

500

If police search without a valid warrant or exception, the exclusionary rule allows the court to do this to the evidence.

Exclude or throw out

500

The stop-and-frisk exception allows officers to pat down a suspect if they have this level of belief that the person is dangerous.

Reasonable Suspicion

500

The right to remain silent protects a person from saying something that could make them look guilty. This is called self- ________.

Incrimination

500

The Miranda Warnings contain rights found in these two amendments.

5th and 6th

500

This right allows you to have a group of your peers, not just a judge, decide your case.

Right to a Jury Trial

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