This decision will exercise my strength as the President of the United States. The United States cannot afford to have disloyal government officials during this time of war. Also, anti-communism is very popular right now in the United States. The suspicion of where John Vincent’s loyalties lie is one that must be dealt with. There is no hard evidence of his innocence, but also none of his guiltiness. The Secretary of State wrote a memorandum to me about…
Police corruption is “an act involving the misuse of authority by a police officer in a manner designed to produce personal gain for himself or others” (Dempsey & Forst, 2016, p. 231). Several policies or procedures can be implemented to eliminate police corruption in the department. The leaders of the police department must be selected such that they are not unethical or unlawful in their actions. If the leaders are not corrupt, there will be a lower possibility of corruption in the department.…
"All war is deception," (Sun Tzu). World War II deceived President Roosevelt and the american people into thinking that all Japanese-Americans citizens are spies which made them fear betrayal. For this reason, Roosevelt ordered the Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942, which issued the internment of Japanese-American citizens. The Americans subjected all of them to internment camps. Families were investigated, tried, and separated. Conceivably never to be reunited again. Roosevelt was…
essentially and collectively stated that an LEO has the “right to make a temporary detention based on reasonable suspicion or a traffic stop even if that stop was primarily for the basis of checking out possible criminal behavior for which the officer lacked reasonable suspicion or probable cause” (“Racial Profiling as”, n.d., para. 2). One of the cases that pulled us into the reasonable suspicion was the Terry v. Ohio case that leaded to the probable cause standard of our Fourth Amendment.…
September eleventh changed the way the world views terrorism, the wars in in Iraq and Afghanistan claimed the lives of thousands and we the United States have taken massive counterterrorism measures home with us. The United States Patriot Act of 2001 made significant changes in the structure of federal law enforcement, it was revised in 2006 and in 2004 when the 9/11 commission called for a complete overhaul of the U.S. intelligence system the National Criminal Intelligence Sharing Plan or NCISP…
For years authors and historian have developed numerous theories to elucidate why the Salem witch trials occurred, yet I have found that the most reasonable explanation for this tragedy is it was a product of the political repression in Salem’s community. In 1692, the village of Salem was inhabited by the Puritans and was ruled by a strict theocracy whose “function was to keep the community together, and to prevent any kind of disunity that might open it to destruction” (Miller 7). However,…
The CIA gathers information from reasonable suspicion than looking for facts. From the information they gather, they try to identify connections and patterns for help them solve their cases. Few rules apply to the CIA when they gather their information. Typically, the FBI’s actions are generally…
Employees should have the right to a reasonable amount of privacy “A co-worker who was changing light bulbs, one day in October, 1995, stumbled on the camera, lying on a newly installed shelf near the ceiling. He pulled the tape from it and watched the video with Nelson, who was shocked to see herself changing clothes” (Lewis 20). Gail Nelson was a secretary at Salem State College in the Small Business Development Center. She choked, when she saw a videotape in which she was changing her…
Arthur Miller, tells a fictional story based in Salem Village and the infamous Salem Witch Trials. The book focuses on how the events began and on the slow and the atrocious mental decline of the overly religious townspeople of Salem. Guilty by Suspicion, Directed by Irwin Winkler and starring Robert De Niro, tells the story of Hollywood director David Merrill and how America’s Communist fears destroyed his family, his career in the film industry and those of countless others due to their…
Katz v. United States 389 U.S. 347 (1967) Facts: In suspicion Katz was sending gambling information to individuals in other states over the phone, Federal agents attached a device to an outside public phone booth to eavesdrop on Katz. The recording revealed Katz was convicted of eight-counts indictment for transmitting illegal wager information from Los Angeles to Boston and Miami. Katz appealed his conviction stating that the recordings could not be used as evidence against him. However, the…