The Fourth Amendment

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The Fourth Amendment, which has given America values, establishes the right to privacy and property. In older days, mostly under the British monarchy, “crowns agents” could search your home whenever and take whatever they please. This seemed unfair and unjust, for it made innocent people feel exposed and intruded. This was the basis of search and seizure and the starting part of the fight for warrants which acted as the people’s self defense. While there’s always a thin line between invading the Fourth Amendment and potential criminal, the Fourth Amendment and catching a potential criminal. The Fourth Amendment has given us some sense of privacy. In the past history of the Fourth Amendment we see Entick V. Carrington as a great example of the …show more content…
This places Americas value of protection and reassurance from most unexpected, unneeded , and unreasonable searches. In Katz v. Ohio, a major Supreme Court case on our rights to privacy and what's the definition/limit of searches; Katz v. Ohio extended the Fourth Amendment to give a “reasonable expectation of privacy”. This giving us as American citizens the expectation of privacy and limited what should be considered an improper search. Lastly in the article “How Privacy Became an American Value”: It talks about how our expectations of privacy is violated because the government continues to spy on us bypassing our Fourth Amendment rights which don’t seem to protect us …show more content…
Examples of this would range from King George and his soldiers to trying to solve a crime vs. invading private property and what's a probable cause to now, where if it is publicly exposed it can be searched terminating our expectation of privacy online. In a “List of Grievances Against the King” it is displayed that KIng George and his crew would expose personal records , search and seize whatever whenever they pleased, and made people criminological suspects for things that should've been private. Thus leaving people feeling violated and exposed because the felt they had no sense of control or privacy it their home. Supreme Court case Safford Unified School District v. Redding was about an 8th grader who was strip-searched at school for a tip on her stealing ibuprofen violating her rights provided to her by the Fourth Amendment as an unreasonable search. This is just one of the many cases and reports that constantly show up under unreasonable search and seizures that have violated peoples rights while protested to be ok. In another Supreme Court case, Mapp v. Ohio that established more of what unreasonable search seizures are and the due process clause Mapp was accused of possessing obscene materials after an illegal police search . With our given rights to be protected by unreasonable search and seizures, which were, and still are, a common issue. In