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#1 |
Fleet Admiral
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I am starting a new thread so that the other Boston incident thread does not get derailed.
There is, and will continue to be controversy, concerning the decision to not issue Dzhokar Tsarnaev, a US Citizen, his rights against involuntary self-incrimination, more commonly called his Miranda rights. The authorities who are choosing not to issue him his Miranda rights are invoking what is called the Public Safety Exception to Miranda. It is quite possible that people here may never have heard of this exception, but it has been valid since 1984 in New York v. Quarles. The FBI has published a nice article that discusses the Public Safety Exception to Miranda. If anyone is interested in discussing this controversial topic, this article will serve nicely as a baseline understanding. http://www.fbi.gov/stats-services/pu...1/legal_digest And for geeks like me who actually like to read SCotUS opinions: http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/script...s/467/649.html
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abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
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#2 |
Fleet Admiral
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My opinion is that if this case is reviewed by the Supreme Court, that the Public Safety Exclusion to Miranda will be judged not applicable in this case.
1. There was no probable cause to presume that there was an imminent threat to public safety. Unlike in U.S. v. Khalil (2000), there was no evidence that there were additional IEDs. Using the fear of additional IEDs to invoke the exclusion should not be allowed. If it were, then it could be applied to any crime where violence is involved. There needs to be some probable cause, as there was in U.S. v. Khalil. 2. There is no indication that there are any living accomplices to this crime. Invoking the exclusion based on the fear that there *might* be an unknown accomplice that *could* commit further acts of violence should not be allowed. If it were, it could be applied to any crime where the police don't know if there is an unknown accomplice. 3. The judicial intent of the exclusion is to mitigate immediate and local threats. Not threats that may occur in distant places at some unknown time in the future. The court cases where the exclusion has been applied all pertained to immediate (temporal) or local (locational) threats of a short duration/limited area. I do not believe the judicial intention of the exclusion was ever intended to be applied to interrogations taken place several days after the arrest. In U.S. v. Khalil, the case that most closely resembles the Boston incident, the exclusion interrogation occurred within hours of the arrest, but in a different location (hospital). This could be a landmark case. The Public Safety Exclusion to Miranda has always been contentious, but the authorities have used it with restraint. The exclusion has its purpose, but it should not be casually expanded without restraint.
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abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
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#3 |
Rear Admiral
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I'm completely unfamiliar with the legal precedents and reasoning behind the decision but FWIW I got a squicky feeling when I heard the report that they were considering not Mirandizing him after taking him into custody. Just on general principles it makes me uncomfortable, besides which if there's any chance that not having done so would lead to an otherwise "clean" conviction being tossed aside on a technicality... I wouldn't like that at all. I say, why take the chance, go by the book right down to the last bit of fine print so there is no doubt that every proper procedure was followed and nothing can be called into question somewhere down the road.
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#4 |
Fleet Admiral
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Smart criminal investigators will arrange a different investigator to conduct all the interrogations, while other investigators go out and investigate the case.
The records are kept separate. Then if any of the interrogation is ruled inadmissible, the fact that the field investigators did not have access to it, will make it easier to have the field evidence admissible. Often Law Enforcement does not have that luxury. The bottom line is that anything recovered during an interrogation before Miranda warnings has been issued is generally ruled inadmissible as direct evidence. Very special cases of res gestae are some of the exemptions. If you can get a conviction without using any non-mirandized evidence, then the fact that you did not mirandize a defendant is not a problem. You only need to issue Miranda warnings when you intend to use statements during interrogation as evidence in the case. Sneaky prosecutors have tried to take advantage of this, but usually it backfires upon appeal. In this case, perhaps there is no intention to ever formally take this individual to trial. Unfortunately, under the current legal situation, there may be venues to simply throw this US Citizen in a military prison and claim that he is an "enemy combatant". In that case, Miranda goes out the door. This is why I strongly oppose classifying US Citizens as "enemy combatants" for the purpose of imprisoning them without a trial. This guy may be a scumbag, and probably is. But as a US Citizen, he still has his constitutional rights even though we may hate his guts. ![]()
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abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
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#5 |
Ocean Warrior
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BINGO! I'm glad in all this hatred and quick judgment I'm not the only one that went "wait a sec..wtf?" I made a couple comments on FB about it and was quickly flamed as a liberal supporting a muslim president.
