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Informationen zum Autor Carlton Bailey is the Robert A. Leflar Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Arkansas School of Law. Professor Bailey has served as the director of Arkansas' Legal Clinic, and he has taught criminal procedure, trial advocacy, pre-trial skills, and basic evidence. Klappentext In a criminal procedure class, students are asked to determine whether a citizen's constitutional rights were violated, and this question is consistently posed under a myriad of factual circumstances. In order to answer the query, students would need to examine and discuss the United States Supreme Court's interpretations of the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the US Constitution, identifying many tests and standards from those examinations and spirited discussions. Criminal Procedure: Model Problems and Outstanding Answers documents a few of the United States Supreme Court's tests and standards from these amendments to provide a more accurate assessment of whether a "right" under the Constitution has retained its full vitality, or whether it has been modified or made less vital than originally intended. Zusammenfassung In a criminal procedure class, students are asked to determine whether a citizen's constitutional rights were violated, and this question is consistently posed under a myriad of factual circumstances. Inhaltsverzeichnis About the Author Preface 1. Is the Fourth Amendment Implicated? 2. The Fourth Amendment - Sense-Enhancing Devices/Probable Cause and the Good Faith Exception 3. The Warrant Process / Knock and Announce / Plainview 4. Consent Searches 5. Exceptions to the Warrant Requirement 6. Arrest in a Public Place or One's Private Home 7. Search Incident to an Arrest or a Stop 8. Special Needs and Reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment 9. The Fifth Amendment Privilege 10. Confessions and Interrogations Table of Cases Table of Constitutions, Statutes, Rules, and Treaties Other Materials ...