Synopses & Reviews
Packed with examples from real-world situations faced by today's law enforcement professionals, CRIMINAL PROCEDURE: LAW AND PRACTICE, 9e gives you a practical and authoritative look at the most current guidelines in criminal procedure. Comprehensive and accurate without bogging you down in unnecessary details, the text includes cutting-edge coverage of the law on arrests, searches and seizures, vehicle stops, use of force, interrogations, and line-ups. It also discusses current topics on racial profiling, DNA evidence, plea bargaining, seizures of text/email messages, technology, the USA Patriot Act, and much more. Long known for its relevance to law enforcement, it features interesting case briefs, sample police forms, hypothetical cases, and coverage of the most recent Supreme Court rulings.
About the Author
Rolando V. del Carmen is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Criminal Justice at the Criminal Justice Center of Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas. He was assistant dean and associate professor of a school of law in the Philippines and has held various administrative and academic positions in the United States. In addition, he has taught at various universities and has written extensively, including numerous articles on legal issues and more than ten books that include CRIMINAL PROCEDURE: LAW AND PRACTICE, CIVIL LIABILITIES OF LAW ENFORCEMENT PERSONNEL, TEXAS PROBATION LAW AND PRACTICE, and POTENTIAL LIABILITIES OF PROBATION AND PAROLE OFFICERS. A consultant to criminal justice agencies in a number of states, Dr. Del Carmen was appointed to a six-year term to the Texas Commission on Jail Standards. He earned the Fellow Award (1990) and the Bruce Smith Award (1996) from the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. He holds a B.A. and a bachelor of laws degree from the Philippines, a master of comparative law from Southern Methodist University, a master of laws from the University of California at Berkeley, and a doctor of science of law from the University of Illinois.
Table of Contents
PART I: INTRODUCTION. 1. The Court System and Sources of Rights. 2. Overview of the Criminal Justice Process. PART II: LEVELS OF PROOF AND THE EXCLUSIONARY RULE. 3. Probable Cause and Reasonable Suspicion. 4. The Exclusionary Rule. PART III: SEARCHES AND SEIZURES OF PERSONS. 5. Stop and Frisk and Stationhouse Detention. 6. Arrests and Use of Force. PART IV: SEARCHES AND SEIZURES OF PROPERTY. 7. Searches and Seizures of Things. 8. Motor Vehicle Stops, Searches, and Inventories. 9. Plain View, Open Fields, Abandonment, and Border Searches. PART V: IDENTIFICATIONS, CONFESSIONS, AND ADMISSIONS. 10. Lineups and Other Means of Pretrial Identification. 11. Confessions and Admissions: Miranda v. Arizona. PART VI: CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AND THE CONSEQUENCES OF POLICE MISCONDUCT. 12. Basic Constitutional Rights of the Accused During the Trial. 13. Sentencing, the Death Penalty, and Other Forms of Punishment. 14. Legal Liabilities and Other Consequences of Police Misconduct. 15. Electronic Surveillance and the War on Terror. APPENDIXES. A. Guide to Case Briefing. B. The Case of Minnesota v. Dickerson--A Full Reprint. C. Thirty Suggestions on How to Be an Effective Witness. D. The Constitution of the United States. CASE INDEX. NAME/SUBJECT INDEX.