Barron
v. Baltimore
Barron v. Baltimore (
1833)
is an important
U.S.
Supreme Court case. The effect of the Court's decision in this case was that
the freedoms guaranteed by the
Bill
of Rights are restrictions on the federal government alone, and that state
governments are not necessarily bound by them. This decision concerned the
Fifth
Amendment only: some legal scholars feel that the Court's decision in this
matter was too broad, and that the justices did not truly intend state governments
to be exempted from the entire Bill of Rights. Recently, further Supreme Court
cases have interpreted the Fourteenth Amendment to apply the bill of Rights to
the states. These cases include: Gitlow v. New York (1925), Wolf v. Colorado (1949),
and
Gideon
v. Wainwright (1963).
See also: List
of United States Supreme Court cases