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Miranda Warnings

Date Posted to Site: 06/29/2004

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court warned police on Monday to stop
using a strategy intended to extract confessions from criminal suspects
before telling them of their right to remain silent.
The court, on a 5-4 vote, said that deliberately questioning a suspect
twice - the first time without reading the Miranda warning - is usually
improper.

But the court left open the possibility that some confessions obtained
after double interviews would be acceptable, providing police could
prove the interrogation wasn't intended to undermine the Miranda
warning.

Criminal defense attorneys and civil libertarians had complained that
the strategy was being used to get around the Supreme Court's landmark
1966 Miranda v. Arizona ruling, which requires that suspects in custody
be told they have the right to remain silent.

The court had considered the treatment of murder suspect Patrice
Seibert. The Missouri Supreme Court ruled that the two-step
interrogation process used in her case was improper - a decision upheld
by the nation's highest court.

Such questioning can be successful because suspects may be more willing
to talk before they're told they have a right to remain silent. And when
told of their rights later, they may not realize their first confession
can be used against them.

Seibert was convicted of plotting to set a 1997 fire that killed a
teenager who had been staying at the family trailer in Rolla, Mo., a
rural town in the Ozarks. Police said she arranged to have her home
burned to cover up the death of her 12-year-old son, who had had
cerebral palsy, in order to avoid neglect allegations.
Justice David H. Souter, writing for himself and three other liberal
justices, said that the practice is worrisome because questioning
tactics are taught at national training sessions.

Justice Anthony M. Kennedy agreed with those four that the interrogation
technique "undermines the Miranda warning and obscures its meaning."
But the court left the door open for police to be able to use some
confessions obtained after double interviews. Kennedy said that police
must be able to prove that the interrogation was not done "in a
calculated way to undermine the Miranda warning."

In a dissent, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor said it would be tough for
lower courts to determine if officers had gone too far. She was joined
by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and
Clarence Thomas.

"In virtually every two-state interrogation case ... courts will be
forced to conduct the kind of difficult, state-of-mind inquiry that we
normally take pains to avoid," she wrote.

Also Monday, the court sided with police in a separate Miranda case,
throwing out a decision in favor of a Colorado man who had told an
officer not to bother reading him the Miranda warnings.

When officers came to Samuel Patane's house to question him about a
domestic case, they told him he had a right to remain silent, but he
said he already knew his warnings. He then directed them to a gun in his
bedroom and was charged with illegal possession of a firearm.

The Denver-based 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the gun
could not be used as evidence against Patane because its discovery was
the result of a statement made without a Miranda warning.

Thomas and two other justices said a failure to give a suspect Miranda
warnings did not make such evidence inadmissible in court. O'Connor and
Kennedy, while not going that far, said that the government presented a
strong case for allowing evidence in the Patane case.

The two cases are the final ones in the Supreme Court's sweeping look
this year at Miranda and how it is followed by U.S. law enforcement.
In January, the court ruled that police may not try to wrest confessions
from criminal suspects facing formal charges without telling them they
have a right to see a lawyer. Then in early June, law enforcement won a
second case when the court refused to require special treatment for
young people under questioning by police.

It took the Supreme Court more than six months to rule in the last two
cases, an extraordinarily long time. They were argued back-to-back at
the court in December.

The cases are United States v. Patane, 02-1183, and Missouri v. Seibert,
02-1371.




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