Supreme Court Breakdown: Davis v. United States (2011)
This is part three in a series on the good-faith exception to the exclusionary rule. Here, the Court considered objectively reasonable, good-faith reliance on binding appellate precedent that was later overturned.

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

▶︎
Supreme Court Breakdown: Herring v. United States (2009)

▶︎
Supreme Court Legal Update (2022) - Every Officer Must Know

▶︎
What Judges Actually Notice in the First 90 Seconds

▶︎
Supreme Advocacy: What It Takes to Argue at the Supreme Court (DOCUMENTARY)

▶︎
Worst Plane Landing Fails Caught on Camera

▶︎
300 Secret Historical Photos You Were Never Supposed to See

▶︎
Trump suffers the consequences of poor staffing choices

▶︎
Supreme Court Breakdown: United States v. Leon (1984)

▶︎
CEO Tells Judge Caprio "I Created Jobs For This City" — He Had The Perfect Answer

▶︎
Here's What it is REALLY Like Onboard Viking River Cruises

▶︎
Why Stop-and-Frisk is Legal | Terry v. Ohio

▶︎
When Animals Surprise Photographers in the Sweetest Way! 😍

▶︎
LAWYER: If Cops Ask "Where You Coming From?" - Say THIS (Simple Phrase)

▶︎
Oral Argument on a police shooting after unpaid tolls: Barnes v. Felix

▶︎
How to Present Your Case In Court

▶︎
PART 5 of 5: Vehicular Searches Without a Warrant. Miscellaneous Concepts.

▶︎
Supreme Court Just Put 12 Million Green Card Holders at RISK – What You Must Know NOW!

▶︎
LAWYER: Supreme Court Just Changed Traffic Stops for Gun Owners

▶︎
