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Legal Guide for Police

By: Craig Hemmens, Jeffery T. Walker
Narrated by: John Chancer
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Publisher's summary

Legal Guide for Police: Constitutional Issues, 11th Edition is a valuable tool for criminal justice students and law enforcement professionals, bringing them up-to-date with developments in the law of arrest, search and seizure, police authority to detain, questioning suspects and pretrial identification procedures, police power and its limitations, and civil liability of police officers and agencies. Including specific case examples, this revised edition provides the most current information for students and law enforcement professionals needing to develop an up-to-date understanding of the law.

The authors have included introductory and summary chapters to aid listeners in understanding the context, importance, and applicability of the case law. A new chapter covers warrantless searches involving cell phones and other technology, as well as vehicles.

©2019 Taylor & Francis (P)2019 Routledge
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Critic reviews

"Jeffery Walker and Craig Hemmens’s Legal Guide for Police: Constitutional Issues is hands down the best book available for anyone who is interested in understanding the complexities of how the U.S. Constitution and case law is applied in policing today. It is a must read for undergraduate, graduate, and law school students, as well as practitioners in the field." Tony Gaskew, Professor of Criminal Justice, University of Pittsburgh, Bradford

"In Legal Guide for Police, Jeffrey Walker and Craig Hemmens, two of the nation’s preeminent legal scholars, provide exceptionally effective, clear explanations of the details and nuances of police officers’ legal authority. Police officers, as well as students and citizens interested in policing, will benefit from the authors’ careful attention to the circumstances in which specific rules apply. The thorough, well-written coverage of recent court decisions makes the book an essential resource for officers and invaluable teaching tool for instructors seeking to provide up-to-date knowledge about changing areas of law." Christopher E. Smith, J.D., Ph.D., Professor of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University

"Legal Guide for Police is a preeminent text for police officers and criminal justice students. It is a book where legal principle meets real life practitioner work. Walker and Hemmens incorporate well the basic ideas of underlying legal thought while not losing sight of the target audience of the book." Kevin Buckler, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Criminal Justice, University of Houston-Downtown

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Great update on 4th amendment case law.

The progressive loss of privacy explained here is unsettling for future generations who have an expectation of privacy from their 4th and 14th amendment rights.

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Good Update

There were a few typos. One that I caught was talking about Mapp VS. Ohio in Chapter 11. It stated that it was decided in 1886. The case was decided in 1961. This is basically a college text book, but I can only assume that it was the narrator that kept me from zoning in and out too much.

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