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Criminal Procedure

Open Textbook Library Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Smith, Christopher E., author.
Trachtenberg, Ben, author.
Alexander, Anne, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Law--Textbooks--United States.
Law.
Criminal law--Textbooks.
Criminal law.
Physical Description:
1 online resource
Place of Publication:
[Place of publication not identified] Michigan State University [2022]
Language Note:
In English.
Summary:
An open textbook for undergraduate Criminal Procedure courses that are typically required of criminal justice majors. The book uses U.S. Supreme Court opinions to illuminate the definition of rights concerning search and seizure, right to counsel, and other aspects of the criminal justice process. This open textbook seeks to make undergraduates familiar with judicial reasoning as well as the definitions of rights relevant to individuals who are drawn into contact with criminal justice officials. The chapters give significant attention to police procedures and individual rights under the Fourth Amendment related to searches, including those using warrants and the situations in which warrant searches are permissible. The book also covers rights in the context of police interrogation, including Miranda warnings and exceptions to the Miranda rule. In addition, there is coverage of the exclusionary rule, right to counsel, plea bargaining, and trial rights. It concludes with a brief examination of rights related to sentencing. This resource challenges undergraduates to understand the development and changes affecting rights as new decisions are issued by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Contents:
Notices and Recommended Citation
Disclaimer
About CALI eLangdell Press
About the Authors
Notices and Permissions
Image Credits
I. Introduction
II. Why Is Criminal Procedure So Important?
III. Key Cases for Incorporation (Nationalization) of the Bill of Rights
IV. Fourth Amendment: What Is a Search?
V. Fourth Amendment: What Is a Search? Some Specifics
VI. Fourth Amendment: What Is a Search? More Specifics
VII. Fourth Amendment: Probable Cause and Reasonable Suspicion
VIII. Fourth Amendment: Seizures and Arrests
IX. Fourth Amendment: Warrants
X. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Permissible Warrantless Search Situations)
XI. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Part 2)
XII. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Part 3)
XIII. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Part 4)
XIV. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Part 5)
XV. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Part 6)
XVI. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Part 7)
XVII. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Part 8)
XVIII. Fourth Amendment: Warrant Exceptions (Part 9)
XIX. Fourth Amendment: Stop and Frisk
XX. Fourth Amendment: Reasonable Suspicion
XXI. Interrogations: Due Process and the Voluntariness Requirement
XXII. Interrogations: The Miranda Rule
XXIII. Interrogations: What Is Custody?
XXIV. Interrogations: The Miranda Rule—Waiver
XXV. Interrogations: The Miranda Rule: Exceptions
XXVI. Interrogations: Sixth Amendment: The Massiah Rule
XXVII. Introduction to the Exclusionary Rule
XXVIII. When Does the Exclusionary Rule Apply?
XXIX. Exclusionary Rule: Suppression Hearings and Monetary Damages
XXX. Sixth Amendment: Right to Counsel
XXXI. Sixth Amendment: Right to Counsel
XXXII. Identification: Right to Counsel
XXXIII. Identification: Best Practices and State Approaches
XXXIV. Plea Bargaining
XXXV. Sixth Amendment: Speedy Trial
XXXVI. Sixth Amendment: Trial by Jury
XXXVII. Eighth Amendment Issues
Appendix
Notes:
Description based on print resource

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