Billede af showet Cuffs and Case Law Podcast

Cuffs and Case Law Podcast

Podcast af Dave & Nate

engelsk

Videnskab & teknologi

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Læs mere Cuffs and Case Law Podcast

We break down Supreme Court case law so you don’t have to!Cuffs & Case Law is a law enforcement podcast focused on search and seizure, the Fourth Amendment, and real-world policing decisions, explained in plain English.New episodes every other Wednesday.We cover landmark cases like Terry v. Ohio, Maryland v. Buie, Payton v. New York etc., along with key circuit court decisions that directly impact how police operate in the field.Whether you’re a police officer, trainee, criminal justice student, or just interested in constitutional law, this channel teaches you:-When police can search without a warrant-How case law applies in real-world scenarios-The legal limits of police authorityWe’re two active full-time police officers with nearly 25 years of combined experience across multiple roles. Our goal is simple:👉 Make smarter cops.

Alle episoder

10 episoder

episode Can Police Enter Your Home Just to Help? The Supreme Court Drew the Line Ep. 10 cover

Can Police Enter Your Home Just to Help? The Supreme Court Drew the Line Ep. 10

Can police enter your home without a warrant if they're trying to help rather than investigate a crime? In this episode of Cuffs & Case Law, we break down two Supreme Court cases that define the limits of the community caretaking doctrine: • Cady v. Dombrowski (1973) • Caniglia v. Strom (2021) Community caretaking allows police officers to perform important public safety functions that are unrelated to criminal investigations. But how far does that authority extend? Can officers search a vehicle to secure a firearm? Can they enter a home without a warrant because they believe someone may need help? We discuss: • Community caretaking explained • Why Cady v. Dombrowski created the doctrine • Vehicle searches and public safety concerns • Securing firearms during community caretaking functions • Why Caniglia v. Strom changed how officers approach homes • The difference between vehicles and houses under the Fourth Amendment • Warrantless entry and exigent circumstances • Wellness checks and constitutional limits • Practical lessons for law enforcement officers Cases Discussed: • Cady v. Dombrowski • Caniglia v. Strom • Harris v. United States • Cooper v. California • Florida v. Jardines • Mapp v. Ohio If you're interested in Fourth Amendment law, search and seizure, police procedure, constitutional law, or practical legal training for officers, subscribe to Cuffs & Case Law for real-world breakdowns of the cases shaping modern policing. #FourthAmendment #CommunityCaretaking #CanigliaVStrom #CadyVDombrowski #PoliceProcedure #SearchAndSeizure #CaseLaw

10. juni 2026 - 1 h 7 min
episode Can Police Ask to Search Your Car After a Traffic Stop? Ep. 9 cover

Can Police Ask to Search Your Car After a Traffic Stop? Ep. 9

You get pulled over. The officer gives you a warning, hands your license back, and starts to walk away.Then comes one more question:“Mind if I search your car?”Most people assume the traffic stop is over at that point — or that police must tell you you’re free to leave before asking for consent to search. In Ohio v. Robinette, the Supreme Court addressed that exact issue.In this episode of Cuffs & Case Law, we break down one of the most important consent search and traffic stop cases in modern Fourth Amendment law. We discuss when a traffic stop legally ends, what “free to leave” actually means, and how courts determine whether consent was truly voluntary during a police encounter.We cover:• Ohio v. Robinette explained• Consent searches during traffic stops• “Free to leave” and voluntary consent• Continued detention vs. consensual encounters• Fourth Amendment seizure analysis• Traffic stop procedures and police authority• Real-world lessons for officers and citizensWhether you’re interested in constitutional law, traffic stop rights, police procedure, or Supreme Court case breakdowns, this episode explains one of the most misunderstood legal issues in everyday policing.Subscribe to Cuffs & Case Law for practical Supreme Court case breakdowns focused on real-world police encounters and Fourth Amendment law.#FourthAmendment #TrafficStop #CaseLaw #PoliceProcedure #OhioVRobinette

28. maj 2026 - 43 min
episode The "Mimms Order" Explained. Why you MUST exit your vehicle Ep. 8 cover

