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Search and Seizure: Crash Course Government and Politics #27 - YouTube
Channel: CrashCourse
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Hi, I'm Craig, and this is Crash Course Government
and Politics, and today, we're gonna continue
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our discussion of the Bill of Rights, and
talk about something that may actually be
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useful to you. We're gonna talk about when
the police are allowed to search your house,
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your car, and even you. But not me. I have
immunity. I'm on YouTube. Right, is that how
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it works, Stan? It's not how it works? I'm
in trouble.
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You might think that this only matters if
you are, you know, a criminal, and if you
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are, then you should be paying close attention,
but even if you haven't committed any crimes
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and you are unlucky enough to be stopped by
the police, these protections apply.
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[Theme Music]
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The question of when and where and how the
police can conduct a search falls under the
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general topic of Criminal Procedure. In this
case, the second word is important. The courts
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usually look at how the police are acting,
and the protections courts have supported
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are primarily procedural. What this means
is that there is no unlimited, sometimes called
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substantive, right to have the police not
search you or your home. The criminal procedure
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civil liberties are found in the Fourth, Fifth,
and Sixth amendments, but today we're only
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gonna look at the Fourth amendment, which
reads, "The right of the people to be secure
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in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,
against unreasonable searches and seizures,
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shall not be violated, and no warrants shall
issue but upon probable cause, supported by
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oath or affirmation, and particularly describing
the place to be searched and the persons or
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things to be seized." You can see right away
that this is not an absolute right. The framers
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made sure that we are only protected from
unreasonable searches and seizures, and they
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added that the police are supposed to get
a warrant before they search you.
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Let's start with the warrant requirement,
because it's kinda confusing. A search warrant
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is a piece of paper issued by a judge, authorizing
law enforcement officers to search something,
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usually your house, but possibly your car
or your person or your desk eagle. I'm not
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hiding anything in there. What? According
to the Fourth Amendment, for the police to
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get a judge to issue a warrant, they must
have probable cause, which is more than just
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a suspicion or an anonymous tip, although
sometimes judges will issue warrants on pretty
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flimsy probably cause. When they are issued,
warrants are supposed to be specific, laying
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out what the police are searching for and
where they expect to find it. This means that
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if the warrant says the police can search
your garage for a stolen car, they can't look
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in your kitchen drawers and cupboards, because
A, the warrant says they can search your garage
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and B, they're looking for a car, and you
can't hide a car in your kitchen drawers,
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unless it's a very small car. I drive a Prius,
which is pretty small, but it doesn't fit
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in my kitchen drawers. I've tried. Even when
I take the whisk out.
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You'll notice that I qualified my statement
about warrants. You do this a lot when you're
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talking about criminal procedure. I said,
"When they are issued," despite the fact that
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the Fourth Amendment seems to say that the
police always need a warrant, the courts have
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ruled that it is not always required for the
police to engage in a reasonable search. What
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this means is that if the police have probable
cause to search you, say, they catch you pocketing
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powdered donuts in the grocery store, they
don't always need to go to the judge to search you.
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What makes a reasonable search is a question
that the courts have wrestled with. Sometimes,
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like with a stolen car in the kitchen cabinet,
it's pretty obvious. But many times it isn't.
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For example, if the warrant allows the police
to search your kitchen for illegal hand grenades
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and they look in your freezer and find illegal
drugs instead, that's probably reasonable,
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because freezers are where most people store
their illegal hand grenades, and also their
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drugs, and if the police stop you for speeding,
which is a violation of traffic laws, also
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known as a crime, and then search your car
and find a dead body in the trunk, the courts
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have ruled that this is reasonable, too. It's
important to realize that the warrant and
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reasonableness requirements are not meant
to prevent the police from stopping criminals
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caught in the act. If the police, after chasing
a masked man carrying a bag with a dollar
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sign on it running away from a bank that has
just been reported robbed by a man with a
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gun and mask manage to catch him, they don't
need an arrest warrant to take him into custody,
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and because the running away and the bag of
money are pretty suggestive, the police will
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have probable cause to search the guy, who
in my mind, looks like the Hamburglar for
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the gun. And the question is, can they use
the gun as evidence?