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#6 |
Aceydeucy
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Let me ask this; The authorities don't read him his rights, what happens if he shuts up and doesn't say anything at all. No name, no address, nothing at all. What can they do? Certainly not beat it out of him.
I'm just asking, that's all.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ That which does not kill us, makes us stronger. We the willing, led by the unsure, have done so much with so little, for so long, that we are now qualified to do anything with nothing. |
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#7 |
Ocean Warrior
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Maybe they just wanted a reason to send him back to Putin.
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#8 | |
Rear Admiral
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What will be interesting, as in this case, the terrorist can't talk due to injury. I think the time limit of interrogation will be tested.
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#9 | |
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I agree especially with #2 if they do this once it basically allows them to do it again under nearly any circumstance where violence occurred or is possible. I see this as a very slippery slope. When you allow the government to openly choose when to make exceptions to the law of the land you are asking for trouble.Anyone that trusts they will only do it under the "correct" circumstances is foolish. |
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#10 |
Silent Hunter
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some thoughts:
1. Miranda rights are the purest expression of "judge made" laws that conservatives are always railing about. Yes, the Constitution contains both a right to counsel and a right against self incrimination, but it was the Supreme Court that decided that this meant both a positive duty on the police to advise suspects of their rights and total exclusion of evidence in case of violation of said rights. That is not to say that the decision is bad, merely that the Warren court chose the interpretation that was the most protective of suspect's rights and most restrictive on police. Since Miranda, some legal scholars have argued that Miranda went too far and there should be a "good faith" exception where evidence could still be admissible if the violation of the Miranda rights is inadvertent or based on a technicality. The Quarles decision was seen as an expression of such a "good faith" exception. i.e. a judge made exception to a judge made right. Since then, as can be seen from the FBI article, Courts have been expanding the scope of the "public safety" exception. 2. In the bombing, there are various reasons why law enforcement would want to delay giving the suspect his "Miranda" rights: a) get more evidence against him. If it falls under the exception, great, if it does not, they only lose that evidence, so no great risk. b) more likely, get evidence against other suspects. If suspect A reveals that he is in a plot with B and C, the evidence may not be admissible against A, but it would be against B and C.
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#11 |
Admiral
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I'm not as familiar as I used to be with Federal Law and the State I was an officer in, usually imposes stricter regulations upon law enforcement than the Federal Government does. Anyway, they are allowed to question him w/o advising him of his Miranda Right if the have cause to believe an imminent threat to the public still exists (US v. Ferguson, 11-3806-cr 2nd Cir. 2012). This potential threat is self evident (e.g., potential for unexploded IEDs and/or their location, coconspirators who may be preparing to harm the public, etc.). The key word here is "imminent threat". Now, I believe it goes without saying that, all this information and "just cause" will have to be shown in court during any trail.
Once (and if) the authorities are satisfied that no imminent threat exists, they will probably advise him of his Miranda rights before questioning him any further. They have more than enough physical evidence against him to charge him with several counts of murder, including his own brother's, not to mention the various terrorism related charges. Still it will be interesting to see how it all unfolds in court once the attorneys get involved.
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#12 |
Rear Admiral
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I wonder. At what point does one cross the line between, not creating extraneous threads by posting in an existing one, and being a thread necro?
Anyway, I was just watching this, and got a good laugh, but it still makes the point. |
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#13 | |
Navy Seal
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Quote:
![]() ![]() What the hey, let's just take everyone's rights away and try the case in the public square Ahhh wait, that's what they're doing now. Mob lynching and a pot luck brunch afterward. BYO Rope.
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#14 |
Rear Admiral
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In related news as it pertains to individual rights or liberties, from the sounds of things, ANY phone call you make can be reviewed.
While, I applaud the efforts to get to the bottom of the Boston bombing, I find myself disconcerted at the idea that any and all conversations I have had with spouse or family members can be reviewed by the government, anytime they choose to do so. They say, they only do this for terrorist cases, but who enforces that policy? I doubt there's much in the way of checks and balances or oversight with this. I think there's a line here that is entirely too fine and narrow to be acceptable. Moral of the story, watch what you say over ANY digital media. Phone or otherwise. ( Insert any Big brother metaphor's or reference's here. ) Last edited by Ducimus; 05-03-13 at 05:44 PM. |
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