69
Criminal Procedure Research Project Westlaw

Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Criminal Procedure Research ProjectWestlaw

Page 2: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

What you are about to see…

Page 3: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

In Westlaw, there are many ways to get what you need for this assignment.

Page 4: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Instructions:• 1. Find out what the legal issue is in Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643 (1961) (see textbook).

Page 5: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 6: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 7: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 8: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 9: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 10: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

This is what you see when youfirst open WestlawNext!

The search box is designed like Googlefor simplicity.

24/7 assistance

Page 11: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 12: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Since we know the case citation (367 U.S. 643)we can simply type that in the search field.

Page 13: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 14: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Or: type in the case name.

Page 15: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

When you type in the case name, you will retrieve the case, and also any cases that have cited (referred to) Mapp v. Ohio.

There are advantages to each approach.

Page 16: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

In addition to case law, Westlaw provides law reviews and secondary sources which

INTERPRET Mapp v. Ohio and can help you identify the legal issue in the case.

These articles can also help you determine key words and search terms

you should use when searching for cases in the state you have chosen.

Page 17: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Instructions:• 2. Obtain your appropriate key word terms and issues from

Mapp v. Ohio. Using these terms, search for cases in the state that you have chosen.

Page 18: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Let’s look at the actual case.

Page 19: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

These are parallel citations which means same case, found in different sources. Professor

Pesca gave you the U.S. Supreme Court official citation

(367 U.S. 643).

81 S. Ct. 1684 is the SAME case, Mapp v. Ohio, in a West case

reporter.

Page 20: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

This is the prior history of the case,

which describes what courts heard the case prior to it coming before the

U.S. Supreme Court.

Page 21: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

West Headnotes are brief summaries of

the main legal issues and points of law and

in the case.

Headnotes are not part of the Court’s

official decision; they are written by West attorney-editors to

help with case interpretation.

Very useful!

Page 22: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Westlaw tells you how many cases have “cited” a particular headnote. For example, 953 cases have referred back to

Mapp v. Ohio for this particular point of law!

Page 23: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

From anywhere in Westlaw, you can access the main scree by clicking on WestlawNext.

So what happens when we run the search Mapp v. Ohio on the main screen? Remember,

before we searched from “Cases.”

Page 24: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

The case

The ConstitutionalAmendment (IV)

Secondary sources

to help youunderstand the

case

Page 25: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Instructions:• 2. Obtain your appropriate key word terms and issues from

Mapp v. Ohio. Using these terms, search for cases in the state that you have chosen.

Page 26: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Secondary Sources!In addition to the case itself, check law reviews and ALR

(American Law Reports).

Which search terms do I use? What are the legal issues…?

Page 27: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Back to the main screen (click on WestlawNext)

Page 28: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 29: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 30: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

This ALR article tells you straight

out what the legal issue is.

Other ideas for search

terms…

Page 31: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Using these terms……search for cases in the state that you have chosen.

Page 32: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 33: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 34: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Some courts located in New Jersey (and in all of the United States) are federal courts, which is why you see both Federal and State court listings under New Jersey (and with every state). It may seem confusing at first,

but it is the U.S. court structure.

Here, you want to choose All New Jersey State Cases.

Page 35: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

In general, you will search these courts most often.

Page 36: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 37: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Note the search results are

displayed in “relevance” order.

You can sort by date or “most cited” as

well.

Page 38: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Think about this: “Most cited” means subsequent (later) cases have referred back to these cases most frequently.

Page 39: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Instructions:• 3. Print out the list of cases and citations that match your

key words and terms.

Page 40: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

To print, click on the arrow just to the right of the

envelope icon.

Your options are: Email, Print, Download or send to a

Kindle.

Choose Print.

Page 41: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Heads up! You do NOT want to print the full text of each case!

The instructions read, “Print out the list of cases and citations that match your key words and

terms.”

Page 42: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Instructions:• 4. Read through the cases and find a case that deals with

the same issue that is in Mapp v. Ohio.

