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Mapp V. Ohio - (Landmark Law Cases & American Society) by Carolyn N Long (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Although she came to be known as merely "that girl with the dirty books," Dollree Mapp was a poor but proud black woman who defied a predominantly white police force by challenging the legality of its search-and-seizure methods.
- Langum Prize for Historical Literature (Legal History) 2006 3rd Winner
- Author(s): Carolyn N Long
- 240 Pages
- Freedom + Security / Law Enforcement, Legal History
- Series Name: Landmark Law Cases & American Society
Description
About the Book
A concise and compelling account of the closely-decided Supreme Court ruling that balanced the duties of state and local crime fighters against the rights of individuals from being tried with illegally seized evidence.
Book Synopsis
Although she came to be known as merely "that girl with the dirty books," Dollree Mapp was a poor but proud black woman who defied a predominantly white police force by challenging the legality of its search-and-seizure methods. Her case, which went all the way to the Supreme Court, remains hotly debated and highly controversial today.
In 1957, Cleveland police raided Mapp's home on a tip--from future fight promoter Don "the Kid" King--that they'd find evidence linked to a recent bombing. What they confiscated instead was sexually explicit material that led to Mapp's conviction for possessing "lewd and lascivious books"--a conviction that initially pitted Ohio police and judges against Mapp and the American Civil Liberties Union. At stake was not only the search-and-seizure question but also the "exclusionary rule" concerning the use of evidence not specified in a search warrant.
Carolyn Long follows the police raid into Mapp's home and then chronicles the events that led to the Court's 5-4 ruling in Mapp v. Ohio (1961), which redefined the rights of the accused and set strict limits on how police could obtain and use evidence. Long traces the case through the legal labyrinth, discusses the controversies it created, and assesses its impact on police behavior, as well as subsequent prosecutions and convictions of the accused. She also analyzes Justice Tom Clark's creative use of Mapp's case to overturn Wolf v. Colorado, which had ruled that the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches applied only to federal law, and presents Justice John Harlan's strong federalist-based dissent.
As entertaining as it is informative, Long's book features a host of intriguing characters: Mapp, her seasoned and determined attorney, A. L. Kearns, and police sergeant Carl Delau, among others. Combined with her concise and insightful explanations of key legal principles--including the exclusionary rule itself--Long's deft narrative provides an ideal format for teachers and students in criminology, legal history, constitutional law, and political science, as well as anyone who loves a good story.
The Mapp case is still much debated, especially in light of the recent reauthorization of the U.S. Patriot Act and the free rein given to law enforcement officers in matters of search and seizure. Long's compelling study thus poses important questions regarding privacy and individual rights that still matter today, even as it also illuminates one of the keystones of the Warren Court's criminal procedure revolution.
Review Quotes
"Long provides a comprehensive account of the landmark case. The historic story of Dollree Mapp comes alive through old papers, legal sources, and interviews. This book probes the past and exposes the political uproar caused by the decision. . . . I would recommend this book to law students in criminal procedure courses and students in criminal justice programs."--Criminal Justice Review
"This book tells the story of the case with exquisite clarity and narrative verve. . . . It is comprehensive, engaging, and lucid."--The Historian
"For historians and students of the twentieth-century United States more generally, the book will serve as a vivid illustration of the complex, and often unexpected, ways in which developments in constitutional law are integrally tied to the 'bigger picture' of American history."--H-Net Reviews
"A lively, colorful and insightful account--and the most comprehensive one I have ever read--of the case that set off the Warren Court's revolution in American criminal procedure."--Yale Kamisar, author of Police Interrogation and Confessions
"A lucid, fair-minded, and entertaining account of one of the Supreme Court's seminal criminal law decisions, and of the woman whose stubbornness made it happen."--Joshua Dressler, author of Understanding Criminal Procedure
"Long's fascinating account of this landmark case shows how much we all owe to the remarkable perseverance of Dollree Mapp--the Rosa Parks of the Fourth Amendment."--Wayne R. LaFave, author of the six-volume Search and Seizure