A search and seizure procedure is where police search a potential suspects property and confiscate any evidence they feel is important. It is used in civil an common law.
a search and seizure are the same thing but a searh is look and a seizure is physicaly look.
There is no right of search and seizure. In the US, it is prevented by the 4th amendment.
The policies regarding search and seizure on college campuses are that police officers have to have a search warrent from a judge before they can search someone.
Search and seizure are two different things. A search is an intrusion into a reasonable expectation of privacy. A seizure is the taking or interference with custody or movement of a person or property. You can have a search without a seizure, and a seizure without a search. Either is unlawful if the search or seizure is not supported by the probable cause to believe that a crime has occurred, is about to occur, or is occurring, and the search or seizure will result in evidence of that crime. Probable cause is a reasonable belief, based on facts available to the person doing the searching and seizing, that criminal activity is taking place. With some exceptions, an officer can't conduct a search just because he wants to, or on pure speculation. There has to be some reasonable basis for the search.
The Miranda Rights have nothing to do with a search or seizure. The Miranda Rights are only read prior to a custodial interrogation, which a search and/or seizure is not.
No. How can it be unreasonable search and seizure if they didn't conduct a search or seize anything.
It is important to have a search engine so you can search for web sites. der
The Fourth Amendment
4th
Private security is not limited by search and seizure laws in most cases.
warrant