Essence: Dollree Mapp, 1923-2014: “The Rosa Parks of the Fourth Amendment”

Essence: Dollree Mapp, 1923-2014: “The Rosa Parks of the Fourth Amendment” by Ken Armstrong:
dollreemapp-1957

Time is not always kind to the people whose names get attached to landmark legal cases. Ernesto Miranda, the defendant whose 1966 Supreme Court case forced police to inform suspects of their basic rights (“You have the right to remain silent…”) was stabbed to death in a skid-row bar. Clarence Gideon won a 1963 Supreme Court case, Gideon v. Wainwright, that established the right of poor defendants to court-appointed lawyers. When he died a decade later the former mayor of his hometown recalled him as a “no-good punk.” It fell to the American Civil Liberties Union to put a marker on his grave.

Before the Gideon ruling, before Miranda, there was Mapp v. Ohio, the 1961 Supreme Court decision some legal scholars credit with launching a “due process revolution” in American law. The Mapp ruling changed policing in America by requiring state courts to throw out evidence if it had been seized illegally. The woman behind the ruling, Dollree “Dolly” Mapp, died six weeks ago in a small town in Georgia, with virtually no notice paid. She was 91, as best we can tell.

It’s really ironic to call her the “The Rosa Parks of the Fourth Amendment” where the exclusionary rule issue there wasn’t even briefed by the parties: SCOTUS got there on its own. Treatise § 7.04, text accompanying n.4 & n.4 (“Mapp, 367 U.S. at 676-77 (dissenting opinion). Only three justices signed on to that dissent.”).

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