corwina
contestada

The Supreme Court extended the right of privacy implied by the 14th and Fourth Amendments to include protection from use in a trial of evidence that was seized (3 points)


A)illegally, in the case Mapp v. Ohio

B)illegally, in the case Roe v. Wade

C)through a warrant, in the case Mapp v. Ohio

D)through a warrant, in the case Roe v. Wade

Respuesta :

C)through a warrant, in the case Mapp v. Ohio

Answer:

Option A.

Explanation:

Illegally, in the case, Mapp v. Ohio, is the right answer.

Mapp v. Ohio, was a milestone petition in criminal procedure, in which the Supreme Court of the United States determined that testimony obtained in breach of the Amendment Fourth, which protects against "irrational explorations and convulsions," may not be practiced in state authority criminal pursuits in state courts and in national criminal law pursuits in federal courts as had earlier been the rule. The Supreme Court achieved this by adopting the policy of selective business; in Mapp, that included the consolidation of the prerequisites, as defined by the Tribunal, of the Amendment Fourth which is suitable only to businesses of the national sovereignty into the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment which is appropriate to activities of the states.

ACCESS MORE
EDU ACCESS