Learning Criminal Procedure: Investigations teaches students the law that governs the investigation of criminal cases. The book presents the legal rules directly in plain language. Each topic includes a clear, straightforward description of the binding legal rules, illustrations of how the rules are applied using examples and summaries of cases, and longer excerpts of the leading Supreme Court cases. The book highlights evolving or ambiguous areas of the law, and provides scores of review questions so that students can test their mastery of each issue. The book's authors build on their combined decades of practical experience to explain the law in plain language and explore the policy justifications behind the rules.
The book's authors build on their combined decades of practical experience to explore the law in straightforward text that enables students to easily engage with the subject.
The Glannon Guide is your proven partner throughout the semester when you need a supplement to (or substitute for) classroom lecture.
Learning Criminal Procedure, 2017 Supplement, Update Memo
Concise, clear, and effective, The Glannon Guide to Criminal Procedure integrates multiple-choice questions into a full-fledged review of the first-year course.
The book utilizes a chronological approach that guides students through criminal procedure doctrine from rules governing law enforcement investigation to matters related to habeas corpus relief.
This supplement to the 5th Edition of Weaver's Criminal Procedure brings the principal text up to date with recent developments in the law.
Because Core Criminal Procedure focuses on comprehensive coverage and major cases, this book can be used as a complement to any criminal procedure casebook.
William W. Greenhalgh (2003). The Fourth Amendment Handbook: A Chronological Survey of Supreme Court Decisions, 2nd ed. (Chicago: American Bar Association). 3. Beck v. Ohio, 379 U.S. 89 (1964). 4. Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213 (1983) ...
gives a statement that Payton is the drug dealer, not him, and that Payton had borrowed his car and must have put the ten kilos into his car. Harris says he knew Payton, Rakas, and Dunaway sold cocaine, but again says that he was there ...
Alabama: The Supreme Court Confronts 'Legal Lynchings,'” in Carol S. Steiker, ed., Criminal Procedure Stories (New York: Foundation Press, 2008), pp. 1–44. ... Gerald N. Rosenberg, The Hollow Hope: Can Courts Bring About Social Change?