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CRIMINAL LAW INFORMATION

The Exclusionary Rule and Search and Seizure

The exclusionary rule requires that evidence obtained by a police officer in an illegal search and seizure be held out of evidence at trial. The primary intention of the rule is to deter unlawful police conduct. Illegally obtained evidence is often referred to as "fruit of the poisonous tree," that is, the search and seizure were tainted and, therefore, evidence produced therefrom is also tainted.
New York case law has defined in detail what degree of police intrusion upon a person is permissible in varying circumstances. The legality of police questioning, stops, frisks and arrests are governed by objective factors which an officer observes. The evidence of a search made with less than the legally required level of suspicion by the officer is subject to exclusion at trial. People are offered the greatest protection from police intrusion in their homes. Unless it is an emergency, the police must have a warrant to arrest an individual in his home.   

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