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The Political Landscape

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The Bill of Rights–

Then and Now

 Civil Liberties: the legal constitutional protections

against the government

 The Bill of Rights: first 10 amendments, which protect

basic liberties, such as religion and speech

The Bill of Rights—Then and Now

Criminal Due Process





 The Fourth Amendment

 The Fifth Amendment

 The Sixth Amendment

 The Eighth Amendment

The Bill of Rights—Then and Now

 The Bill of Rights and the States

 Written to restrict the national government

 “Congress shall make no law…”



 Barron v. Baltimore (1833)



 Most have been “incorporated” through the 14th

Amendment, and now restrict state and local

governments

 First Amendment protection of speech first incorporated to

states in Gitlow v. New York (1925)

Incorporation

 Until 20th century, Bill of Rights did not apply to states.



 14th Amendment’s due process clause raises questions.



 Begins to apply after Gitlow v. New York (1925).



 Case is first step in incorporation doctrine.



 Not all guarantees have been incorporated.



 Selective incorporation of fundamental freedoms.

The Bill of Rights—Then and Now

Freedom of Religion

 The Establishment Clause

 “Congress shall make no law respecting the

establishment of religion…”

 Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971)

 Secular legislative purpose

 Neither advance nor inhibit religion

 No excessive government “entanglement”

First Amendment: Free Exercise

 Government cannot interfere with religious practice.



 Is not absolute; necessity can outweigh freedom.



 Still, laws must be neutral toward religion.

Freedom of Expression

 Free Speech and Public Order

 Speech is limited if it presents a “clear and present

danger.”

 Schenck v. US (1919)

 Permissible to advocate the violent overthrow of

government in abstract, but not to incite anyone to

imminent lawless action

 Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969)

 Speech is generally protected in public places, but

usually not on another’s private property.

Protected Speech

 Court will rarely tolerate prior restraint.



 Court also protects symbolic speech.



 Hate speech also receives growing protection.

Symbolic Speech

 Symbolic Speech

 Definition: nonverbal communication, such as burning

a flag or wearing an armband

 Generally protected along with verbal speech

 Texas v. Johnson (1989): Burning the American flag is

symbolic speech protected by the First Amendment.

Free Speech May Interfere with

other Civil Liberties

 Free Press and Fair Trials

 Is extensive press coverage of high profile trials (OJ

Simpson; Martha Stewart) permissible?

 The public has a right to know what happens; trial must be

open to the public.

 The press’ own information about a trial may not be

protected.

 Yet, some states have passed shield laws to protect reporters.

Commercial Speech

 Definition: communication in the form of

advertising

 Generally the most restricted and regulated form of

speech (Federal Trade Commission)

 Regulation of the Public Airwaves

 Broadcast stations must follow Federal Communication

Commission rules.

 Regulation must be narrowly tailored to promote a

compelling governmental interest.

 United States v. Playboy Entertainment Group (2000)

Unprotected Speech

 These types of speech are without social value.



 Libel, or false written statements.



 Slander, or untrue spoken statements.



 Fighting words, or words that breach the peace.



 Obscenity, which varies by jurisdiction.

Freedom of Assembly

 Right to Assemble

 Generally permissible to gather in a public place, but

must meet reasonable local standards, such as fire codes

and apply for permits

 Balance between freedom and order

 Right to Associate

 Freedom to join groups or associations without

government interference

 NAACP v. Alabama (1958)

First Amendment: Assembly

 Assembly and petition have been controversial.



 Tied closely to speech and press.



 If speech crosses line, protection may not exist.

Right to Bear Arms

 Common National, State, and Local Gun Laws

 Restrictions on owning and carrying handguns.

 Background checks

 Limited the sale of certain types of weapons.

 Requirements that guns be stored in a fashion to prevent

their theft or children from accessing and firing them.

 Courts have usually upheld these.

Individual or Collective Right?

 Militia Clause:

 Many advocates of gun control argued that the Second

Amendment applied only to the right of states to create

militias.

 District of Columbia v. Heller (2008)

 Individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with

service in a militia.

 Use that arm for traditionally lawful purposes, such as

self-defense within the home.

Defendants’ Rights

4th Amendment

 Searches and Seizures

 Probable Cause: when the police have reason to believe

that a person should be arrested

 Unreasonable searches and seizures: evidence is

obtained in a haphazard or random manner, prohibited

by the Fourth Amendment

 Exclusionary Rule: the rule that evidence, no matter how

incriminating, cannot be introduced into trial if it was

not constitutionally obtained

 Mapp v. Ohio (1961)

5th Amendment

 Self-Incrimination

 Definition: when an individual accused of a crime is

compelled to be a witness against himself or herself in

court

 Police must inform suspects of these and other Fifth

Amendment protections upon arrest.

 Miranda v. Arizona (1966)

 Protection from coerced confessions and entrapments

Fifth Amendment

 Prevents self-incrimination and double jeopardy.



 Miranda v. Arizona (1966) is landmark case.



 Miranda rights inform suspects of right to silence.

6th Amendment

 The Right to Counsel

 The state must provide lawyers in most criminal cases

(Sixth Amendment).

 Gideon v. Wainwright (1963)

 Trials

 Plea bargaining: a bargain between the prosecution and

defense for a defendant to plead guilty to a lesser crime;

90 percent of cases end here and do not go to trial

 Juries generally consist of 12 people, but unanimity is not

always needed to convict.

 The Sixth Amendment also guarantees a “speedy and

public” trial.

8th Amendment

 Cruel and Unusual Punishment

 The Eighth Amendment forbids cruel and unusual

punishment.

 The death penalty is not cruel and unusual. It is “an

extreme sanction, suitable to the most extreme crimes.”

 Gregg v. Georgia (1976)

 The death penalty’s use and application varies by state.

8th Amendment Continued

 Protects against cruel and unusual punishment.



 Most common application is the death penalty.



 Briefly unconstitutional for a period in 1970s.



 Used at varying rates and forms in different states.



 Minors and mentally retarded are excluded.



 Growth of innocence projects and DNA evidence.



 2008 case upholds constitutionality of lethal injection.

Right to Privacy

 Created by the courts from penumbras of constitution.



 Applied first to contraception.



 Extended to abortion in Roe v. Wade (1973).



 Also applied in some homosexual rights cases.



 Right to die movement also uses right to privacy.

The Right of Privacy









• Roe v. Wade

• Undue Burden

Civil Liberties and Terrorism

 Virtually all civil liberties have been affected.



 USA Patriot Act and Military Commissions Act.



 Place limitations on free speech rights.



 Increase law enforcement’s search capabilities.



 Attempt to deny habeas corpus rights to defendants.



 Allow for use of techniques such as water-boarding.

Figure 5.1- Methods of Execution











Back

Gun Control

Summary

 Civil liberties are expressed in the Bill of Rights.

 These are the individual’s protections—for religion,

expression, assembly, and the accused—against the

government.

 Legislatures and courts constantly define what the Bill

of Rights protects in practice.



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