The Legal Archive
In this episode of The Legal Archive, you are guided through the story behind Terry v. Ohio (1968), told as a calm, immersive legal history narrative. This episode does not explain stop and frisk as a doctrine. Instead, it traces how the doctrine came into existence; beginning on a quiet street corner in Cleveland in 1963, where a police officer stopped and searched two men without a warrant, without probable cause, and without witnessing a crime. From that ordinary moment, the case moved through the courts and reached the United States Supreme Court, where a new constitutional standard was formed. Terry v. Ohio introduced the concept of reasonable suspicion, permanently reshaping how the Fourth Amendment would be applied in everyday policing and criminal procedure. Told in a slow, steady narrative style, this episode is designed for quiet listening, immersive storytelling, and thoughtful engagement with legal history. Sources and references for this episode: https://thelegalarchive.substack.com/p/terry-v-ohio-1968 ⸻ What to Expect in This Episode * a legal history narrative of Terry v. Ohio (1968) * the origin of stop and frisk in the United States * how reasonable suspicion differs from probable cause * Fourth Amendment search and seizure principles * the Supreme Court’s reasoning and constitutional balancing * the long-term impact of Terry v. Ohio on policing and criminal law * calm, non-dramatic storytelling suitable for extended listening ⸻ You will follow the case as it unfolds, from the streets of Cleveland, to the trial courts, to the United States Supreme Court, and beyond, as Terry v. Ohio becomes one of the most cited and consequential decisions in American criminal procedure. This is not a documentary. It is legal history, told as a story.
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