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29 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
U.S. Supreme court Justice Marketplace of idea |
Oliver Homes |
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Shenck v. U.S. in 1918 |
Espionage Act |
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Clear and present danger |
Schenck v. U.S. |
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Brandenburg v. Ohio case |
Inciting inmonant Lawless action Likey to produce |
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Symbolic speech |
Flag Burning, Book burning, peace sign |
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U.S. flag is protected speech |
Texas v. Johnson |
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An assembly |
Picketing, sit-in |
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The assembly took place in a__or private property |
Public |
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Westboro Baptist Church on public property |
Snyder v. Phelps |
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A violation of the first amendment |
Mccullen v. Coakley |
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Prohibits speech, primarily on the media, or other expression |
Prior Restraint |
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(A written) Reckless disregard |
Libel |
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(An oral) reckless disregard |
Slander |
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Public officials and public figures |
Actual malice |
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"Actual malice" standard |
Nytimes v. Sullivan |
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Obscenity to the court |
Miller v. California |
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U.S. Supreme court claimed in Miller v. California |
Prurient Interest, datrently offensive, literary, artistic |
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Pornography |
Reno v. ACLU 1997 |
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The court defines fighting |
Damaging conduct |
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Right of every citezed against arbitrary |
Due process |
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Fourth amendment, low enforcement |
Probable cause or worront |
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The silver platter doctrine |
Mapp v. Ohio |
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Violation of the fourth amendment |
Exclusionary rale |
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The court claim that when an individual is talking on a telephone |
Katz v. U.S. |
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Law enforcement could stop and frisk individuals for officer safety |
Reasonable suspicion |
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Official charge or accusation |
Expectation |
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Tried twice for the same crime according to what? |
Grand jury |
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The first amendment claims that no one can be compelled to be? |
Self-incrimination |
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Officers read suspects Their miranda rights |
Miranda v. Arizona |