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Class Four: Defining a Search

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Has a government actor intruded upon some individual's reasonable or ... Ownership plus effective bailment (Rawlings v. Kentucky) Factors rejected after Rakas ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Class Four: Defining a Search


1
Class Four Defining a Search
2
The Katz Test
  • Has a government actor intruded upon some
    individuals reasonable or legitimate expectation
    of privacy?
  • A threshold question if no intrusion, then no
    Fourth Amendment regulation
  • But regulation from other sources (e.g.
    Fourteenth Amendment) possible

3
Primary Factors to consider
  • Location (importance of the home issue of
    multiple entries )
  • Assumption of risk - did the individual who
    suffered the possible intrusion knowingly expose
    the area or thing searched to others?

4
US v. Oliver (1984)
  • Government entry into open fields does not
    amount to a search within the meaning of the
    Fourth Amendment
  • (open fields doctrine)
  • open field is any unoccupied and undeveloped
    area outside the curtilage of the home

5
US v. Dunn (1987)
  • Established four factors for defining curtilage
  • Proximity to home
  • Whether included in enclosures surrounding house
  • nature of use of area
  • steps taken to protect against observation

6
Assumption of risk cases
  • Secret informants (US v. White) - identity issue
  • Electronic tracking (US v. Karo)
  • Aerial surveillance (CA v. Ciraolo)
  • Thermal imaging (Kyllo v. US)
  • Container searches (CA v. Greenwood Bonds v. US)

7
Secondary factors
  • Property interests (abandonment question)
  • Social custom (properly a standing question)
  • Past practices and expectations (work place)
  • Legality and intimacy of activities (commercial
    use of homes)
  • Vantage point (enhancement issue)
  • Reduced expectations of privacy (vehicles)

8
A continuum of intrusions
  • Surveillance
  • Consensual encounter
  • Brief detention
  • Arrest
  • Arrest with non-deadly force
  • Arrest with deadly force

9
Defining a Seizure
  • Of a person when intentional police actions
    would cause a reasonable innocent person to
    believe that s/he was not free to leave or
    otherwise terminate the encounter.
  • Of a thing when a government actor causes a
    meaningful interference with a persons
    possessory interest in an object

10
What is standing?
  • A question about who gets to contest the legality
    of a government search or seizure
  • Has the effect of narrowing category of persons
    who can challenge an intrusion
  • Best seen as deliberate choice to reduce social
    expense of exclusionary rule

11
Standing prior to Rakas
  • Ownership or possessory interest in premises
    searched
  • Legitimate presence on premises (Jones v. US)
  • Ownership or lawful possession of seized property
  • automatic standing (possessory crimes)
  • target theory

12
Standing to contest an intrusion
  • The Rakas Test Did a government actor intrude
    upon the defendants reasonable or legitimate
    expectation of privacy?

13
Factors in Standing
  • Right to exclude public owners, tenants,
    present or not
  • Continuing access plus possessory interest (US v.
    Jeffers)
  • Legitimate presence plus possessory interest (MN
    v. Olson)
  • Ownership plus effective bailment (Rawlings v.
    Kentucky)

14
Factors rejected after Rakas
  • Legitimately on premises (Rakas)
  • Target theory (US v. Payner)
  • Automatic standing (US v. Salvucci)
  • Ownership of thing seized not enough to contest
    search of area in which no privacy interest
    (Rawlings v. Kentucky)

15
Next time
  • Reasonableness balancing pp. 169-177
  • Probable Cause pp. 177-210
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