Civil Liberties



Civil Liberties

Civil liberties are…

Specific individual freedoms that are constitutionally protected against infringement by govt

“Selective Incorporation”

What is it?

Judicial doctrine that incorporates certain Bill of Rights protections into the 14th Amendment to allow federal courts to prevent states from infringing on those rights.

Freedom of Expression

Includes:

actual speech (spoken or written)

symbolic speech

association and assembly

Allows citizens to:

-influence the government and other citizens

-act to protect other rights

Freedom of the Press

Standard is “No Prior Restraint” (New York Times v. US, 1971)

In general, courts will not allow the government to stop things from being published (although some national security exceptions)

But can be held accountable for what is published

Obscenity

Is not protected

Is difficult to define

Freedom of Religion

The “Establishment Clause”

The Right of Privacy

Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)

Constitution suggests an “underlying right of privacy”

Was the basis for Roe v. Wade (1973) which legalized abortion

The Rights of The Accused

Rooted in 14th amendment’s “Due Process of Law” clause

usually procedural safeguards

4th, 5th, 6th, 8th amendments

The “Exclusionary Rule”

Bars the use of evidence obtained in violation of 4th amendment protections (Mapp v. Ohio, 1961)

Police need:

Suspicion of wrongdoing (probable cause)

Warrant or other offense that allows search

By a 7-to-0 vote the United States Sentencing Commission, the agency that sets guidelines for federal prison sentences, lightened punishments retroactively for some crimes related to crack cocaine, a decision that could eventually affect about 19,500 inmates and mean freedom for some within months.

Rights and the War on Terrorism

In Times of War, Courts are more permissive

Lincoln and Civil War

World War II and internment of Japanese Americans

Courts have ruled that:

Because Gitmo (Guantanamo) is on U.S. soil, American courts have jurisdiction; prisoners can challenge detention (2004)

U.S. citizens have a right to U.S. courts and constitutional protections (2004)

Secret military tribunals are unlawful – Geneva Conventions

In 2006, Congress passed legislation granting some legal protections to detainees (but not at overseas sites).

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