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Let's go to the Thought Bubble. One of the
most important Supreme Court cases dealing
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with searches and seizures is Mapp v. Ohio,
decided in 1961. The facts of the case are
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pretty wild. The police went to the home of
Dollree Mapp to search for explosives and
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gambling equipment. They didn't have a warrant,
so she didn't let them in. They came back
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a bit later with a fake warrant and searched
the house. They didn't find explosives or
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gambling equipment, but they did find a trunk
full of pornography, which was illegal at
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the time, so they arrested her. The main evidence
against her, naturally, was the pornography,
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but the cops' probable cause was to search
for explosives. The Court ruled that the evidence
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had been seized through an illegal search.
There was no warrant, and even if there had
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been one, it probably wouldn't have included
the trunk in which they found the porn. More
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important, they ruled that this evidence and
any evidence seized pursuant to an illegal
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search cannot be used against a defendant
in a trial. This is called an exclusionary
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rule, unlawfully obtained evidence is excluded
from the trial, and it's sometimes called
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the "Fruit of the Poisoned Tree," possibly
because lawyers are better at naming things
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than historians are. This is incredibly important,
especially for cop shows on TV, but also for
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you if you happen to have your home searched
illegally and the police find evidence of
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criminal activity. Thanks, Thought Bubble.
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So it seems like there are some pretty strong
protections against the police searching your
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home because of Mapp, but there are also plenty of
exceptions, and no, we're not talking about the Mongols.
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[Mongoltage]
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Many of these exceptions involve your car.
In general, the courts have been very lenient
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when police search your car, probably because
very often, when they pull you over, it's
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because of some kind of moving violation,
like speeding, which can be probable cause,
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especially if they think you might be speeding
away from a crime. The court decisions on
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this issue are really, really complicated,
but the general rule of thumb is that the
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police can usually search your car and you
if they pull you over, despite what Jay-Z
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may think. Another question that comes up
is random traffic stops to check for drunk
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driving. A breathalyzer is a type of search,
so it would seem that the police should have
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probable cause to stop you and check to see
if you're drunk.
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But the Courts have ruled that drunk driving
checkpoints are okay, assuming they don't
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disproportionately target people of a specific
race, but that's for another episode. While
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we're talking about cars and specific groups
of people, I should probably add that there's
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one group of people who don't have the same
protections against searches: students.
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Students often think that it's not okay for school
officials to search their lockers or their
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bookbags, but those students are wrong. Most
students go to public schools, where the officials
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are mostly government workers, and are subject
to the Bill of Rights. The Courts have ruled
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that students don't have the same protections
as other citizens, and that the interests
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of the state in keeping a safe, drug and weapon-free
educational environment trumps their privacy
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interest. Although there are limits to how
intrusive these searches can be. Drug tests
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for student athletes? Fine. Strip searches?
Not okay.
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And bee tee dubs, in the same way that a breathalyzer
test is a search, so is a drug test, or as
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they say in England, a drugs test, which is
probably a more accurate way to say it, because
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they usually test more than one drug. These
can seem pretty intrusive, but the Courts
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usually rule that they are okay, especially
where public safety is concerned. The state
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interest in drug-free schools is a pretty
strong one, but the cases on student drug
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tests are really interesting, especially when
they get into the issue of whether schools
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can test all students without probable cause,
or only specific groups, like athletes. If
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you're really interested, you should look
these cases up, but why are you so interested?
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Maybe you should take a drug test.
Or a drugs test.
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So I'm gonna stop here before I get too deep
in the weeds about search and seizures and
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the Fourth Amendment. There are two important
things to remember. The first is that, like
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all the Constitutional protections of civil
liberties, it only applies to government agents.
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You have no Fourth Amendment protection against
your parents searching your room, unless your
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parents are police officers and they're on
duty, and it's like, official police business.
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The second thing to remember is that the protections
in the Fourth Amendment are far from absolute.
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The Amendment itself includes a reasonableness
standard, and what is reasonable as well as
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when warrants are necessary has been, and
continues to be, determined by the Courts.
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In this case, as with most civil liberties
cases, the Court's attempt to balance an individual's
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interest in maintaining her privacy against
the state's interest in preventing crime and
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keeping citizens safe. It's not an easy balance,
but that's what makes the issue complex and
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interesting, at least to us here at Crash
Course, because we're complex and interesting.
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Right, Stan?
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Thanks for watching. See ya next time. Crash
Course Government and Politics is produced
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in association with PBS Digital Studios. Support
for Crash Course US Government comes from
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Voqal. Voqal supports nonprofits that use
technology and media to advance social equity.
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Learn more about their mission and initiatives
at Voqal.org. Crash Course was made with the
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help of these complex and interesting people.
Thanks for watching.
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