Excerpt
Trained dogs are a staple of law enforcement units across the United States. Their highly developed sense of smell is at least 10,000 times more sensitive than a human’s. Because of this ability, they’re often used during search-and-rescue operations to locate survivors, at airports to detect traces of explosives, and by police to track suspects and identify the presence of narcotics. But are trained dogs always reliable? And just because a police dog gives an “alert” to the presence of drugs from outside a vehicle, does that mean that police have probable cause to conduct a thorough search? These are…
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Drug-Sniffing Dogs
Trained Canines and Police Searches
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Vehicle Searches
Fourth Amendment Rights While in an Automobile
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Illinois v. Caballes
The Court Upholds Using Police Dogs During Vehicle Stops
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Lower Court Holding in Harris v. Florida
Decision of the Florida Supreme Court
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Before the Court in Florida v. Harris
The Justices Weigh in on Drug-Sniffing Dogs
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Inside the Court
College Admissions, Police Searches, and Gay Marriage on the Docket
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Pro & Con
Is an Alert by a Well-Trained Narcotics-Detection Dog Sufficient for a Warrantless Search of a Vehicle?