Outlines the critical foundation for: basic requirements for valid warrants, the warrant preference, and unreasonable searches and seizures.
the fourth amendment
The ability to recognize one's own emotions, understand what they're telling the self, and realize how one's own emotions affect people around.
Emotional Intelligence
Who is a juvenile offender?
must be 10 years or more of age, but less than 18:
- commits an act which, if committed by an adult, would constitute the commission of a felony or misdemeanor.
- minor in possession/consumption of alcohol
-performs any act associated with gambling
- while under 18 - unlawfully posses a firearm with a barrel less than 12 inches long.
3 types of lamp examinations to be aware of:
Cold Shock, Hot Shock, and Hot bulb
Personal attitudes and beliefs about a person or group, which are held on a conscious level.
Explicit Biases
Reasonable belief that a specific crime has been committed and that the defendant committed the crime.
Probable cause
Process of identifying and evaluating choices.
Decision- making
Can a juvenile in a "dating relationship" commit domestic battery or aggravated domestic battery?
Yeth.
Newtons Law's of Motion
Law of Inertia, Law of Force, Law of Action and Reaction
Pattern of behaviors, thought, speech, actions, customs, social forms, and traits which are specific to a particular group.
Culture.
Fourth amendment is triggered when government LEOs do three things:
1. Conduct a search or seizure
2. The defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the place search or object seized
3. that expectation is one society is prepared to recognized.
7 steps to the Problem solving process with Critical Thinking
Define the problem. Brainstorm initial ideas for solving the problem. Identify known facts. Identify what you need to know. Develop an action plan. Implement and monitor the plan. Evaluate the process.
When can a juvenile suspect under 14 years of age be interrogated?
After a Miranda warning is given in the presence of a parent/guardian or attorney and after the consult privately amongst themselves.
There are three collisions in all traffic crashes. What are they?
Vehicle collision with another vehicle, animal, or object.
The human collision (occupant collides with objects in the car)
Internal collision (organs colliding with skeletal structure in the body)
Unconscious and frequently unintentional attitudes/beliefs about a person or group.
Implicit Bias
An intrusion by the government into an area someone has a reasonable and legitimate expectation of privacy.
Fourth Amendment search.
Five Characteristics of Emotional Intelligence
Self- awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skills.
Acts or omissions by a parent, guardian, resulting in harm to a child or presenting a likelihood of harm, and the acts or omissions are not due solely to the lack of financial means of the child's parents or other custodian.
Neglect.
Contributing factors in traffic crashes
Education, Environment, Engineering
Four Pillars of Procedural Justice
Voice, Transparency, Fairness, and Impartiality
Curtilage four-part test:
1. Proximity of the area claimed to be curtilage to the home
2. whether the area is included within an enclosure surrounding the home
3. the nature of the uses to which the area is put
4. the steps taken by the resident to protect the area from observation by passerby.
Five aspects of critical thinking.
Dispositions, Criteria, Argument, Reasoning, and Point of View.
An emotional barrier or wall which is used as a defense mechanism to block the undesirable aspects of human life.
Isolation of Affect
Three methods to searching for additional victims and evidence
Spiral, Strip, and Grid patterns
based on the premise that the criminal justice system must consistently demonstrate its legitimacy - that its existence is valid and justified - to the public it serves.
Procedural Justice