Fourth Amendment: Reasonable Suspicion
Reasonable Suspicion
In this chapter we review the Court’s efforts to define “reasonable suspicion,” which is required for stops and frisks under Terry v. Ohio. Critics of stop and frisk practices complain that the Court has set too low a standard, thereby allowing law enforcement to stop pretty much anyone, particularly in neighborhoods with high crime rates. Advocates for stop and frisk counter that a stricter standard would undermine effective policework.