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  2. suppression. In a criminal case, most evidence gathered in violation of the Constitution is inadmissible at trial, due to the exclusionary rule. Evidence that has been kept out in this manner is said to have been “suppressed.”. wex.

  3. Suppress. To stop something or someone; to prevent, prohibit, or subdue. To suppress evidence is to keep it from being admitted at trial by showing either that it was illegally obtained or that it is irrelevant.

  4. A motion to suppress is a motion that revolves around the exclusion of evidence from trial. In the United States, a motion to suppress is a request made by a criminal defendant in advance of a criminal trial asking the court to exclude certain evidence from the trial.

  5. A motion to suppress evidence is a request by a defendant that the judge exclude certain evidence from trial. The defense often makes this motion well in advance of trial—if the defendant wins it, the prosecution or judge may have to dismiss the case.

  6. Learn the legal definition of suppress and its importance in legal proceedings. Discover how suppression protects constitutional rights, ensures accuracy and reliability, and promotes transparency in the legal system.

  7. The act of rejecting or excluding evidence at trial if it was illegally gathered, ensuring it is not used in the legal proceedings. A situation where due process is violated when important evidence that could benefit a defendant is purposely not revealed. This refers to the act of intentionally concealing or withholding evidence in a legal context.

  8. suppress vt. 1: to put down by authority or force 2 a: to keep secret b: to stop or prohibit the publication or revelation of 3 a: to exclude (illegally obtained evidence) from use at trial [ narcotics found in violation of the right against unreasonable search and seizure] b: to fail to disclose (material evidence favorable to a defendant) in ...

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