When Police Overstep Constitutional Boundaries
Officers are rifling through your belongings. Fear and anger surge as they invade your personal space.
Your home contains your private life. Your car holds personal items. Your phone contains intimate conversations, photos, and information. When police search without proper authority, they violate all of it.
You watch helplessly. You feel exposed and vulnerable. You’re confused about whether you can refuse.
Even if they found nothing, the damage is done. Your sense of security is shattered. Your trust is broken.
Illegal searches often target certain communities disproportionately. That’s not an accident. That’s a pattern.
I’m so sorry this happened to you. You didn’t deserve this treatment.
Your Fourth Amendment Rights
The Founding Fathers experienced British soldiers searching homes at will. They watched as colonists’ privacy was violated without cause or oversight.
The Fourth Amendment was written specifically to prevent government intrusion into your private life.
You have the right to privacy in your home, papers, and personal effects. Police generally need a warrant based on probable cause before they can search. Warrants must be specific about what they’re searching for and where they’re allowed to look.
Courts use a “reasonable expectation of privacy” standard. If you have a reasonable expectation that something is private, the government needs legal justification to invade that privacy.
These protections apply to everyone: citizens and non-citizens alike.
New York State Constitution provides additional protections beyond federal law. That means you have multiple layers of constitutional rights that police must respect.