Supreme
The 1819 Supreme Court case McCulloch v. Marylandfirmly established the broad scope of the Elastic Clause. The Court decided that congressional actions are constitutional as long as they are based on one of the expressed powers and are "consistent with the letter and spirit of the Constitution."
Supreme Court cases diminished the scope of the exclusionary rule?
By statute.
Marbury v. Madison is the Supreme Court case that established the precedent of judicial review. John Marshall was the Chief Justice of the court.
The Supreme Court case that established the federal government's broad power under the elastic clause is McCulloch v. Maryland (1819). In this landmark decision, Chief Justice John Marshall ruled that Congress had the authority to create a national bank, asserting that the elastic clause (Necessary and Proper Clause) allowed for implied powers beyond those explicitly listed in the Constitution. This case reinforced the principle of federal supremacy over state laws and expanded the scope of federal legislative power.
Precedent
McColloch vs. Maryland
Gregory vs. Chicago
exclusionary rule
Mapp vs. Ohio
In the case of Marbury v. Madison in 1803, the court established the principle of judicial review, which gives the Supreme Court the power to declare laws unconstitutional.
In Re Gault