
What Are Your Rights During A Traffic Stop?
The Fourth Amendment includes rights that a protect you during a seizure, which includes during a traffic stop.
The Fourth Amendment includes rights that a protect you during a seizure, which includes during a traffic stop.
The Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution provide you with several important rights that apply during a search.
You can file a Bivens action any time your rights are violated, but violations of the Fourth, Fifth and Eighth Amendments are most common.
Police can search a person in a number of different situations, but the Fourth Amendment provides some protections.
Prisoners don't have 4th Amendment rights. COs don't need a warrant or probable cause to search your cell.
For law enforcement, probable cause allows them to get warrants. Probable cause for prosecutors means they have enough evidence against you to hold a hearing
During and after an arrest, you do have rights. These rights are mostly protected by the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Amendments.
Your Fourth Amendment rights protect your privacy. But what happens to those rights when you're convicted of a crime? Read more inside.
After police shot and killed Amir Locke, the term "no-knock warrant" started making headlines again. Here's what you need to know.
The Fourth Amendment protects you when you get arrested. If police violate it, courts can suppress evidence. You can also file a lawsuit.