Fourth Amendment To The United Term Paper

Prosecutors understandably want to win cases and police want to keep criminals off the streets: that is their job and usually they perform it well. However, illegal search and seizure is against the law just as armed robbery is against the law. To turn a blind eye to illegal search and seizure is to invite tyranny into our borders, to create a state in which citizens live in fear of the police and in which police can routines abuse their position of power.

As Fyfe suggests, police should periodically receive retraining and reeducation and should be routinely subject to "supervision, monitoring, and discipline" (p. 381). Public policy should reflect a stricter interpretation of the Fourth Amendment and we should do away with Operation Pipeline-like...

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Police officers and public prosecutors do a good enough job without having to resort to illegal means. Permitting a ridiculously liberal interpretation of the Fourth Amendment only causes spurious and false arrests, allows for racial profiling, and undermines the reputation of honest, ethical police officers.
Works Cited

Fyfe, James J. "Stops, Frisks, Searches, and the Constitution." Criminology and Public Policy. Vol.3 No.3. Retrieved Nov 4, 2005 at http://216.234.48.148/courses/CJ701_media/Police%20Searches%20Fyfe.pdf

Harcourt, Bernard E. "Unconstitutional Police Searches and Collective Responsibility." Criminology and Public Policy. Vol.3 No.3. Retrieved Nov 4, 2005 at http://216.234.48.148/courses/CJ701_media/Police%20Searches%20Harcourt.pdf

Shocking the Conscience: Beyond the Routine Illegality of Police Searches." Criminology and Public Policy. Vol.3 No.3. Retrieved Nov 4, 2005 at http://216.234.48.148/courses/CJ701_media/Police%20Searches%20Editorial.pdf

U.S. Constitution: Fourth Amendment." Reproduced online at FindLaw.com. Retrieved Nov. 4, 2005 at http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution/amendment04

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Fyfe, James J. "Stops, Frisks, Searches, and the Constitution." Criminology and Public Policy. Vol.3 No.3. Retrieved Nov 4, 2005 at http://216.234.48.148/courses/CJ701_media/Police%20Searches%20Fyfe.pdf

Harcourt, Bernard E. "Unconstitutional Police Searches and Collective Responsibility." Criminology and Public Policy. Vol.3 No.3. Retrieved Nov 4, 2005 at http://216.234.48.148/courses/CJ701_media/Police%20Searches%20Harcourt.pdf

Shocking the Conscience: Beyond the Routine Illegality of Police Searches." Criminology and Public Policy. Vol.3 No.3. Retrieved Nov 4, 2005 at http://216.234.48.148/courses/CJ701_media/Police%20Searches%20Editorial.pdf

U.S. Constitution: Fourth Amendment." Reproduced online at FindLaw.com. Retrieved Nov. 4, 2005 at http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution/amendment04


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