Supreme Court Breakdown: United States v. Leon (1984)
I talk about United States v. Leon, in which the Supreme Court first adopted the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule. This is the first in a multipart series on the good-faith exception. Subscribe for more!

▶︎
My Criminal Case Was Dismissed Without Prejudice. What Does That Mean? | With vs. Without Prejudice

▶︎
Probable Cause

▶︎
Why Returning From Mars Is Impossible: Feynman's Warning

▶︎
Developer of buckling NYC high-rise faces $300M lawsuit over other building

▶︎
Top 20 Most Quotable Monty Python Moments

▶︎
Supreme Court Breakdown: Davis v. United States (2011)

▶︎
Killer Cross Examination - Cooperating Witness Cross Examination By Attorney Neil Rockind

▶︎
Can the Police Use Evidence They Got Illegally? | Mapp v. Ohio

▶︎
Prosecutorial Misconduct

▶︎
9-0: SCOTUS Says Goodbye to the Fourth Amendment

▶︎
When Can We Expect Privacy? | Katz v. United States

▶︎
Utah v. Strieff - Post-Decision SCOTUScast

▶︎
The Differences Between Ashkenazi & Sephardic Jews | Modi Stand Up Comedy

▶︎
Ames Moot Court Competition 1987

▶︎
First 10 Amendments - Explained by a Lawyer

▶︎
Search Incident to a Lawful Arrest: Chimel v. California | Criminal Law

▶︎
Come and Take It: For First Time in 100 Years, Texas’ Supreme Court Weighs In

▶︎
Goldberg v. Kelly - Due Process, Fair Hearings & Entitlements

▶︎
How Birth Control Became Legal | Griswold v. Connecticut

▶︎
