POLS 101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Fourth Amendment To The United States Constitution, Exclusionary Rule, Fifth Amendment To The United States Constitution

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O schenck was a socialist, and was handing out pamphlets to go against the. Preferred position of speech: speech is most important of liberties, murdock v. pennsylvania. Symbolic speech: tinker v. des moines (1969, students were wearing armbands protesting war, suspended from school, texas v. johnson (1989, flag-burning. Limited protection: student speech: morse v. frederick (2007, banner that encouraged drug use, interfered with discipline of school. Unprotected speech: fighting words, commercial speech (regulated by fcc and ftc, deceptive advertising. Freedom of the press: prior restraint stopping speech before it happens, near v. minnesota (1931, obscenity, libel, miller v. california (1973, new york times co. v. sullivan (1964) 4th amendment: search and seizure: mapp v. ohio (1965) exclusionary rule. 5th amendment: rights at trials: miranda v. arizona (1966) miranda warning/rights. 6th amendment: the right to council: gideon v. wainwright (1963, right to an affordable attorney.

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