The Bill of Rights. Objectives Students will be able to identify protections of the Bill of Rights....
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- Slide 1
- The Bill of Rights
- Slide 2
- Objectives Students will be able to identify protections of the
Bill of Rights. Students will be able to evaluate the importance of
different provisions of the Bill of Rights. Students will be able
to analyze the reasons that the framers developed the protections
of the Bill of Rights.
- Slide 3
- Bill of Rights 1. What five rights are protected by the First
Amendment? 2. By what amendment are property rights protected? 3.
Where can one find protections against excessive bail? 4. How much
money has to be at stake for a federal civil trial to require a
jury? 5. Where can one find the right to trial by jury in a
criminal trial? 6. Where can one find protections against the
quartering of troops? 7. What does the ninth amendment protect? 8.
Whose rights are protected by the 10 th amendment? 9. What are
three rights that a person has if he is accused of a crime? 10.
Which amendment protects a person from testifying against himself
in court?
- Slide 4
- The First Amendment The First Amendment has Five parts!
Religion (From and Of) Speech Press Petition Assembly
- Slide 5
- The Five Freedoms of the First Amendment
- Slide 6
- The Second Amendment Two Bare Arms!
- Slide 7
- Second Amendment Protections The Second Amendment Protects the
right to bear arms, for a well regulated citizen military.
- Slide 8
- The Third Amendment Ching! Ching! Ching! I hear three
QUARTERS!
- Slide 9
- Third Amendment Protections The Third Amendment prevents the
government from keeping troops in your house.
- Slide 10
- The Fourth Amendment The Fourth Amendment prohibits
unreasonable Search and Seizure!
- Slide 11
- Fourth Amendment Protections The Fourth Amendment says that
police officers have to have either a WARRANT or PROBABLE CAUSE
before they can look for or take evidence from a person or a
place.
- Slide 12
- The Fifth Amendment I Plead the Fifth!
- Slide 13
- Fifth Amendment Protections
- Slide 14
- Fifth Amendment Protection You have to be accused of a crime by
a grand jury of peers. You cant be tried twice for the same crime.
You dont have to testify against yourself. If the government is
going to put you in jail or take your things, they have to give you
a trial and follow steps. The government cant take your private
property for government use unless they pay you for it.
- Slide 15
- The Sixth Amendment Right to a SPEEDY trial!
- Slide 16
- Protections of the Sixth Amendment Your trial has to be SPEEDY
and PUBLIC. You must be tried in the state where the crime was
committed. You have to be informed of your charges. You have the
right to confront the people who have accused you. You have the
right to have people on your side in court. You have the right to a
lawyer
- Slide 17
- The Seventh Amendment You might have seven people on a
JURY!
- Slide 18
- Seventh Amendment Protections You have the right to a jury in a
civil lawsuit. This is a case in which a person or state sues you
over money.
- Slide 19
- The Eighth Amendment Behind the Eight Ball! (or you cant hang
the fat man!)
- Slide 20
- Eighth Amendment Protections The government cannot charge you
huge amounts of money for minor crimes. The government cannot
punish you in ways that are cruel or unusual. Basically, the
punishment has to fit the crime.
- Slide 21
- The Ninth Amendment Nine Happy Nights, Unenumerated
Rights!
- Slide 22
- Ninth Amendment Protections James Madison thought that it was
impossible to make a list of ALL of the rights that people have, so
he added this amendment that says that the fact that some rights
arent written down, like privacy, does not mean you dont have
them.
- Slide 23
- The Tenth Amendment 10 x 5 = 50 States Rights!
- Slide 24
- Tenth Amendment Protections The states get to hold any power
not expressly spelled on in the Constitution for the national
government. That means states make their own laws about policing,
traffic, marriage, etc.