Question 2
Craig and Dan were involved in a burglary into a rare coin store. After being arrested, Dan made a confession to the police and named Craig as the mastermind of the crime. The police obtained a warrant for Craig’s arrest. Two officers went to Craig’s house to arrest him. As the police car pulled in at the house, the officers saw Craig, a gun in hand, run out of the house. He ran in the direction of a park. The officer gave chase. Craig ran into the park. It was a Saturday and there were a lot of people in the park. Craig tripped and fell as he ran through a wooded area. The officers caught up with him and handcuffed him. They could not find the gun on him. One of the officers asked: “Where is the gun?” Craig replied: “Over there next to a tree.” The officer retrieved the gun. The prosecution charges Craig with illegal possession of a firearm and intends to use the gun found by the police as evidence. Craig objects, claiming that the gun was found as a result of police violation of his Miranda rights.
The police obtained a warrant to search Craig’s house. The warrant authorized the police to search for stolen coins. While conducting the search, the police opened a desk drawer. In it, they found stolen coins. Next to the coins, the police saw credit cards with different people’s names on them. Suspecting that the cards were stolen, the police seized them. One officer took notice of a laptop computer on the desk. The computer was in sleep mode. The officer woke it up and found an e-mail message. In the message, Craig bragged about the things he had bought with stolen credit cards. In addition to the burglary, the prosecution also charges Craig with credit card fraud. The prosecution intends to use the stolen coins, the seized credit cards and the e-mail message as evidence. Craig objects, claiming the search conducted by the police in his house was illegal.
The police found fingerprints on the gun dropped by Craig in the park. To make sure that the gun was dropped by Craig, the police asked Craig to provide fingerprint samples. Craig refused to cooperate. The police forcefully obtained his fingerprints. The prosecution intends to use the fingerprint evidence at trial. Craig objects. He argues that obtaining fingerprints from him by force was in violation of the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination.
We are a professional custom writing website. If you have searched a question and bumped into our website just know you are in the right place to get help in your coursework.
Yes. We have posted over our previous orders to display our experience. Since we have done this question before, we can also do it for you. To make sure we do it perfectly, please fill our Order Form. Filling the order form correctly will assist our team in referencing, specifications and future communication.
1. Click on the “Place order tab at the top menu or “Order Now” icon at the bottom and a new page will appear with an order form to be filled.
2. Fill in your paper’s requirements in the "PAPER INFORMATION" section and click “PRICE CALCULATION” at the bottom to calculate your order price.
3. Fill in your paper’s academic level, deadline and the required number of pages from the drop-down menus.
4. Click “FINAL STEP” to enter your registration details and get an account with us for record keeping and then, click on “PROCEED TO CHECKOUT” at the bottom of the page.
5. From there, the payment sections will show, follow the guided payment process and your order will be available for our writing team to work on it.
Need this assignment or any other paper?
Click here and claim 25% off
Discount code SAVE25