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Rights of the Accused: Search and Seizure Protections

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Abstract
The Constitution only provides protections of the criminal process in the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. The most controversial element of the Fourth Amendment is the exclusionary rule which applies to objects obtained by search and seizure. A court will not accept evidence, however relevant, if it was unlawfully acquired. However, those protections are getting narrower. In recent decades evidence has been admitted if the procedural errors are small or if the evidence would have been discovered anyway.
Series
American History, American Government and Politics, Framework for Democracy
Duration
00:01:45 (HH:MM:SS)
Language:
English
Copyright Holder
Name INTELECOM Intelligent Telecommunications
RoleDistributor
Telephone800-576-2988 x122
Address150 E. Colorado Blvd. Ste. 300, Pasadena, CA 91105
Email[email protected]
Rights Declaration:
This video is protected by copyright. You are free to view it but not download or remix it. Please contact the depositing institution for further information about how you may use this video.
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https://54098.surd9.group/show.php?pid=njcore:19224
Basic LTI parameter
pid=njcore:19224
PID
njcore:19224