Summary
Police officers stopped three men on the street whom they suspected were planning a burglary. The officers did not have a warrant for the search; they merely suspected the three men after observing them lingering and possibly “casing” a location. This level of suspicion would probably have also been insufficient to obtain a warrant. Upon stopping the men, the police also conducted a search of their bodies—a “frisk”—to ensure that there were no weapons on their persons. The officers discovered concealed weapons on two of them. After being sentenced to three years in prison, the Petitioner (Terry)—one of the three men—appealed his case, arguing that his search was a violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. Terry involves a police tactic that remains controversial to this day: the stop and frisk. In this case, the Court concluded that the Fourth Amendment did not prohibit police from stopping a person they have reasonable suspicion to believe had committed a crime, and frisking that person if they reasonably believe that person to be armed.