The police, acting on a tip that Billy Greenwood was dealing illegal narcotics, searched some trash bags that he had left on the curb. Actually, to be more specific, they asked Greenwood’s garbage man to set aside his thrash from the rest of the neighborhood’s, then searched it after it was isolated. Finding paraphernalia associated with drugs in the bags, the police applied for a search warrant, including a description of the things they found in the trash. Based on evidence from both the garbage and the search of the house, Greenwood was convicted of drug-related charges. Greenwood appealed to the Supreme Court, claiming that the search of his garbage was illegal because it was searched without a warrant. My side of the case, which is the state of California, tends to argue three main things.
First, the exception to the warrant requirement, which is ‘searching abandoned property.’ We also tend to argue two previous court cases, Oliver vs. US and Katz vs. United States. In the case Olive vs. US, Oliver had posted no trespassing signs around his fenced in farm. Two Kentucky State narcotics officers, also acting on a tip that Oliver was growing narcotics, walked around the fenced in area to see a field of home-grown marijuana.
This case also dealer with the right of privacy. The courts decided that the police had the right to charge Oliver because of plain view. In the second case that we are going to argue, which is Katz vs. United States, ‘no knock’s tat utes were defined. These allow police to forcibly enter a place when no one will let them in and the police have a reason to believe that a fugitive is hiding out or evidence is being destroyed.
The Term Paper on Equal Opportunities Police Case Discrimination
Essay Title: Critically examine the status of equal opportunities within the police service with reference to one or more of the following: gender, race, sexual orientation. Introduction Equal opportunities is not only a non racist and non-sexist philosophy, it is a non-sexual orientation notion. In these three dimensions, race, gender and sexual orientation will be considered. The conclusion of ...
Our last argument has to do with the exclusionary rule. As stated before, searching abandoned property can be warrant less. The state of California will rue that garbage, being accessible to children, animals, and passerby’s, can be considered abandoned. The opposing side may argue the precedent of Mapp vs. Ohio is a reason why Greenwood’s charges should be dropped. The state of California will argue that the police did NOT force themselves into Greenwood’s house without a warrant.
They had a perfectly legal warrant, which was not attempted to be hidden or kept from Greenwood. I believe that if the court sides with the state of California, it will benefit society in a big way. It will keep Greenwood from dealing any more narcotics, and also let others know that no matter what they argue, what they did was still wrong, and will not be excused.