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Major Court Cases American Government CLEP.Complete Exam Review Bundle | Midterm, Final & Bonus Questions with A+ Rated Solutions

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Major Court Cases American Government CLEP. Complete Exam Review Bundle | Midterm, Final & Bonus Questions with A+ Rated Solutions

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Major Court Cases American Government CLEP
Extensive Exam Preparation Pack | Fully Solved Questions, Practice Tests, and
Expert Answer Guides
Marbury v. Madison

(1803) - Established Judicial Review; "midnight judges"; John Marshall; power of the Supreme
Court.



McCulloch v. Maryland

(1819) - Established national supremacy; established implied powers; use of elastic clause; state
unable to tax fed. Institution; John Marshall; "the power to tax the power to destroy."



Gibbons v. Ogden

(1824) - Established a broad interpretation of the Commerce Clause; determined Congress'
power encompassed virtually every form of commercial activity.



Plessy v. Ferguson

(1896) - Established "separate but equal." Gave Supreme Court approval of Jim Crow laws.



Weeks v. U.S.

(1914) - Established the "Exclusionary Rule" at the federal level; illegally obtained evidence
cannot be used in court.



Schenck v. U.S.

(1919) - Clear and present danger test; shouting "fire" in a crowded theater; limits on speech,
especially in wartime.



Gitlow v. New York

, (1925) - Established precedent of federalizing Bill of Rights (applying them to the states); states
cannot deny freedom of speech, protected through due process clause of Amendment 14.



Near v. Minnesota

(1931) - Held that the 1st Amendment protects newspaper from prior restraint.



Palko v. Connecticut

(1937) - Provided test for determining which parts of the Bill of Rights should be federalized,
those which are implicitly or explicitly necessary for liberty to exist.



Korematsu v. U.S.

(1944) - Upheld as constitutional the internment of Americans with Japanese descent during
WWII.



Brown v. Board, 1st

(1954) - School segregation unconstitutional; segregation psychologically damaging to blacks;
overturned "separate but equal"; use of 14th Amendment.



Brown v. Board, 2nd

(1955) - Ordered schools to desegregate "with all due and deliberate speed."



Roth v. United States

(1957) - Established that "obscenity is not within the area of constitutionally protected speech
or press."



Mapp v. Ohio

(1961) - Established the "Exclusionary Rule" at the state level; illegally obtained evidence cannot
be used in court.

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