Bar Prep - Outline - Crim Procedure - Short
Bar Prep - Outline - Crim Procedure - Short
Bar Prep - Outline - Crim Procedure - Short
CHECKLIST
I. 4th Amendment
a. ARREST/DETENTION
b. SEARCH & SEIZURE
V. 8TH AMENDMENT
a. CRUEL/UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT
b. PRISONER RIGHTS
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CRIM PRO SHORT OUTLINE & CHECKLIST
I. 4th Amendment
A. The 4th Amendment protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures. 4th Amendment is
applicable to the states via the 14th Amendment.
B. ARRESTS
i. An arrest occurs when the police take a person into custody against her will for purposes of
criminal prosecution and interrogation. It must be based on probable cause – facts/knowledge
sufficient for a reasonable person to believe the suspect has committed a crime.
ii. A warrant is not required to make an arrest in a public place.
iii. Arrest warrant allows police to arrest Δ in his home, but need search warrant to go into home of
a third party to find/arrest Δ
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CRIM PRO SHORT OUTLINE & CHECKLIST
a. Own or have a right to possession of the place searched, in your home, and
overnight guests of the owner of the place searched.
3. Sometimes standing-you own prop seized & have REP in area searched; W's purse?
4. No standing:
a. No standing to sue for search and seizure in violation of someone else's rights
b. No REP for anything that you hold out to the public everyday
c. The sound of your voice.
d. The style of your handwriting.
e. The paint on the outside of your car.
f. Bank account records.
g. Monitoring the location of your car on a public street or in your driveway.
(NOTE: fixing GPS tracking device on car is a search).
h. Anything that can be seen across the open fields.
i. Anything that can be seen from flying over in the public air space.
j. Luggage/Car odors.
k. Your garbage set out on the curb for collection.
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CRIM PRO SHORT OUTLINE & CHECKLIST
4. (4) Consent
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a. For consent to be valid, the consent must be voluntary and intelligent. Have to
have authority to consent. Police do NOT need to tell people they have a right
to withhold consent.
b. Police saying they have a warrant when they don’t always negates consent.
c. Third Party Consent:
i. If multiple people have equal rights to use/occupy property, either party
can consent to a warrantless search. If both present and one consents
but other does not, the one who does not consent controls
ii. If nonconsenting party is removed for reason unrelated to refusal (ex:
arrest), the police may search upon consent of other occupant
A. SELF-INCRIMINATION:
i. The 5th Amendment, which is applicable to the states through the 14th Amendment, prohibits
compelled self-incrimination. Can be asserted in both civil and criminal proceedings. Must
assert privilege the first time the Q is asked or privilege is waived.
B. DOUBLE JEOPARDY:
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i. When Applicable:
1. Under the 5th Amendment, a person may not be retried for the same offense once
jeopardy attaches. Jeopardy attaches (1) in a jury trial once the jury is sworn in, and (2)
in a bench trial once the first witness is sworn.
2. Two crimes do NOT constitute the same offense if each crime requires proof of an
additional element that the other does not require. (proof of ABC and proof of ABD)
3. Attachment of jeopardy bars retrial for lesser included offenses, and vice versa (no retrial
for greater offense if jeopardy attaches for lesser offense).
a. Exception: If tried/convicted for battery and victim later dies, then you can be
prosecuted for murder
ii. Exceptions that permit retrial:
1. Hung jury, manifest necessity aborts first trial (Δ has medical emergency), after Δ has a
successful appeal unless the finding was insufficiency of the evidence, or upon breach of
an agreed upon plea bargain by Δ (can then reinstate original charges)
a. On retrial – a Δ may NOT be tried for a greater offense than that for which he
was convicted at the first trial
b. If Δ agrees to testify against a co-Δ as part of a plea, it's for both the first trial
and any subsequent trials
iii. Separate Sovereigns:
1. Double Jeopardy bars retrial for the same offense by the same sovereign. (IE: federal
and federal, or state and state). Thus, if Δ violates both a fed law and a state law, he can
be prosecuted under both the fed law and the state law separately without jeopardy
attaching.
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B. SPEEDY TRIAL:
i. The 6th Amendment guarantees the right to a speedy trial, which his based on the totality of the
circumstances. Factors considered include:
1. Length of delay, reason for delay, whether Δ asserted his right (timely objection), and
prejudicial effect on defendant.
ii. This right attaches as soon as Δ is arrested or charged.
