The 14th Amendment to the U.S Constitution enforces federal law, including the Bill of Rights, on the state governments.
However, before the 14th Amendment, states did have the ability to "violate" the rights of their citizens.
Not without amending the federal constitution.
Yes. In the United States the 14th amendment to the constitution made the bill of rights and all other rights in the Federal Constitution binding on State Governments.
Law enforcement, as such, does not violate the bill of rights. Violations come from errors or malfeasance on the part of the enforcers.
freedom of speech
To guarantee that the national government would not violate the rights of the people
yes it was the Bill of Rights
the Bill of Rights the Bill of Rights
It is called a Bill of Rights. There are many different examples, such as a states Bill of Rights or the federal Bill of Rights.
The Bill of Rights
United States Bill of Rights was created on 1789-09-25.
There are no implied rights. The Bill of Rights states the rights directly.
yes they do have a Bill of Rights
Bill of Rights
The Missouri Constitution does contain a Bill of Rights, found in Article I. The United States Constitution has a Bill of Rights as well.