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Word(s) in meaning: chat  "global warming"
Postal codes: USA: 81657, Canada: T5A 0A7

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What does SITA stand for?

Search Incident to Arrest


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This definition appears very rarely and is found in the following Acronym Finder categories:

  • Military and Government

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<< PreviousAbbreviation Database SurferNext >>
System Integration Test
System Interoperability Test
Système d'Information Territorial (French: Territorial Information System)
Système Intelligent de Transport (French: Intelligent Transpiration System; Canada)
Systems Interface Test
System of Integrated Tools for the Creation of Multimedia Contents Delivered Off-line and ON-line
Sloan Intelligence Test-Revised
Slosson Intelligence Test-Revised
Standard Insurance Table/Other Health Insurance
Signal Intensity on T2
Selected Image Target Area
Sideward Impact Test Apparatus
Sister Islands Tourism Association
Société Internationale de Télécommunications Aéronautiques
Society of Information Theory and Its Applications
Something in the Air
State Independent Telephone Association of Kansas
State Information Technology Agency (South Africa)
Students in the Arts (various organizations)
Suppression of Immoral Traffic Act of 1956



Samples in periodicals archive:
5) [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] This article recounts the evolution of the search incident to arrest exception to the warrant requirement; discusses how the bright-line rule for searching vehicles following arrests developed; and analyzes how the recent Arizona v.
According to the Frierson rule, the officers know three things going into the illegal detention: (1) if they run a warrants check or inquire about warrants and the individual has an open warrant, they will probably discover it; (2) if they discover a warrant, any evidence they seize in the search incident to arrest will be admissible, regardless of the illegality of the detention; and (3) if they do not discover a warrant, they are no worse off.
If the Court does return to the general issue of searches incident to arrest, as Thornton suggests it may, it should be handled as follows: First, Chimel's "area within immediate control" approach should be abandoned, and the automatic, suspicionless, search incident to arrest should be limited to the person of the suspect, including any containers found on him, as Robinson v.
The power to search incident to arrest - a search of the arrested suspect's person and (if arrested there) his home - was well established in the mid-eighteenth century, and nothing in Entick or Wilkes or, indeed, the Fourth Amendment changed that.
Supreme Court unanimously overturned the Virginia Supreme Court, holding that as the officers had probable cause to arrest Moore, the search incident to arrest also was lawful.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The search incident to arrest doctrine appears simple on its face; however, today's technology complicates the matter, presenting officers with unique challenges.
A few vehicle cases were reviewed, including one addressing the scope of the search incident to arrest when the individual already was out of the vehicle when the law enforcement encounter began and the other relating to highway checkpoints.
The search incident to arrest must be contemporaneous to the suspect's arrest.

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