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General Searches. Determine when an officer can and cannot search and seize according to the fourth amendment. Search and Seizure. Examination of persons or places for the discovery of property stolen or otherwise unlawfully obtained or held. Evidence of the commission of crime.
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General Searches Determine when an officer can and cannot search and seize according to the fourth amendment
Search and Seizure • Examination of persons or places for the discovery of property stolen or otherwise unlawfully obtained or held. Evidence of the commission of crime. • 4th Amendment- right to be secure in person, house, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures
Abandoned Property • Highly incriminating evidence may often be found in a wastebasket, trash receptacles, garbage barrels, this is known as Abandoned Property • Abel v. United States • California v. Greenwood • 4th amendment does not allow warrantless searches, but does not stop warrantless searching through exposed garbage to the public
Administrative Searches for Government Buildings • Warrantless searches or inspections as part of an administrative function • Administering a search on someone visiting someone in prison • In case of weapons
Body Cavity Search • Is an intrusive search. • Includes a degree of probing and touching the Anus and/or Vagina • Try to find Contraband- usually additional evidence of an illegal act • Warrant is needed. Authorized by a judge not an officer. • Must be conducted in a medical facility by a physician • Limit Humiliation • Rodriques v. Furtado
Strip Searches • Inspection of a naked person without scrutiny of his or her body cavities • Probable cause to believe that a weapon, or item of evidentiary value, and or contraband • Usually done by supervising officer or commanding officer • Done by same sex and in a private room • Can not check cavities but can search more if signs show weapons just outside of the anus • Officer can separate the prisoners’ buttocks
Consent Searches • Individual gives his or her consent for the police to conduct a search of his or her property • Voluntary Surrendering- will be analyzed by the court system (Nothing to hide) • For consent- 2 conditions • Owner, possessor, control of property, must consent, • Must be freely and voluntarily done • Person can end search anytime they want, unless evidence is found • Plain View- seeing contraband or something out of the ordinary • Searches are limited to the size of the contraband • If something thing is found inadvertently then they can be charged
Search Incident to an Arrest • If the person is arrested they can do a warrantless search. • Search has to do with arrest • Find weapon • Stop someone from destroying evidence • Immediate Surrounding Area- area from arrestee were evidence can be found, or destroyed • Check the entire property if it is necessary- Commonwealth v. Flowers • South Dakota v. Opperman- arrest unlawful so is the search • No evidence permitted
Stop-and-Frisk or Searches • External Pat-down • Based on person, place, time, and location • Officer can Frisk if: • Contraband/ Weapon • Bulky clothing can be searched underneath • No pretext to search for evidence • Must • Prevent themselves as a Police Officer • Announce purpose for Frisk • Edge of a hand or the back of the palm