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Good-faith exception - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In United States constitutional law, the good-faith exemption (also good-faith doctrine ) is a legal doctrine providing an exemption to the exclusionary rule. The exemption allows evidence collect...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good-faith_exception |
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United States v. Leon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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THE CYBER SECURITY ENHANCEMENT ACT'S "GOOD FAITH DISCLOSURE" EXCEPTION: A Serious Threat To Individual Privacy ... Terrified of government reprisals and confident of their ability to invoke the "good faith" exception, a very low standard that is hard to enforce, they will likely turn over information at the drop of a hat.
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Good faith exception - Definition of Good faith exception at Dictionary.com a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms, and translation of Good faith exception. Word of the Day and Crossword Puzzles. ... Main Entry: good faith exception; Function: noun;
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The good-faith exception applies when officers conduct a search or seizure with “objectively reasonable reliance” on, for example, a warrant that is not obviously invalid but that a judicial magistrate should not have signed.
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After over one decade of dissatisfaction with the exclusionary rule (which requires in certain instances the suppression of trustworthy but illegally obtained evidence) this term on July 5, 1984, the United States Supreme Court modified the rule with a good faith exception.
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A closely-divided Supreme Court ruled today that evidence does not have to be suppressed when an arrest is made based on good faith reliance on faulty information.
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