The Warren Court Jill St. Laurent Carley Denis. Earl Warren 14 th Chief Justice Very Liberal vs Conservative Appointed by Eisenhower Racial Equality.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Warren Court Changing Americas Interpretation.
Advertisements

Click on the arrow to begin the quiz.. Miranda v. Arizona (1966) Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) Texas v. Johnson (1989) Mapp v. Ohio (1961) Katz v. United.
Marbury vs. Madison (1803) Essential Skill:
The Warren Court Changing America’s Interpretation.
The Warren Court By Rebecca Johnson. Chief Justice Earl Warren Chief Justice for 16 years ( ) Warren painting (online image) available.
The Warren Court 1953 – – 1969 Chief Justice Earl Warren Chief Justice Earl Warren Liberal decisions Liberal decisions Supported the rights of.
Warren Court. Warm-up Do you have rights when you are being arrested? What rights do you have?
USH2 unit 4: Equality and Power Lesson 4.2 = The Warren Court.
Supreme Court Decisions
Miranda v Arizona Escobedo v Illinois By Austin Lallier.
Supreme Court Cases. What you need to know to present your case: The background of the case – What happened? – What were both sides of the argument? Constitutional.
Chapter 26 Section 2 The “Great Society”. Lyndon Johnson’s Rise to the Presidency Member of the House of representatives-1937 Won a Senate seat in 1948.
Landmark Supreme Court Cases
The Supreme Court and Civil Liberties Chapter 18-2 Nine old men: Supreme Court in the 1960s.
Supreme Court Cases. U. S. v. Nixon Background: Background: Watergate Hotel; burglars break into Democratic Party headquarters. White House staff are.
8 Landmark Supreme Court Cases
The Rights of Individuals Analyze court cases that demonstrate how the U.S. constitution and the bill of rights protect the rights of individuals.
Jeopardy The Bill of Rights Landmark Cases First Amendment Random Name That Case Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500.
By: Holden Luce.  Mapp was accused of harboring a criminal involved in a bombing case.  The Officers confronted Mapp at her home and demanded that she.
Court Cases dealing with Individual Rights (Bill of Rights) J. Worley Civics.
2.05 Starter Why were the Civil War amendments so important? Explain the 14 th amendment in your own words. Which amendment was repealed (done away with)?
The Supreme Court.
Important Supreme Court Decisions. Marbury v. Madison (1803) Established the Supreme Court’s right of judicial review (the right to determine the constitutionality.
SUPREME COURT CASES CASES EVERY POLITICAL SCIENCE STUDENT NEEDS TO KNOW.
 1803  DECISION  Established the concept of Judicial Review: the Supreme court has the final authority to find acts of government unconstitutional.
Important Court Cases THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW! Important Cases Marbury v. Madison (1803) McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) Brown.
Do They Have the Right??? You SHALL Decide……. Case #1 The United States is involved in a controversial war. To show their opposition to the war, two students.
Miranda vs. Arizona Right to Remain Silent.
Landmark Supreme Court Cases. Marbury v. Madison  1803  Article III – Judicial Powers  Establishment of Judicial Review – the power of the Supreme.
Look over all the cases in the powerpoint and select only one of the cases. Open the Supreme Court Cases Reading file on Edmodo and read about the case.
USH2 Unit 4: Equality and Power Lesson 4.2 = The Warren Court.
Homework: Read/OL 14.3 for Monday FrontPage: Have 3 worksheets on your desk.
Landmark Supreme Court Cases: American History. Marbury v. Madison Essentials: Essentials: Established JUDICIAL REVIEW Established JUDICIAL REVIEW 1803.
Supreme Court Cases. Marbury vs Madison Established Judicial review-which says the Supreme Court decided what’s constitutional or not It gave them Judicial.
4.04: Creation and Defense of Individual Rights Supreme Court Cases.
The Warren Court ( ). Wordsplash Create one sentence per term using some clue words from below. DUE PROCESS Lawlegal principles No citizen may.
The Warren Court Supreme Court Decisions :. The Warren Court: Civil Rights 1. Civil Rights  Brown v. Board: Desegregated public schools  Reynolds v.
Miranda V. Arizona By: Elise Kloppenburg. Facts of the Case Phoenix, Arizona 1963 Ernesto Miranda, 23 years old Arrested in his home Taken to the police.
USH2 Unit 4: Equality and Power Lesson 4.2 = The Warren Court.
Supreme Court Cases of the 60s. Mapp v. Ohio, 1961 What happened? - illegal search of home found “obscene materials”. Mapp was convicted. Brought to court.
Objective: To examine the importance of the Supreme Court case of Brown v. Board of Education.
Supreme Court Cases. Marbury v Madison Issue: Should the Constitution be very strictly interpreted or is there room for interpretation? If there.
Judicial Change The Warren and Burger Court. Earl Warren.
Quote of the Day: “School officials do not possess absolute authority over their students. Students in school as well as out of school are "persons" under.
The Warren Court (1950s-1960s) How did the Supreme Court (under the leadership of Earl Warren) expand the rights of individuals?
In the criminal justice system, the Supreme Court has the final say. In the 1960s, the dedicated Justices who heard these cases were members of an elite.
Court Cases that Protect the Individual Citizen
The Warren Court 1953 – 1969 Chief Justice Earl Warren
Landmark Supreme Court Decisions
John F. Kennedy
Landmark Cases Mapp v. Ohio Tinker v. Des Moines Miranda v. Arizona
The Warren Court 1953 – 1969 Chief Justice Earl Warren
Supreme Court rulings that reshaped American politics and society
Important Court Cases of the 20th Century
The Warren Court By Rebecca Johnson.
"I would like the Court to be remembered as the people's court"
Landmark Supreme Court cases
Bell Work John F. Kennedy became president in the 1960s, during the height of Cold War tension. His new foreign policy called _1._ was designed to decrease.
Important Supreme Court Cases
Liberalism vs. Conservatism
Landmark Supreme court cases
Landmark Supreme Court Cases
Civil Rights Chart Rachel Carson Cesar Chavez Bob Dylan Joan Baez
Landmark Supreme court cases
Lesson 4.2: The Warren Court
The Warren Court, Roe v. Wade, & School Rights Cases
The Warren Court AP US History.
Bellringer If a state is primarily represented by one political party, how might redistricting (redrawing of electoral district boundaries) create an.
Constitutional Rights: Protections and Limitations
Do Now: a) Finish up Rights Movement Packet b) Earl Warren Background
Presentation transcript:

