Cuffs and Case Law Podcast
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
10 episodios
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