Explain the practical benefits of the exclusionary rule and how the rule impacts criminal investigations— negatively and positively
What will be an ideal response?
The exclusionary rule relates primarily to cases involving issues of search and seizure, arrests, interrogations, and stop-and-frisk violations. In addition, it pertains to any evidence obtained illegally even though it may be both relevant and material. The exclusionary rule states that courts will exclude any evidence that was illegally obtained even though it may be relevant and material. In a positive light the exclusionary rule curtails the power of the government to unnecessarily or illegally search without probable cause.
You might also like to view...
Liberals tend to:
a. support government spending for parochial schools. b. favor big government. c. support government collection of personal information for national safety. d. favor foreign aid to dictatorships. e. all of the above.
Examples of the legal requirements for willfully refusing to obey a signal to stop by a police officer would be all but one of the following:
a. The officer must be in a fully marked squad car. b. The officer's car must be equipped with the necessary police lights and audible signals. c. The motorist increases the speed of the vehicle the police officer is attempting to sto
Radical–critical criminology has been criticized for its nearly exclusive emphasis on theory over methods of social change
a. True b. False
Officers can sometimes use handcuffs during an investigative detention without placing a person under arrest.
a. true b. false