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Supreme court cases landmark

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Page 1: Supreme court cases landmark
Page 2: Supreme court cases landmark

1803 DECISION

Established the concept of Judicial Review: the Supreme court has the final authority to find acts of government unconstitutional

Page 3: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Students wrote an article the principal

would not allow to be published in the school newspaper

DECISION Schools can filter or limit information that is

placed into a school newspaper. This case allows school officials to have full control

of school sponsored activities Activities can continue “so long as their actions

are reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical concerns

1st Amendment (1988)

Page 4: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened 2 students caught smoking in bathroom,

sent to VP, asked to open purses, VP found rolling paper used for marijuana, asked students to dump out purses, found money, marijuana, and list of people owing her money

DECISION Schools are only required to have

“reasonable suspicion” to search students 4th Amendment (1985)

Page 5: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Obscene Speech at assembly

DECISION Schools may limit the profane, obscene

lewd speech of a student 1st Amendment (1983)

Page 6: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Students wore black arm bands

protesting Vietnam War, they were suspended

DECISION A student does not shed his rights at the

door. Black armbands to protest the Vietnam War can be worn since they are not disruptive.

1st Amendment (1969)

Page 7: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Sent to juvenile detention for an alleged

obscene phone call, no lawyer, no witnesses

DECISION Juveniles are provide due process as well

as adults Prior to this ruling juvenile crimes were handled

in family law not criminal law 14th Amendment – Due Process (1966)

Page 8: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Maryland tried to put a tax on a branch

of the Bank of the US DECISION

A state cannot tax a federal institution Supremacy Clause (1819)

Page 9: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Ogden had NY state license to ferry people

from NYC to NJ, Gibbons also ferried people but had no state license but did have a federal coasting license

DECISION The Federal government has the power over

the state to regulate interstate commerce. Federal ferry license prevails over a State Ferry License (no NY monopoly)

Supremacy Clause (1824)

Page 10: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Sandford lived in MO (a slave state) took

Dred Scott to IL (a free state) and Scott said he was now free

DECISION States cannot deprive a person of his

right to property 5th Amendment (1857)

Page 11: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Plessy (1/8 of African decent) sat in

white only train car, would not move when asked

DECISION Established the concept of “separate but

equal” in public facilities 14th Amendment (1896)

Page 12: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Mr. Brown wanted his daughter to attend

the neighborhood school (she was black and the school was for whites)

DECISION Schools were desegregated. Separate is

unequal. Separate but equal has no place Integrated schools Overturned Plessy v. Ferguson

14th Amendment (1954)

Page 13: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Mr. Swann said CMS was not integrated

even though Brown v. Board of Ed said that segregation is not okay

DECISION Court ordered busing to integrate

schools This decision changed the landscape of CMS

schools by forcing the busing of students outside their neighborhood school

This lead to forced desegregation of schools 14th Amendment (1971)

Page 14: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Mr. Korematsu said it is not Constitutional for

people of Japanese decent to be forced to move to internment camps

DECISION Justices ruled for US government saying that

times of national hardship and extreme times can allow some individual rights to be taken away

Court upheld the military order presented by the circumstances of WW II – “Pressing public necessity may sometimes justify the existence of restrictions which curtail the civil rights of a single racial group”

5th Amendment – Due Process (1944)

Page 15: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Georgia death penalty law vague and so

most death row inmates were Black men DECISION

Capital Punishment and the enforcement of the death penalty cannot be racially biased

8th and 14th Amendment (1971)

Page 16: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Sentenced to death for 2 counts murder

DECISION Upheld sentences of death – death

penalty itself does not violate the Constitution

8th and 14th Amendments (1976)

Page 17: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Gideon charged with crime, at that time in FL

lawyers only given for death penalty and insanity cases, he had no money to pay a lawyer and was found guilty

DECISION All accused persons are entitled to a lawyer,

even if they cannot afford one. Right to Counsel Person must have counsel provided, regardless of

the charges filed against them Gideon Rule

6th Amendment (1963)

Page 18: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Miranda arrested but not told his right to not

confess to the crime, he signed a confession and was convicted

DECISION A person must be read his or her rights before

being arrested. When Ernesto Miranda was arrested and questioned

and signed a confession that listed that he had “full knowledge of his legal rights”, he was not made aware of his rights to counsel and the confession was illegally gained.

5th Amendment (1966)

Page 19: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Police searched Mapp’s house with a fake

warrant and found illegal material DECISION

Illegally obtained evidence cannot be used in court.

Illegal Evidence and Due Process Clause No illegal search and seizures applied to all states

Before this rule not every state incorporated excluding evidence gained through an illegal search

Exclusionary Rule 4th and 14th Amendment (1962)

Page 20: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened/Decision “Reasonable expectation of privacy” did

not include wiretapping. 4th amendment does not protect individuals form wiretapping. And this evidence may be used in court.

4th Amendment (1928)

Page 21: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened School board required students to say a prayer at

beginning of each day DECISION

A school cannot require students to pray. This court case upheld separation of church and state.

Establishment Clause Eliminated prayers in school Students cannot be forced to recite a prayer because it

violates their 1st Amendment right to freedom of religion

1st Amendment (1962)

Page 22: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Texas had a law against desecrating the

Flag, Mr. Johnson burned a Flag in protest DECISION

The Government cannot limit a citizen’s right to burn the US Flag

This case protected the rights of individuals to freedom of expression, even if in this case that expression is the burning of the American flag

1st Amendment (1989)

Page 23: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened/Decision A state cannot take away a woman’s

right to an abortion 4th Amendment (1973)

Page 24: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened Anti-Vietnam leader who urged men to

resist the draft DECISION

Free speech is limited during times of war and 1st Amendment rights are not absolute

1st Amendment (1919)

Page 25: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened A white student was not accepted in to

the school and several minority students with lower scores were

DECISION Schools cant use admissions quotas and

admit students solely based on race 14th Amendment (1978)

Page 26: Supreme court cases landmark

What happened/Decision Congress could outlaw racial segregation of

private facilities that are engaged in interstate commerce

Supremacy Clause (1964)