Case Analysis: United States V. Santana

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United States v Santana (1976)-
Facts about the case: using marked money, police officers made an undercover heroin purchase from a third person. When the money was taken from the officers, the respondent entered “mom Santana’s” house and came out with the heroin. Officers then arrested the respondent and then returned to Santana’s house where they identified themselves as police officers and then went into the house after Santana, she fled into the house from the porch. After obtaining, the officers then told her to empty her pockets. Once doing so they discovered some of the marked money. The search was done without a warrantless. Did the search violate her 4th amendment? (United States v. Santana. (n.d.)).
Conclusion: 7-2 decision for the United States. The search was upheld by the courts. Relying on the court’s decision in United States v. Watson (1976), Justice Rehnquist argued that since Santana was sitting on her front porch and not inside her house, she was “not in area where she had any expectation of privacy.” And at that moment, the police had probable cause to arrest and search her at that time being, their behavior was consistent with courts Watson precedent. Washington v Chrisman (1982) Facts about the case: In 1978, a Washington police officer stopped a student at Washington State …show more content…

The decision comes with a number of justices choosing to concur in part and dissent in part, the court said that the searches and seizures of Coolidge’s property were unconstitutional. Justice Stewart’s opinion wrote that the warrant authorized to seize his automobile was not valid because it was not issued by a “nature and detached magistrate.” Stewart also rejected the argument of New Hampshire argument to make an exception to the search warrant with “special circumstances” neither the incident to arrest doctrine nor the plain view doctrine justified the search, and that an automobile exception was also

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