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Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights

Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights. Reference Chapter 20. Due Process Freedom and Security of the Person Rights of the Accused Punishment. Due Process. essentially , the government must act fairly and lawfully Court has determined its meaning case by case.

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Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights

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  1. Civil Liberties: Protecting Individual Rights Reference Chapter 20

  2. Due Process • Freedom and Security of the Person • Rights of the Accused • Punishment

  3. Due Process • essentially, the government must act fairly and lawfully • Court has determined its meaning case by case. • 14th Amendment means that due process guarantees must apply to state, local governments and any administrative action

  4. procedural how the government acts Rochin v. California 1952 substantive the laws must be fair Pierce v. Society of Sisters 1925 Due Process

  5. 10th Amendment reserves this power to the states limits on alcohol, tobacco pollution laws vaccinations • Police Power: • to protect and promote • public health • public safety • morals • general welfare concealed weapons seat belt laws DUIs gambling pornography prostitution compulsory education Medicaid PUC regulation Police Power cannot violate Due process Clause of 5th/14th amendment

  6. Right to Privacy • Stanley v.Georgia 1969 —the right to be let alone • Griswold v. Connecticut 1965 – can’t prohibit birth control counseling and the use of contraceptives

  7. Right to Privacy • Roe v. Wade 1973 – abortion • 1st – no restriction • 2nd – reasonable regulations • 3rd – can prohibit all but medically necessary • Planned Parenthood v. Casey 1992 – • women must receive counseling to persuade her against abortion • must wait at least 24 hours after counseling • unmarried minor must have parental or judicial consent • doctors and clinics must keep detailed records. • does not place “ a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion…”

  8. Freedom of Security –Home and Person • 4th Amendment – Warrants and Probable Cause • no general right to search or seize without a warrant • exceptions • “plain view” • “informational roadblocks and DUIs” • after a person is arrested • “common sense” grounds—suspect flight • public place arrests with probable cause

  9. 4th Amendment – Warrants and Probable Cause • Automobiles • “moveable scene of the crime” • California v. Acevedo 1991 • When it’s a lawful stop AND the police have probable cause, police do not need a warrant to search anything in the car.

  10. 4th Amendment – Warrants and Probable Cause • Exclusionary Rule • Can’t be convicted with illegally acquired evidence Mapp v. Ohio 1961 • Exceptions • “inevitable discovery” • “good faith” • “honest mistakes”

  11. 4th Amendment – Warrants and Probable Cause • Drug-testing • employment • sports/extracurricular activity • Wiretapping • with a warrant • Katz v. United States 1967 (phone booth) • entitled to private conversation • NSA electronic surveillance program

  12. Rights of the Accused • Writs of Habeas Corpus • No bills of attainder, ex post facto laws • Federal Grand Jury for serious crimes • No double jeopardy

  13. Rights of the Accused • Speedy and Public Trial • but not too speedy or too public • 45 minute murder trial w/hostile audience • tv in the courtroom

  14. Rights of the Accused • Trial by Jury • defendant may ask for a “change of venue” • defendant may decline-bench trial • juries may vary in size (6-12) • may not require a unanimous decision • no one may be excluded from jury duty based on gender, race, color, national origin or religion

  15. Rights of the Accused • Right to Counsel/No self-incrimination • Escobedo v. Illinois 1964 • Gideon v. Wainwright 1963 • Miranda v. Arizona 1966

  16. Escobedo v. Illinois 1964 SC overturns

  17. Miranda v. Arizona

  18. Punishment • Bail • no automatic entitlement to bail • justification for bail • shouldn’t be jailed until proven guilty • better able to prepare for trial • can’t be set at what is higher than what will reasonable assure that the defendant will appear. Stack v. Boyle 1951

  19. Preventive Detention • 1984 Congressional action • judge can order “preventive detention” for someone who might commit another serious crime before trial. • Supreme Court upheld the decision in 1987

  20. Yes burning @ stake crucifixion drawing & quartering excessive force deprivation denationalization Such punishment as would amount to torture or barbarity, any cruel and degrading punishment not known to the Common Law, or any fine, penalty, confinement, or treatment that is so disproportionate to the offense as to shock the moral sense of the community. No firing squad electrocution twice lethal injection hanging 3 Strikes Laws Cruel and Unusual Punishment?

  21. Capital Punishment—Death Penalty • 1972 – Court struck down state death penalties because they were capriciously and/or randomly applied. • State response • Mandatory sentence –unconstitutional • 2-step procedure to apply the death sentence • trial conviction • sentencing trial

  22. Capital Punishment—Death Penalty • 2-stage laws are OK • crime must result in death of victim • can’t be applied to the mentally challenged • can’t be applied to those under 18 at the time of the crime • must be decided by the jury that convicted • defendant can’t be manacled at dp hearing

  23. p. 523 in text

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