Summary: The Exclusionary Rule

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Mr. Weeks was found guilty in a criminal jury trial in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri. The guilty verdict was based on the evidence collected from his home. He then later asked the Judge to review the case, which helped in his favor. The evidence collected during the illegal search was in violation of the 4th Amendment and was thus inadmissible at the trial. The Weeks decision was the birth of a new legal doctrine titled ‘The Exclusionary Rule.’ The Exclusionary rule is defined as is a legal principle in the United States, under constitutional law, which holds that evidence collected or analyzed in violation of the defendant's constitutional rights is sometimes admissible for a criminal prosecution in a court of law. In this case, it tickles me that police officers even had the mindset it was okay to enter a home after locating a hidden key. They were simply not given consent to enter and/or search the home. Another case that grabbed my attention regarding warrantless searches is Veronia School District v. Acton. This is a U.S. Supreme Court Case in 1995. This case resolved from a school district that adopted a policy authorizing random drug testing of student athletes. In the schools, there was a known drug problem in the school district. Student athletes were the individuals using and considered the drug users …show more content…

Hayden? In this case the defendant Hayden was arrested shortly after in his home after a robbery took place. The robber, Hayden, was followed by two cab drivers and led to the inside of his residence. The cab drivers dispatch notified Police, who arrived shortly after and were permitted to enter the home by the defendant’s wife. The police searched inside the residence and located several types of weapons, ammunition, and clothing that the robber was described to be wearing at the time of the incident. The police did not have a search warrant to enter and/or search the residence

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