Throughout the United States, more and more law enforcement officials are coming to realize the tremendous benefits they receive when the questioning of suspects in police facilities is recorded from beginning to end, starting with the Miranda warnings and continuing until the interview is completely finished. Recordings put an end to a host of problems for detectives: having to scribble notes during interviews and later type reports; straining on the witness stand weeks and months later, trying to describe what happened behind closed doors at the station; becoming embroiled in courtroom disputes about what was said and done during custodial interrogations, and about whether suspects\u27 statements were voluntary; and having to defend again...
In his attempt to define the meaning of democracy, Carl Becker, looking back to Plato\u27s view of s...
The current landscape of the Court’s interpretation of the Fifth Amendment is a bleak one. The Court...
In 1966, in Miranda v. Arizona, the U.S. Supreme Court sought to mitigate the inherently coercive at...
Throughout the United States, more and more law enforcement officials are coming to realize the trem...
Should law enforcement officers be required to record, by video or audiotape, custodial interrogatio...
Although not constitutionally required, it has become considerably more commonplace for law enforcem...
Numerous authors, from all points on the political spectrum, have advocated that police interrogatio...
Much has been written about the need to videotape the entire process of police interrogation of susp...
Despite growing concern regarding the problem of false confessions, including due to high profile DN...
Custodial interrogations and how they are conducted in light of Miranda and its progeny are an integ...
This Article attempts to resurrect a concept crucial to the Supreme Court lexicon. It is not, howeve...
The court, in Miranda, was quick to point out, however, that the decision in that case did not suppo...
The existing rules in the United States governing the questioning of suspects in custody are based o...
It seemed so clear a half-century ago. After years of frustration reviewing the voluntariness of con...
Fifty years after Miranda, courts still do not have clear guidance on the types oftechniques police ...
In his attempt to define the meaning of democracy, Carl Becker, looking back to Plato\u27s view of s...
The current landscape of the Court’s interpretation of the Fifth Amendment is a bleak one. The Court...
In 1966, in Miranda v. Arizona, the U.S. Supreme Court sought to mitigate the inherently coercive at...
Throughout the United States, more and more law enforcement officials are coming to realize the trem...
Should law enforcement officers be required to record, by video or audiotape, custodial interrogatio...
Although not constitutionally required, it has become considerably more commonplace for law enforcem...
Numerous authors, from all points on the political spectrum, have advocated that police interrogatio...
Much has been written about the need to videotape the entire process of police interrogation of susp...
Despite growing concern regarding the problem of false confessions, including due to high profile DN...
Custodial interrogations and how they are conducted in light of Miranda and its progeny are an integ...
This Article attempts to resurrect a concept crucial to the Supreme Court lexicon. It is not, howeve...
The court, in Miranda, was quick to point out, however, that the decision in that case did not suppo...
The existing rules in the United States governing the questioning of suspects in custody are based o...
It seemed so clear a half-century ago. After years of frustration reviewing the voluntariness of con...
Fifty years after Miranda, courts still do not have clear guidance on the types oftechniques police ...
In his attempt to define the meaning of democracy, Carl Becker, looking back to Plato\u27s view of s...
The current landscape of the Court’s interpretation of the Fifth Amendment is a bleak one. The Court...
In 1966, in Miranda v. Arizona, the U.S. Supreme Court sought to mitigate the inherently coercive at...