In what ways do actions based on administrative justification avoid the requirements of the Fourth Amendment?
What will be an ideal response?
Actions based on administrative justification and consent require neither reasonable suspicion nor probable cause. The term administrative justification is something of a euphemism. It is not really justification at all. Actions based on administrative justification require that the government's interest in protecting public safety outweighs individual privacy interests.
Consent searches, in contrast, need to be predicated on little more than validly given consent. Actions based on administrative justification are rich in variety. They have been labeled special needs searches and regulatory searches, but to promote clarity, this chapter has used the language administrative justification to refer to all such actions. The most common actions based on administrative justification are inventories, inspections, checkpoints, school discipline, "searches" of government employees' offices, drug and alcohol testing, and parole and probation supervision.
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Storyville was a quasi-legal gambling area of 38 blocks in New Orleans, named after Alderman Sidney Story
a. True b. False
What does this decision mean for those people that are on either side of the gun control debate?
a. Only one side will be able to have their day in court. b. The court will be relieved of a backlog of criminal cases. c. The majority opinion will become the landmark decision. d. The state supreme court judges will be employed through the federal system.
First used in 1888 by New York, __________ was considered a more humane method of execution than hanging and was presumed to be a relatively painless way to die because death would be virtually immediate
Fill in the blank(s) with correct word
Primarily the plan was confusing and failed to clarify agency roles:
a. Red Cross Plan. b. National Response Plan. c. Homeland Security Plan. d. Analysis Plan.