The "Mimms Order" Explained. Why you MUST exit your vehicle Ep. 8

Do police officers actually have the authority to order you out of your car during a traffic stop? What about passengers? In this episode of the Cuffs & Case Law Podcast, we break down two major Supreme Court cases that shaped modern traffic stop law: • Pennsylvania v. Mims (1977) • Maryland v. Wilson (1997) These cases established that police officers can order both drivers and passengers out of a lawfully stopped vehicle — even without additional suspicion. We discuss: - Why the Supreme Court considers traffic stops dangerous - The balance between officer safety and personal liberty - What a “Mims order” actually is - Why passengers can also be ordered out of the vehicle - The Fourth Amendment reasoning behind these rulings - How Terry v. Ohio influenced both decisions - Why so many people misunderstand their rights during traffic stops This episode also dives into the real-world reasoning behind these cases, including officer safety statistics, common misconceptions, and how these rulings still affect police encounters today. Cases Discussed: - Pennsylvania v. Mims - Maryland v. Wilson - Terry v. Ohio - Michigan v. Summers - Michigan v. Long Topics Covered: Traffic stops, Fourth Amendment, search and seizure, constitutional law, police procedure, officer safety, passengers during traffic stops, criminal law, Supreme Court case breakdowns Subscribe for more Cuffs & Case Law episodes where we break down the cases shaping modern policing and constitutional law. #TrafficStop #FourthAmendment #PoliceProcedure #SupremeCourt #CaseLaw #PennsylvaniavMims #MarylandvWilson #KnowYourRights #SearchAndSeizure #CriminalLaw #ConstitutionalLaw #LawPodcast

14. maj 2026 - 53 min
episode When Are You “In Custody”? Miranda Rights Explained Clearly Ep.7 cover

When Are You “In Custody”? Miranda Rights Explained Clearly Ep.7

When do Miranda rights actually apply? The answer comes down to one key question: are you “in custody”? In this episode of Cuffs & Case Law, we break down what “in custody” really means using real Supreme Court cases and practical scenarios. We walk through: * Questioning in your home (even late at night) * Voluntary interviews at a police station * Traffic stops and roadside questioning * When being a “suspect” actually matters (and when it doesn’t) The Supreme Court has made this clear: Miranda warnings are required only when a person’s freedom is restricted to the level of a formal arrest—not just because questioning feels coercive. If you want a clear, practical understanding of your rights (or how courts actually apply them), this is the breakdown you need. Key Supreme Court cases covered: * Orozco v. Texas (1969) * Oregon v. Mathiason (1977) * Berkemer v. McCarty (1984) * Stansbury v. California (1994) * Thompson v. Keohane (1995) * J.D.B. v. North Carolina (2011) * Howes v. Fields (2012) #MirandaRights #CriminalLaw #PoliceLaw #FifthAmendment

30. apr. 2026 - 1 h 17 min
episode When Do Police Have to Read Miranda Rights? | Miranda v. Arizona Explained Ep. 6 cover

When Do Police Have to Read Miranda Rights? | Miranda v. Arizona Explained Ep. 6

How improper interrogations led to suppressed confessions Real-world application for law enforcement today ⚖️ Cases Covered: Miranda v. Arizona (1966) Vignera v. New York Westover v. United States California v. Stewart 📚 Key Legal Concepts: Custodial Interrogation Fifth Amendment Rights Right Against Self-Incrimination Right to Counsel Voluntary Waiver Police Interrogation Tactics 🎯 Why This Case Matters: The Supreme Court made it clear: Statements from custodial interrogation cannot be used unless proper procedural safeguards are in place. That’s where Miranda Warnings come from—and why they still shape every police interview today. 👊 About the Show: We’re active police officers breaking down real case law so you don’t have to. Context matters. 🔗 Case Link (Justia): Miranda v. Arizona (Full Case): https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/384/436/ [https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/384/436/] 🔥 Hashtags: #MirandaRights #MirandaVArizona #CaseLaw #PoliceTraining #CriminalProcedure #FourthAmendment #FifthAmendment #SixthAmendment #LawEnforcement #CustodialInterrogation #PolicePodcast #TrueCrimeLaw #LegalEducation

15. apr. 2026 - 1 h 12 min
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