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29 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

U.S. Supreme court Justice


Marketplace of idea

Oliver Homes

Shenck v. U.S. in 1918

Espionage Act

Clear and present danger

Schenck v. U.S.

Brandenburg v. Ohio case

Inciting inmonant Lawless action Likey to produce

Symbolic speech

Flag Burning, Book burning, peace sign

U.S. flag is protected speech

Texas v. Johnson

An assembly

Picketing, sit-in

The assembly took place in a__or private property

Public

Westboro Baptist Church on public property

Snyder v. Phelps

A violation of the first amendment

Mccullen v. Coakley

Prohibits speech, primarily on the media, or other expression

Prior Restraint

(A written) Reckless disregard

Libel

(An oral) reckless disregard

Slander

Public officials and public figures

Actual malice

"Actual malice" standard

Nytimes v. Sullivan

Obscenity to the court

Miller v. California

U.S. Supreme court claimed in Miller v. California

Prurient Interest, datrently offensive, literary, artistic

Pornography

Reno v. ACLU 1997

The court defines fighting

Damaging conduct

Right of every citezed against arbitrary

Due process

Fourth amendment, low enforcement

Probable cause or worront

The silver platter doctrine

Mapp v. Ohio

Violation of the fourth amendment

Exclusionary rale

The court claim that when an individual is talking on a telephone

Katz v. U.S.

Law enforcement could stop and frisk individuals for officer safety

Reasonable suspicion

Official charge or accusation

Expectation

Tried twice for the same crime according to what?

Grand jury

The first amendment claims that no one can be compelled to be?

Self-incrimination

Officers read suspects Their miranda rights

Miranda v. Arizona