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  1. 106 of 106. Quiz yourself with questions and answers for Intro to Policing Final Exam, so you can be ready for test day. Explore quizzes and practice tests created by teachers and students or create one from your course material.

  2. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like when government power is increased, the rights of citizens a. decrease b. increase c. stagnate d. decrease, which of the following is an example of a police action that does not have "good ends"? a. soliciting sex b. lying to a suspect in an interrogation c. searching a house without a warrant d. searching a citizen without ...

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  4. suspect. A suspect is a person who is believed to have committed a crime, but has not yet been found guilty. If a suspect received an arrest warrant, they might then be identified as a defendant; and after the suspect was convicted or found guilty, they would be called an offender. According to the 4th Amendment, a suspect has the right to be ...

    • Probable Cause Based on Tips from Informants
    • Probable Cause vs. First Amendment Rights
    • More on The Fourth Amendment
    • Footnotes

    Requirements for establishing probable cause through reliance on information received from an informant has divided the Court in several cases. Although involving a warrantless arrest, Draper v. United States4 may be said to have begun the line of cases. A previously reliable, named informant reported to an officer that the defendant would arrive w...

    Where the warrant process is used to authorize the seizure of books and other items that may be protected by the First Amendment, the Court has required the government to observe more exacting standards than in other cases.12 Seizure of materials arguably protected by the First Amendment is a form of prior restraint that requires strict observance ...

    Students’ Rights Against Search and Seizure: New Jersey v. TLO
    The Exclusionary Rule: Mapp v. Ohio

    1. Byars v. United States, 273 U.S. 28 (1927) (affiant stated he has good reason to believe and does believe that defendant has contraband materials in his possession); Giordenello v. United States, 357 U.S. 480 (1958) (complainant merely stated his conclusion that defendant had committed a crime). See also Nathanson v. United States, 290 U.S. 41 (...

    • Attorney at Law
  5. When the Police Can Make an Arrest: Probable Cause. "Probable cause" requires more than a mere suspicion that a suspect committed a crime, but not an absolute certainty. Probable cause is the key issue in the arrest process. Under the Fourth Amendment, the police need probable cause to make an arrest or obtain an arrest warrant from a judge.

  6. An example of the public safety exception is when the police interrogate a suspect to determine the location of a bomb. The due process clause limits states from infringing individual rights: The Supreme Court has interpreted the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to mean that state governments, in addition to the federal government ...

  7. Consider that the Seventh Circuit once tried to provide a good legal definition but concluded that, when all is said and done, it just means having “a good reason to act.”2 Even the Supreme Court— whose many powers include defining legal terms— decided to pass on probable cause because, said the Court, it is “not a finely-tuned ...