Term
Reynolds v. United States
(1879) |
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Definition
Polygamy
George Reynolds was a Mormon who had 2 wives and was convicted of polygamy
-Arrest and conviction was constitutional
-Not free to worship in ways that violate the laws protecting the health, safety |
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Term
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette
(1943) |
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Definition
WV required students to salute the flag and recite the Pledge of Allegiance
Jehovah's witnesses appealed Gobitis
-Law was unconstitutional
-Reversed Gobitis
-Could make people stand out of respect |
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Term
Employment Division of Oregon v. Smith
(1990) |
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Definition
Two Native Americans who worked for a private drug rehabilitation organization were fired for ingesting peyote for part of religious service
denied unemployment benefits
-Court ruled that you can practice your religion as long as it doesn't violate the law |
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Term
Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v. City of Hialeah
(1993) |
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Definition
Animal Sacrafice
Church leaded land and planned to build a church, school, and cultural center to practice santeria - which included animal sacrafice
City passed several ordinances prohibiting animal sacrafice
Ordinances were unconstitutional |
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Term
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Definition
New York created a non-denomination prayer it urged school to use
-Unconstitutional |
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Term
McCollum v. Board of Education
(1948) |
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Definition
Religious teachers came to school once a week and gave instruction to those students who desired it
-Unconstitutional
- Because school rooms were being used for religious purposes
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Term
Edwards v. Aguillard
(1987) |
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Definition
State law which required teaching the Bible's account of creation with evolution as an alternative POV
-Unconstitutional |
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Term
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Definition
Aid to Parochial Schools
state supplements to the salary of Catholic School teachers
-Unconstitutional
Lemon test
- have a nonreligious purpose
- main effect neither advance nor hinder religion
- Avoids "excessive government entanglement with religion
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Term
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Definition
During World War I, Schenk handed out pamphlets that urged people to fight the draft
-Arrest was constitutional
-Clear and Present Danger Test--speech may be limited when it poses an immediate danger |
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Term
United States v. O'Brien
(1968) |
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Definition
Burning a draft card in protest
-Arrest was constitutional, not protected symbolic speech
Three Part Test
- Falls within constitutional power of government
- Narrowly drawn
- Other form of symbolic speech
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Term
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District
(1969) |
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Definition
Students suspended for wearing black armbands in protest of Vietnam Conflict
-Suspension was unconstitutional
-Did not disrupt school day/activities |
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Term
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Definition
Burning a flag in protest
-Protected speech |
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Term
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire
(1942) |
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Definition
Cursing in public
Arrested for breach of peace
-not protected speech : "fighting words"
words are meant to inflict an injury or incite violence |
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Term
New York Times v. Sullivan
(1964) |
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Definition
Ad in NYT against Montgomery police - claimed racist
-1st Amendment protects publications of statements-even false ones-about public officials
-Must show actual malice |
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Term
Miller v. California
(1973) |
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Definition
Distributing pornography across state lines
Miller Test
- Average person applying contemporary community standards finds it obscene.
- Depicts/describes in a patently offensive way sexual conduct defined by law
- Work taken as a whole lacks serious literary, artistic, scientific, or political value
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Term
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Definition
Restricting dirty words on television and radio
-Can restrict words on television and radio |
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Term
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Definition
Near published article calling local officials gangsters.
Stopped from publishing with Minnesota's gag law.
-Ruled unconstitutional |
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Term
Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier
(1988) |
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Definition
Principal deleted articles from school newspaper he felt were inappropriate.
-Did not violate the constitution
-Schools action must be legally related |
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Term
Morse v. Frederick
(2007) |
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Definition
At school function, student holds up banner "Bong Hits 4 Jesus"
-School may prohibit speech that would promote illegal drug use |
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Term
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Definition
Convicted of conducting a Communist Party Meeting
-Conviction was unconstitutional |
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Term
Cox v. New Hampshire
(1941) |
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Definition
Jehovah's Witnesses arrested for marching on sidewalk without permit
-Constitutional |
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Term
Lloyd Corporation v. Tanner
(1972) |
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Definition
Group arrested for protesting the Vietnam War in a shopping mall.
-Constitutional because a mall is private property--even though it is open to the public |
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Term
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Definition
Alabama wants list of members of NAACP
-Court ruled that they have Constitutional right to join groups without being forced to hand over list of members |
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Term
Boy Scouts of America v. Dale
(2000) |
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Definition
Boy Scout leader thrown out for being a homosexual.
-Court ruled ok to kick him out |
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Term
Griswold v. Conneticut
(1965) |
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Definition
Can a state outlaw birth control counseling and the sale of birth control devices?
-NO! Law is unconstitutional
-14th Amendment's Due Process clause creates a right to privacy |
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Term
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Definition
Can a state limit a woman's right to an abortion?
-In the this case the Court held the 14th Amendments "due process" and "right to privacy"
During 1st Trimester, state cannot limit women's right to abortion
2 & 3 Trimester - state can limit abortion |
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Term
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Definition
Can police use evidence they didn't have a warrant for?
-Exclusionary rule applies to STATES!
-No they can't |
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Term
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Definition
Evidence found by mistake
(Police searched wrong apartment)
-Tainted evidence may be used against a person if it was inevitable that the evidence would have been eventually found by lawful means |
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Term
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Definition
Student was suspected of smoking in the bathroom and school administrator searched her purse without a warrant.
Drugs found in purse.
-School asked with reasonable suspicion and, therefore, did not need a warrant |
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Term
Miranda v. Arizona
(1966) |
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Definition
Does the police practice of interrogating individuals without notifying them of the rights to counsel and their protection against self-incrimination violate the 5th Amendment?
-YES!
Before a suspect may be questioned that suspect may be read their rights |
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Term
Gideon v. Wainwright
(1963) |
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Definition
Accused of robbery in Florida, denied an attorney because it wasn't a capital offense
-If you could not afford an attorney, one will be provided for you |
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Term
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Definition
Man repeatedly asked to see his lawyer during intense questioning but was denied.
-Rights were violated |
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Term
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Definition
-Court declares death penalty as unconstitutional because there was no set procedure in place for applying the death penalty |
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Term
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Definition
Court declares revamped death penalty law constitutional because there is now a procedure for juries to follow when assigning the death penalty |
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