Right To Privacy In A Man's Home example essay topic
When the case reached the Supreme Court, the Court ruled in favor of the plaintiff, stating that there was a right to privacy in a man's home. In Mapp vs. Ohio, (Mapp) Police received an anonymous tip that there was a bomber inside the residence of a Mrs. Mapp. They came to her house, and she refused to let them in without a search warrant. The police came back later, handcuffed Mapp, and found several items of obscene material throughout her house. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Mapp, stating the right to privacy in a person's home, and the guarantees that the fourth and fourteenth amendments have. What gives the court the right to base a decision on the right to privacy?
The first amendment to the Constitution states that people have the rights of speech, religion, press, petition, and "assembly". More specifically, "freedom to associate". The court ruled that "the disclosure of membership lists of a constitutionally valid association, was invalid". It also ruled that "we have protection in the associations that are not political in the customary sense, but pertain to the social, legal, and economic benefit of the members", in NAACP vs. Button. (U.S. Supreme Court N.A.A.C.P.V. Button) Another reason why the right to privacy is implied is the fourth and fifth amendments.
In Boyd vs. US, they are used as protection against invasions "of the sanctity of a man's home and the privacies of life". In Mapp vs. Ohio, the fourth amendment was referred to as "a right to privacy, no less important than any other right carefully and particularly reserved to the people". The forth is also referred to in Griswold vs. Connecticut case as "the right to be left alone". In NAACP vs. Alabama, (N.A.A.C.P. vs. Alabama) the fourth and first amendments were used in conjunction to say "we have the right to associate and to have privacy in one's associations".
Throughout the brief history of the Supreme Court, hundreds of cases have been held. Several of those cases have had the decision based on the "right to privacy". The problem is, that no where in any version or in any language does the United States Constitution specifically say we have a right to privacy. Even one of the most controversial cases in history, Roe vs. Wade, (Roe vs. Wade) had a decision that was based at least partially on the "right to privacy". Whether the fourth amendment is written or implied by the courts, one thing is for sure, due to the ninth and fourteenth amendments, there is no way, that a state or national law will ever take away our so called "Right to Privacy.".