Defendant-appellant was charged with violation of a Los Angeles municipal ordinance which required all persons convicted of a felony in California, or of a crime committed elsewhere which would have been punishable as a felony in California, subsequent to January 1, 1921, to register with the Chief of Police upon remaining in the city longer than five days, or upon making more than five visits to the city within a thirty-day period. At the time of her arrest, appellant had been a resident of Los Angeles for seven years. Within that period she had been convicted (in Los Angeles) of forgery, a felony in California, and had subsequently failed to register as required. At her jury trial appellant asserted that the application of the ordinance t...
The Supreme Court announced in 1936 that under certain circumstances the admission of a confession i...
This comment will not attempt to consider the guarantees of a fair trial, but will deal with the rem...
In the course of evolving workable doctrines which give substance and meaning to the skeletal phrase...
Defendant-appellant was charged with violation of a Los Angeles municipal ordinance which required a...
Petitioner was convicted of murder in the first degree with a recommendation for life imprisonment. ...
In 1948, pursuant to an amendment to its charter, Los Angeles passed an ordinance which provided tha...
Petitioner was convicted in the Police Court of Louisville, Kentucky, of two offenses. After seeing ...
In March 1951, defendant, a New York City policeman, was called to testify before a state grand jury...
In March 1951, defendant, a New York City policeman, was called to testify before a state grand jury...
Undisputed evidence established that petitioner, a negro boy of fifteen, was arrested at about midni...
Petitioner was convicted of bookmaking under the anti-gambling laws of California by the use of evid...
The practice of wringing confessions from the lips of persons accused of crime forms a substantial b...
Petitioner was summoned to appear as a witness before one of Oakland County\u27s judges who was then...
On May 16, 1932, petitioner, then seventeen years of age, was arraigned, tried, convicted of murder ...
Local police officers entered the private office of petitioner, a practising physician, without a wa...
The Supreme Court announced in 1936 that under certain circumstances the admission of a confession i...
This comment will not attempt to consider the guarantees of a fair trial, but will deal with the rem...
In the course of evolving workable doctrines which give substance and meaning to the skeletal phrase...
Defendant-appellant was charged with violation of a Los Angeles municipal ordinance which required a...
Petitioner was convicted of murder in the first degree with a recommendation for life imprisonment. ...
In 1948, pursuant to an amendment to its charter, Los Angeles passed an ordinance which provided tha...
Petitioner was convicted in the Police Court of Louisville, Kentucky, of two offenses. After seeing ...
In March 1951, defendant, a New York City policeman, was called to testify before a state grand jury...
In March 1951, defendant, a New York City policeman, was called to testify before a state grand jury...
Undisputed evidence established that petitioner, a negro boy of fifteen, was arrested at about midni...
Petitioner was convicted of bookmaking under the anti-gambling laws of California by the use of evid...
The practice of wringing confessions from the lips of persons accused of crime forms a substantial b...
Petitioner was summoned to appear as a witness before one of Oakland County\u27s judges who was then...
On May 16, 1932, petitioner, then seventeen years of age, was arraigned, tried, convicted of murder ...
Local police officers entered the private office of petitioner, a practising physician, without a wa...
The Supreme Court announced in 1936 that under certain circumstances the admission of a confession i...
This comment will not attempt to consider the guarantees of a fair trial, but will deal with the rem...
In the course of evolving workable doctrines which give substance and meaning to the skeletal phrase...