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The Bill of Rights and the 14 th amendment

The Bill of Rights and the 14 th amendment. What you should understand about their relationship…. Rights in the Constitution. No titles of nobility Trial by Jury (Article III) No ex post facto laws (Article I, Section 9) No suspension of writ of habeas corpus (Article I, Section 9)

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The Bill of Rights and the 14 th amendment

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  1. The Bill of Rights and the 14th amendment What you should understand about their relationship…

  2. Rights in the Constitution • No titles of nobility • Trial by Jury (Article III) • No ex post facto laws (Article I, Section 9) • No suspension of writ of habeas corpus (Article I, Section 9) • No bills of attainder • Protection of citizens as they travel or move state to state (Privileges and Immunities Clause) • Republican Form of Government • No religious test for holding of office

  3. The Bill of Rights • Introduced at the first Congress – 12 amendments but only 10 passed • Intent: protect citizens from the actions of the NATIONAL government • 1833: Barron v. Baltimore – the Supreme Court rules that the states do NOT have to abide by the Bill of Rights

  4. 14th Amendment’s Role • 1868: 14th Amendment added to the Constitution – rely on Due Process Clause • 1925: Gitlow v. New York – started the trend of “Selective Incorporation” or Nationalization of the Bill of Rights

  5. Selective Incorporation • Case by case determination by the Supreme Court whether or not a right should be protected by the states and national government • That is why you might find 1st amendment and 14th amendment • Palko v. Connecticut – what is a fundamental right for the person involved? Should be incorporated for fairness value?

  6. Rights NOT incorporated • 2nd amendment – right to bear arms • 3rd amendment – quartering of troops • 5th amendment – grand jury indictments NOT required for all criminal cases in the states • 7th amendment – civil trial by jury – changed the dollar amount required • 9th amendment – privacy • 10th amendment – powers reserved to the states

  7. Right to Privacy • Not directly stated in the Constitution, but there are Zones of Privacy found • 1st – freedom of association, expression, thought • 3rd – homes • 4th – homes • 5th – self incrimination • 9th – any unenumerated rights are granted • 14th – due process clause incorporates the rights into the states

  8. Right to Privacy • Griswold v. Connecticut – first case to test the 9thamendment • Birth control issue • Right to be free from government surveillance and intrusion • Right not to have private matters made public • Free in thoughts and beliefs • Eisenstadt v. Baird – also involved the 14th amendment’s equal protection clause • Birth control for unmarried couples

  9. Abortion issue • Roe v. Wade – 1973 – class action lawsuit – abortions are legal and unrestricted to the third trimester – started the trimester test • Planned Parenthood v. Casey -1992- reaffirmed ROE, prior to viability only reasonable regulations • Stenberg v. Carhart – 2000 – ban on partial birth abortions ruled unconstitutional due to “undue burden on the female” • Some regulations include – parental notification, permission, waiting period, counseling, hospitals for specific abortions, etc.

  10. Privacy and Sexual Orientation • Bowers v. Hardwick – 1986 – anti sodomy laws ruled constitutional – there was no discrimination involved • Baker v. Vermont, Powell v. Georgia and Kentucky v. Wasson – rights of civil unions • Boy Scouts of America v. Dale – private associations may ban at their discretion • Lawrence v. Texas – Anti Sodomy laws are ruled unconstitutional – interference with private matters.

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