Law School

Criminal Procedure Part Three: Exceptions to the Warrant Requirement

Jan 14, 2026
Dive into the complex world of the Fourth Amendment and its warrant exceptions. Discover how probable cause and reasonable suspicion shape legal actions. Analyze the nuances of consent and exigent circumstances, including limitations on law enforcement. Learn how technological advancements clash with privacy rights, featuring the landmark Carpenter case on cell phone data. Understand the implications of various exceptions, from search incident to arrest to the automobile exception. Wrap up with key takeaways on navigating legal challenges in a digital age.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Warrants Are The Default Rule

  • Warrants are the default and warrantless searches are presumptively unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
  • The government bears the burden to prove a specific exception applies to justify any warrantless search.
ADVICE

Always Demand The Government’s Proof

  • If a search is warrantless, name the exception and prove every element against the government burden.
  • If the government fails any element, conclude the search is unconstitutional and suppress the evidence.
INSIGHT

Probable Cause Versus Reasonable Suspicion

  • Probable cause requires a fair probability, not a mathematical 51% standard.
  • Reasonable suspicion is considerably lower and can exist even when facts are consistent with innocent behavior.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app