Criminal ProcedureCriminal Procedure is a contemporary, comprehensive case-driven textbook from award-winning teacher Matthew Lippman that covers the constitutional foundation of criminal procedure and includes numerous cases selected for their appeal to today's students. With an emphasis on diversity and its impact on how laws are enforced, this clearly written textbook features numerous learning devices, including You Decide scenarios, Cases and Comments, and Legal Equations and is accompanied by robust ancillaries, including an open-access student study site with Web-based activities, helpful study aids, and resources. |
Contents
01Lipppman CP46169 | 1 |
03Lipppman CP46169 | 58 |
04Lipppman CP46169 | 94 |
05Lipppman CP46169 | 137 |
06Lipppman CP46169 | 181 |
07Lipppman CP46169 | 247 |
08Lipppman CP46169 | 291 |
09Lipppman CP46169 | 355 |
10Lipppman CP46169 | 399 |
11Lipppman CP46169 | 447 |
12Lipppman CP46169 | 483 |
13Lipppman CP46169 | 527 |
14Lipppman CP46169 | 586 |
15Lipppman CP46169 | 631 |
16GlossaryLipppman CP46169 | 659 |
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Common terms and phrases
accused African American agents Amendment right arrest asked attorney authority automobile bail charged checkpoints circumstances cocaine committed concluded conduct confession consent consent search constitutional rights convicted Court of Appeals crime Criminal Procedure custody decision defendant defendant's detained detention determine dissent drug Due Process Clause established evidence exclusionary rule expectation of privacy fact federal Fourteenth Amendment Fourth Amendment frisk grand jury guilty http://www.sagepub.com/lippmancp identification indicated individual innocent interest interrogation intrusion investigation issue judge judicial jurors justify knock and announce lawyer lineup ment Miranda rights Miranda warnings narcotics obtained offense person petitioner police officer pretrial probable cause prosecution prosecutor protection question reasonable suspicion relied respondent result search incident search warrant searches and seizures seized Sixth Amendment standard Supreme Court held suspect Terry stop tion U.S. Constitution U.S. Supreme Court United unlawful unreasonable searches vehicle victim violation witnesses