Activity 1
Activity 1
Activity 1
The plain view doctrine is a criminal procedural law that allows an officer to seize
evidence of a crime without needing a warrant. The plain view doctrine does not require
a warrant when the evidence is visible. Also known as the clear-view doctrine or the
plain sight rule. This doctrine is based on the practical reasoning that an officer does not
lawfully present, the object may be seen, and he has a legal right to access that object.
Furthermore, when an officer is legally present, this doctrine generally supports the
concept that further refinement by the courts will help resolve differing interpretations of
Under the plain view doctrine, objects in an officer's view may be seized and
used as evidence. Three requisites of plain view doctrine apply. (1) Law enforcement
officers searching for evidence have a prior justification for an intrusion or can view a
particular area. (2) the discovery of the evidence in plain view is inadvertent, and (3) it is
immediately apparent to the officers that the item may be evidence of a crime,
Consent searches are those performed by law enforcement authorities with the
consent of the individual whose property they seek to search. The most commonly used
To perform a consent search, the person whose property is being searched must
willingly consent to the search. Clearly, no force or threat was used to get the arrested
reasonable person would understand that he or she is free to refuse." Consent must be
given positively. Silence is not consent. The search may only proceed as far as the
authority granted. In most instances, the individual may deny consent. However, law
enforcement is not required to inform the individual that consent is voluntary. It is not
For a search to be legal, the person granting authorization must have common
power over the property. For example, hotel management grants permission to search.
It does not apply to a landlord granting permission to search an owner's apartment, and
3. What are the different between Check Point and Choke Point?
The difference between Check Point and Choke Point is: First, the meaning itself
Checkpoint is a place on the road at a terminal at which vehicles or people are stopped
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
for inspection. At the same time, Choke Point is a point of congestion or blockage.
no category or specific member has the authority to conduct a chokepoint. Lastly, the
checkpoint is regularly performed by an authorized police officer, all mobile vehicles are
the crime or incident that took place. That information will be disseminated around by
the police officer. Now, law enforcement officers will establish a chokepoint, where they
will only apprehend or perform an inspection on the vehicle that has been specifically
recognized.
Republic of the Philippines
Laguna State Polytechnic University
Province of Laguna
References
Davis, J. R. (1979). The Plain View Doctrine (Conclusion). FBI L. Enforcement Bull., 48,
27. https://www.ojp.gov/pdffiles1/Digitization/63104NCJRS.pdf
P&L, Law. (2020, February 18). Valid Warrantless Searches in the Philippines.
thephilippines/?fbclid=IwAR1MTN384VzCXaOZ2H7zcpDddfyYCikccIZKeF5OzOI
z7ohnXgdQ7aFjM74
Saylor, J. (2010). Computers as Castles: Preventing the Plain View Doctrine from
Becoming a Vehicle for Overboard Digital Searches. Fordham L. Rev., 79, 2809.
https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4725&context=flr
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/plain_view_doctrine_0
Tracey Maclin, “Black and Blue Encounters”—Some Preliminary Thoughts About Fourth
(1991).
https://newdemo.openrepository.com/bitstream/handle/2384/582977/The%20Vol
untariness%20of%20Voluntary%20Consent_%20Consent%20Searches%20and
%20the.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
http://www.searchandseizure.org/consentsearches.html