Ohio": Guarding Against Unreasonable Searches and Seizures’ By Nina C. Ayoub April 14, 2006 On May 23, 1957, police in Cleveland searched the home of Dollree Mapp, an act that infuriated Ms. Mapp and ...
Anyone who has ever watched a TV show about police and the courts knows the rule: Illegally obtained evidence is not admissible in a trial. We expect it. We consider it a constitutional right. But ...
This is the 10th part in an ongoing series on seminal cases in American law. Sometimes, law can be downright colorful. Perhaps never more so than in the seminal case of Mapp versus Ohio and the “fruit ...
On Oct. 31, the day after her 91 st birthday, Ms. Dollree Mapp, of the 1961 landmark Supreme Court decision, Mapp v. Ohio, died. Her passing, which was not widely reported when it happened, bears ...
In 1961 the U.S. Supreme Court issued a watershed decision holding local police officers and prosecutors accountable under the Fourth Amendment. Writing for the majority in Mapp v. Ohio, Justice Tom ...
1957—Three Cleveland police officers arrive at Dolly Mapp’s home seeking a suspect wanted in connection with a recent bombing. After Mapp refuses to admit them, the police forcibly enter and search ...
WASHINGTON — A woman who stood up to police trying to search her Ohio home and won a Supreme Court decision on searches and seizures has died. Dollree Mapp died Oct. 31 in Conyers, Ga. Ms. Mapp died ...
This is a preview. Log in through your library . Journal Information The Duke Law Journal is published six times per year, in October, November, December, February, March, and April, at the Duke ...
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