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Chapter Four – The Exclusionary Rule

Chapter Four – The Exclusionary Rule. Rolando V. del Carmen. The Exclusionary Rule. The Exclusionary Rule Evidence obtained in violation of Fourth Amendment cannot be used at trial The primary purpose of the exclusionary rule is to deter police misconduct

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Chapter Four – The Exclusionary Rule

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  1. Chapter Four – The Exclusionary Rule Rolando V. del Carmen

  2. The Exclusionary Rule • The Exclusionary Rule • Evidence obtained in violation of Fourth Amendment cannot be used at trial • The primary purpose of the exclusionary rule is to deter police misconduct • What other purpose does the exclusionary rule have?

  3. The Exclusionary Rule • A Judge-Made Rule • Some maintain that the exclusionary rule is Judge-made. • Some argue that the exclusionary rule originates from the Constitution and is beyond the reach of Congress

  4. The Exclusionary Rule • Historical Development • In Federal Courts • U.S. Origin • Silver Platter Doctrine • In State Courts

  5. The Exclusionary Rule • The Exclusionary Rule Applied to State Criminal Prosecutions: Mapp v. Ohio • Significance • Differences from Wolf

  6. The Exclusionary Rule • Procedures for Invoking the Exclusionary Rule • In Pretrial Motions and Motions During the Trial • Motion to Suppress the Evidence • Burden of Proof on the Accused • Burden of Proof on the Prosecutor

  7. The Exclusionary Rule • Procedures for Invoking the Exclusionary Rule • On Appeal • Evidence is admitted • Evidence is excluded

  8. The Exclusionary Rule • Procedures for Invoking the Exclusionary Rule • In Habeas Corpus Proceedings • Seeks release of defendant because of a constitutional rights violation before or during trial

  9. The Exclusionary Rule • Procedures for Invoking the Exclusionary Rule • “Standing” and the Exclusion of Illegally Seized Evidence • What is “standing”? • Exclusionary rule can only be used by the person who’s rights were violated • Minnesota v. Carter (1998)

  10. The Exclusionary Rule • Determining What is Inadmissible • Illegally Seized Evidence • Contraband • Fruits of the crime • Instruments of the crime • “Mere Evidence”

  11. The Exclusionary Rule • Determining What is Inadmissible • Fruit of the Poisonous Tree Illegal Police Act Evidence illegally obtained is inadmissible. Evidence obtained from illegally obtained evidence. This is fruit of the poisonous tree.

  12. The Exclusionary Rule • Exceptions to the Exclusionary Rule • The Good Faith Exceptions • When the Error Was Committed by the Judge or Magistrate, Not by the Police: The Sheppard and Leon Cases • When the Error Was Committed by a Court Employee: Arizona v. Evans • When the Police Erred but Honestly and Reasonably Believed That the Information They Gave to the Magistrate When Obtaining the Warrant Was Accurate: Maryland v. Garrison

  13. The Exclusionary Rule • Exceptions to the Exclusionary Rule • The Inevitable Discovery Exception • Nix v. Williams (1984)

  14. The Exclusionary Rule • Exceptions to the Exclusionary Rule • The Purged Taint Exception • Wong Sun v. United States (1963) • Brown v. Illinois (1975) • Taylor v. Alabama (1982)

  15. The Exclusionary Rule • Exceptions to the Exclusionary Rule • The Independent Source Exception • United States v. Crews (1980) • State v. O’Bremski (1967)

  16. The Exclusionary Rule • Procedures to Which the Rule Does Not Apply • In Private Searches • In Grand Jury Investigations • In Sentencing • In Violations of Agency Rules Only • In Noncriminal Proceedings • In Parole Revocation Hearings

  17. The Exclusionary Rule • Arguments in Support of the Exclusionary Rule • It deters violations of constitutional rights by police and prosecutors • It manifests society’s refusal to convict lawbreakers by relying on official lawlessness • It results in the freeing of the guilty in a relatively small proportion of cases

  18. The Exclusionary Rule • Arguments in Support of the Exclusionary Rule • It has led to more professionalism among the police and increased attention to training programs • It preserves the integrity of the judicial system • It prevents the government from profiting from its wrongdoing • It protects the constitutional right to privacy

  19. The Exclusionary Rule • Arguments Against the Exclusionary Rule • It is wrong to make society pay for an officer’s mistake. • It excludes the most credible, probative kinds of evidence. • It discourages internal disciplinary efforts by law enforcement agencies. • It encourages police to perjure themselves in an effort to get the evidence admitted. • It diminishes respect for the judicial process and generates disrespect for the law and the administration of justice.

  20. The Exclusionary Rule • Arguments Against the Exclusionary Rule • There is no proof that the exclusionary rule deters police misconduct. • Only the United States uses the exclusionary rule; other countries do not. • It has no effect on those large areas of police activity that do not result in criminal prosecutions. • The rule is not based on the Constitution; it is only an invention of the Court. • It does not punish the individual police officer whose illegal conduct led to the exclusion of the evidence. • Justice Scalia says, “It has been ‘universally rejected’ by other countries.”

  21. The Exclusionary Rule • Alternatives to the Exclusionary Rule • An independent review board in the executive branch. • A civil tort action against the government. • A hearing separate from the main criminal trial but before the same judge or jury. • Adoption of an expanded good faith exception. • Adoption of the British system.

  22. The Exclusionary Rule • The Future of the Exclusionary Rule: It is Here to Stay

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