A recent Supreme Court decisions strips away what little remained of the guardrails preventing police from seizing anyone under a flimsy pretext, law professors Daniel Harawa and Kate Weisburd ...
Thanks to the Supreme Court, now there is no real limit on police seizures. People of color will bear the brunt of this ...
The Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments in a case that could impact what’s needed for law enforcement to enter your ...
A new FinCEN rule forced small money services businesses to collect personal data on nearly every customer transaction.
When can the police enter a person’s home without a warrant? The Fourth Amendment and the various judicial exceptions to it don’t provide a clear answer. But the Supreme Court may provide some clarity ...
Lower courts are divided on the Fourth Amendment implications of a drug detection dog that jumps into a car on its own and then alerts to illegal drugs. I thought I would offer some thoughts on the ...
WASHINGTON (Gray DC) - The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in “Case v. Montana” Wednesday, a case tied to the Fourth ...
For the U.S. Supreme Court majority, poor quality decisions are the new normal. They draft edicts on major issues — not opinions. Such is the case with their new shadow docket decision on racial ...
Penn Carey Law Dean Sophia Lee recently published an article in about the Fourth Amendment rights to privacy (Photo from Penn Carey Law). University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School Dean Sophia Lee ...
In September, the Supreme Court rendered obsolete the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on suspicionless seizures by the police.