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Examples
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The California Supreme Court decided the loss of privacy upon arrest extends beyond the arrestee's body to include personal property.
California Court Rules Texts Can Be Searched Without Warrant AP 2011
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The California Supreme Court decided the loss of privacy upon arrest extends beyond the arrestee's body to include personal property.
California Court Rules Texts Can Be Searched Without Warrant AP 2011
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Supreme Court decisions from the 1970s on the right to search an arrestee's property should not extend to modern technological devices.
California Court Rules Texts Can Be Searched Without Warrant AP 2011
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The California Supreme Court decided the loss of privacy upon arrest extends beyond the arrestee's body to include personal property.
California Court Rules Texts Can Be Searched Without Warrant AP 2011
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Supreme Court decisions from the 1970s on the right to search an arrestee's property should not extend to modern technological devices.
California Court Rules Texts Can Be Searched Without Warrant AP 2011
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The California Supreme Court decided the loss of privacy upon arrest extends beyond the arrestee's body to include personal property.
California Court Rules Texts Can Be Searched Without Warrant AP 2011
-
Supreme Court decisions from the 1970s on the right to search an arrestee's property should not extend to modern technological devices.
California Court Rules Texts Can Be Searched Without Warrant AP 2011
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Supreme Court decisions from the 1970s on the right to search an arrestee's property should not extend to modern technological devices.
California Court Rules Texts Can Be Searched Without Warrant AP 2011
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As a result, the plaintiffs are asserting that state law obligated the generic manufacturers at least to ask the FDA to review the product-labeling and then approve stronger warnings — just like Arizona's immigration law would obligate state officials to ask DHS to verify an arrestee's immigration status.
Obama Embraces the 'Pre-emption' Doctrine Jay Lefkowitz And Michael Shumsky 2010
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The attorney general, for instance, says that Virginia law already permits officers to check an arrestee's immigration status if there is a "reasonable suspicion" that the person is in the country illegally.
How curious: Cuccinelli vs. Stewart Peter Galuszka 2010
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