Your challenge now is to find a case that most closely deals with the same issue that is in Mapp v. Ohio, is reasonably current (though a pivotal case

may be very old), and is still good law.

Page 43: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Is the case still good law?

•Is the case I am looking at still good law?

• While viewing a case with a KeyCite flag, click the flag (if there IS one).• No flag = no negative treatment (so far)• Yellow = CAUTION• Red = CASE HAS BEEN OVERRULED – DO NOT USE

Page 44: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

No flag = good law so far - Yellow flag = caution – Red flag = no longer good law (has been overruled, overturned)

Click on the flag for specific negative history.

Page 45: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Just because there is no flag…• … does not mean this is the best case!

• A case like Roe v. Wade – (Supreme Court of the United States January 22, 1973 - 410 U.S. 113)

• a very famous U.S. Supreme Court case in the 1970s, has a yellow flag because some courts have not agreed with certain aspects of the Court’s ruling – but this case has been cited over 22,000 times!

• If later cases have ‘cited’ to (referred to) a case thousands of times, even if there is some negative treatment, this case is still good law, and very, very important!

• Bottom line: don’t be afraid of cases with yellow flags!

Page 46: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Let’s say we decide this is the case that deals closely with the issue in Mapp v. Ohio. How did we decide this?

Page 47: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Remember those “Headnotes”

described earlier.

Headnotes are brief summaries of the

legal issue(s) in the case, written by

Westlaw attorney-editors.

Page 48: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

To understand and effectively BRIEF the case,

you have to read the case,

not just the headnotes. The opinion,

written by the judge, contains the facts, the

issue(s) before the court, the

court’s holding and rationale.

Page 49: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

To print, click on the arrow

just to the right of the envelope

icon.

Page 50: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 51: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

The print screen defaults to term

highlighting, including headnotes and dual column printing (see

next slide).

Page 52: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Dual column layout

Page 53: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Fact Pattern:• Jay C is a suspected methamphetamine manufacturer and

seller in the small town of Clear Lake. The police think Jay C keeps drugs and paraphernalia in his truck.

• While Jay C is at work, the Rensselaer County Sheriff’s Dept. walks a K9 drug dog by Jay C’s truck, without a warrant. The dog immediately detects illegal substances and Jay C is arrested for criminal possession of methamphetamine manufacturing material.

Page 54: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Legal Issue:• If a K9 is used to walk by an automobile the police suspect

might have drugs in it, is that a search without a warrant?

Page 55: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 56: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 57: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 58: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Here we are approaching the legal issue with natural

language searching.

Page 59: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 60: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Things to think about…• As with the prior example, this is the challenge, once you have

formulated your search technique. It is a balancing act between:• Is the case most closely deals with my legal issue?• Is the case still good law?• Is there a more recent case close to my fact pattern?

Page 61: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

LET’S RUN THE SEARCH AGAIN, THIS TIME USING SIMPLE BOOLEAN CONNECTORS.

Page 62: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Connectors and Expanders

Before jumping in and deciding that natural language is your best bet for retrieving search results, remember correct Boolean searching produces accurate results that you can compare to your natural language search results.

& AND/s In same sentence Or OR+s Preceding within sentence/p In same paragraph" " Phrase+p Preceding within paragraph% But not/n Within n terms of! Root expander+n Preceding within n terms of* Universal character

The idea is to anticipate the language the

judge may use.

Page 63: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Concepts:• Canine or dog or K9• Auto or automobile or car or vehicle or truck• 4th Amendment or Search and Seizure or Right to Privacy• Search Warrant

• (k9 or dog or canine) & (auto! or car or vehicle or truck) & ("4th amendment" or "search and seizure" or "right to privacy") & "search warrant"

Page 64: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 65: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 66: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 67: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca
Page 68: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

Notice we retrieved 19 more cases on

this topic with Boolean searching!

This is a perfect example of why you

should not rely solely on natural

language searching.

Page 69: Criminal Procedure WestlawNext - Pesca

YOU CAN DO IT!Ask for help. Ask a Librarian or call 1.800.REF.ATTY