The Warren Court Jill St. Laurent Carley Denis

Earl Warren 14 th Chief Justice Very Liberal vs Conservative Appointed by Eisenhower Racial Equality

Brown vs Board of Education Linda Brown ▫Student in a segregated school ▫Walked five miles each day ▫Oliver Brown, her father, had NAACP help Thurgood Marshal was the head of NAACP He challenged the segregation ▫It went against the 14 th amendment Justice Earl Warren said, “In the eyes of the law, justice was colorblind.” This meant integration for America Huge event in the civil rights movement

Mapp vs Ohio Dolree Mapp Suspected of hiding a fugitive Police ▫No warrant ▫Fake warrant  She grabbed it and they fought her to get it back  Attroney wasn’t allowed to enter her house Arrested for having pornographic material “Exclusionary Rule”

Gideon vs Wainwright Gideon was convicted for breaking and entering Not granted a lawyer ▫Said only for people in capital cases who can no afford and lawyer Forced to defend himself ▫Five years in jail Hand wrote a note to Supreme Court ▫The supreme court unanimously decided “All citizens must be provided a lawyer if they can not afford one. This is regardless of crime type.”

Escobedo vs Illinois Danny Escobedo arrested in connection with a murder Repeatedly requested for his lawyer but was denied to even leave the interrogation room ▫His lawyer even went down there and was denied “Escobedo Rule” ▫“Holds that individuals have the right to an attorney when an investigation is no long a general inquiry…but has begun to focus on a particular suspect…”

Miranda vs Arizona Ernest Miranda arrested for kidnapping and rape of four young girls Interrogated for two hours and confessed Acquitted Led to “Miranda Rights” ▫“Your have the right to remain silent, anything you say can, and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford one, one will be appointed for you.”

Engle vs Vitale Prayer be said in public schools voluntarily New Hyde Park Long Island parent sued school Court ruled against the school district Led to “Separation of church and state” Prayer in schools was to be considered unconstitutional

Abbington vs Schempp Pennsylvania law required that at least ten Bible verses be read each morning in public schools. The Schempps, a family from Abington, sued The court found the school district wrong again ▫Just like Engle vs Vitale ▫Prayer in schools was to be considered unconstitutional

Tinker vs Des Moines Students and parents protesting Vietnam War Wore black arm bands Tinker children got suspended when they wore the bands to school Mr. and Mrs. Tinker sued Led to freedom of “Symbolic speech” ▫Rights to freedom of speech and expression

Katz vs United States Katz arrested for illegal gambling FBI had recording device on Phone booth Katz habitually used. Court ruled in favor of Katz Search and Seizure (wiretaps) ▫4 th amendment allowed for the protection of a person and not just a person’s property against illegal searches whatever a citizen “seeks to preserve as private”, even in an area accessible to the public

Bibliography American Heritage. 2nd ed. Vol. 24. American Heritage Company, Christine Composition. Earl Warren Justice For All. New York: Oxford Unity P, Discover Enterprise. Civil Rights Movement. Carlisle: Discover Enterprise, g_share

Slide 13 Instructional Products Description: This powerpoint was created by two US History students. How Technology Was/Is Used: Students used a desktop loaded with Microsoft Powerpoint to create this presentation. Various Software and Hardware Used: Microsoft Powerpoint. Maine Learning Result(s): History A1. Identify and analyze major events and people that characterize each of the significant eras in US History. Bloom’s Taxonomy: Creating