C. JURY TRIAL:
i. The 6th Amendment guarantees the right to a jury trial in cases involving serious crimes where
the penalty exceeds 6 months in jail.
ii. Jurors:
1. The minimum number of jurors permissible is six – in which case the verdict must be
unanimous.
2. There is no federally protected constitutional right to a unanimous twelve juror verdict.
The Supreme Court has approved the non-unanimous verdicts of 10-2 and 9-3 (but
would probably not uphold 8-4 vote).
3. Jury pool must reflect a fair cross-section of the community.
4. Peremptory challenges of jurors can never be based on race or gender.
iii. Guilty Pleas:
1. Guilty pleas must be voluntary and intelligent/knowing.
2. The judge must specifically address the Δ on the record and make clear:
a. (1) The nature of the charge
b. (2) The judge must tell the defendant the maximum authorized penalty and
any mandatory minimum penalty
c. (3) The judge must tell him that he has a right to plead not guilty and to
demand a trial
*judge must determine if Def plea is voluntary and intelligent
D. CONFRONTATION:
i. A Δ has a 6th Amendment right to confront all witnesses against him.
ii. The absence of face-to-face confrontation between the Δ and accuser does not violate the 6th
Amendment when preventing such confrontation serves an important public purpose and the
reliability of the witness’ testimony is otherwise assured – or if Δ is disruptive.
1. IE: child testimony in a sex abuse case.
iii. Co-Defendant Confession: generally excluded because of 6th amendment confrontation clause
1. In a joint trial, a co-defendant’s confession cannot be admitted against the Δ unless:
a. (1) Portions referring to the other Δ are redacted,
b. (2) the co-defendant takes the stand and is subject to cross-examination, OR
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CRIM PRO SHORT OUTLINE & CHECKLIST
c. (3) the confession of the co-defendant is used to rebut the Δ’s claims that his
confession was involuntary obtained.
iv. Prior testimonial evidence is inadmissible unless the declarant is unavailable and the DF had an
opportunity to cross-examine the declarant.
B. LIMITATIONS:
i. Certain Proceedings: The rule does NOT apply to grand jury proceedings, civil proceedings,
parole revocation proceedings, or evidence obtained contrary to state law (MUST be federal
law).
ii. Police Officer Good Faith Mistake: The rule does NOT apply if the police act in good faith on a
search or arrest warrant. (not applicable to Miranda)
iii. Violations of Knock and Announce: not available in violations of this rule in the execution of
search warrants
iv. Impeachment: illegally obtained evidence may be used to impeach Δ's credibility if the Δ takes
the stand (but NOT other witnesses’ credibility).
C. HARMLESS ERROR:
i. If illegal evidence is used to convict, the conviction will be upheld if the conviction would have
resulted despite the improper evidence
Exclusionary rule does not apply to grand jury proceedings
V. 8th Amendment
A. The 8th Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. The court will look at whether the penalty
is grossly disproportionate to the seriousness of the offense.
B. Death Penalty:
i. Must Allow for Mitigating Facts: Any death penalty statute that does not give the defendant a
chance to present mitigating facts and circumstances is unconstitutional.
ii. No Automatic Categories: There can be no automatic category for imposition of the death
penalty.
iii. No Limiting of Mitigating Factors: The state may not by statute limit the mitigating factors; all
relevant mitigating evidence must be admissible or the statute is unconstitutional.
iv. Jury Determines Aggravating Factors: Only a jury – not a judge – may determine the
aggravating factors justifying imposition of the death penalty.
v. No imposition on mentally retarded, insane, or minors.
A. The 14th Amendment protects a defendant from violations of due process of law.
2. Car and man reek of alcohol, so rsbl for cop to believe he may find additional evidence
(of alcohol) in the car (2nd prong of Gant)
B. Cops see vehicle code violation and stops car. Drugs and pipe accidentally fall out of driver's pocket
when he's getting license out. Cop tells driver to step out and that he's under arrest. Driver breaks free
and runs. 1 cop chases and 1 decides to search the car and find evidence of another crime in car. Is this
a valid search incident to arrest?
i. Yes
1. Arrestee is unsecured (was under arrest from moment told he was)
2. Not as clear under prong 2 of Gant
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