Numerous authors, from all points on the political spectrum, have advocated that police interrogations be taped. But police rarely record custodial questioning, at least in full, and only a handful of courts have found this failure objectionable. This commentary outlines three different constitutional grounds for mandating that such recording become a routine practice. To set up the constitutional argument, the article first outlines why taping is needed despite the elaborate rules that now govern interrogation. Put simply, the reasoning is as follows: the Miranda regime has failed, voluntariness should once again be the focal point of interrogation regulation, and taping is the most likely way to move in that direction. The article then ex...
This Article argues that the Supreme Court should go further and reexamine the basic principles unde...
Throughout the United States, more and more law enforcement officials are coming to realize the trem...
This Article attempts to resurrect a concept crucial to the Supreme Court lexicon. It is not, howeve...
Numerous authors, from all points on the political spectrum, have advocated that police interrogatio...
Fifty years after Miranda, courts still do not have clear guidance on the types oftechniques police ...
Despite growing concern regarding the problem of false confessions, including due to high profile DN...
Police interrogation is designed to convict suspects under arrest or those suspected of crime. It do...
The primary conceptual hurdle confronting the Miranda Court was the legal reasoning that any and a...
Much has been written about the need to videotape the entire process of police interrogation of susp...
Should law enforcement officers be required to record, by video or audiotape, custodial interrogatio...
It seemed so clear a half-century ago. After years of frustration reviewing the voluntariness of con...
As Yale Kamisar\u27s writings on police interrogation demonstrate, our simultaneous commitments to p...
Decades after the Supreme Court’s decision in Miranda v. Arizona, questions abound as to what consti...
This Note maintains that trickery can be effectively curtailed despite the failure of Miranda to do ...
The court, in Miranda, was quick to point out, however, that the decision in that case did not suppo...
This Article argues that the Supreme Court should go further and reexamine the basic principles unde...
Throughout the United States, more and more law enforcement officials are coming to realize the trem...
This Article attempts to resurrect a concept crucial to the Supreme Court lexicon. It is not, howeve...
Numerous authors, from all points on the political spectrum, have advocated that police interrogatio...
Fifty years after Miranda, courts still do not have clear guidance on the types oftechniques police ...
Despite growing concern regarding the problem of false confessions, including due to high profile DN...
Police interrogation is designed to convict suspects under arrest or those suspected of crime. It do...
The primary conceptual hurdle confronting the Miranda Court was the legal reasoning that any and a...
Much has been written about the need to videotape the entire process of police interrogation of susp...
Should law enforcement officers be required to record, by video or audiotape, custodial interrogatio...
It seemed so clear a half-century ago. After years of frustration reviewing the voluntariness of con...
As Yale Kamisar\u27s writings on police interrogation demonstrate, our simultaneous commitments to p...
Decades after the Supreme Court’s decision in Miranda v. Arizona, questions abound as to what consti...
This Note maintains that trickery can be effectively curtailed despite the failure of Miranda to do ...
The court, in Miranda, was quick to point out, however, that the decision in that case did not suppo...
This Article argues that the Supreme Court should go further and reexamine the basic principles unde...
Throughout the United States, more and more law enforcement officials are coming to realize the trem...
This Article attempts to resurrect a concept crucial to the Supreme Court lexicon. It is not, howeve...