Defendant, detained on a vagrancy charge in Texas, voluntarily confessed to a homicide committed in Nebraska. Upon his return to the latter state, the defendant repeated his confession and was subsequently arraigned, having been in custody for twenty-five days. The confessions were introduced at the trial and a conviction of manslaughter followed. Defendant, failing to gain a reversal in the state court, sought review by the United States Supreme Court, charging that a failure to arraign the defendant promptly in breach of local statutes was a want of due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. On certiorari, held, affirmed, Justices Black and Douglas dissenting. Illegal detention alone is not sufficient basis under the Fourteenth Amendmen...
The Supreme Court of the United States has vigorously implemented the principle that criminal prosec...
Stein v. People of State of New York, a coerced confession case decided by the Supreme Court last Ju...
Every individual in our society needs confidence in our criminal justice system to know that one can...
Defendant, detained on a vagrancy charge in Texas, voluntarily confessed to a homicide committed in ...
Defendant, after proper arraignment on a charge of as· sault, was questioned intermittently about an...
Petitioner was arrested on suspicion of robbery and the next day confessed the theft of a car owned ...
The Supreme Court announced in 1936 that under certain circumstances the admission of a confession i...
Undisputed evidence established that petitioner, a negro boy of fifteen, was arrested at about midni...
Defendant was indicted for first degree murder and convicted of manslaughter in the Federal District...
Petitioner was arrested without a warrant on suspicion of larceny. He was held without commitment fo...
The practice of wringing confessions from the lips of persons accused of crime forms a substantial b...
In McNabb v. United States the Supreme Court promulgated novel judicial legislation, the gist of wh...
Petitioner, suspected of the murder of his parents, was subjected to intensive police interrogation ...
Defendants were arrested on suspicion of murder and questioned by police. Defendants confessed after...
State v. Moore recently held that only two proper grounds exist for excluding a confession from evid...
The Supreme Court of the United States has vigorously implemented the principle that criminal prosec...
Stein v. People of State of New York, a coerced confession case decided by the Supreme Court last Ju...
Every individual in our society needs confidence in our criminal justice system to know that one can...
Defendant, detained on a vagrancy charge in Texas, voluntarily confessed to a homicide committed in ...
Defendant, after proper arraignment on a charge of as· sault, was questioned intermittently about an...
Petitioner was arrested on suspicion of robbery and the next day confessed the theft of a car owned ...
The Supreme Court announced in 1936 that under certain circumstances the admission of a confession i...
Undisputed evidence established that petitioner, a negro boy of fifteen, was arrested at about midni...
Defendant was indicted for first degree murder and convicted of manslaughter in the Federal District...
Petitioner was arrested without a warrant on suspicion of larceny. He was held without commitment fo...
The practice of wringing confessions from the lips of persons accused of crime forms a substantial b...
In McNabb v. United States the Supreme Court promulgated novel judicial legislation, the gist of wh...
Petitioner, suspected of the murder of his parents, was subjected to intensive police interrogation ...
Defendants were arrested on suspicion of murder and questioned by police. Defendants confessed after...
State v. Moore recently held that only two proper grounds exist for excluding a confession from evid...
The Supreme Court of the United States has vigorously implemented the principle that criminal prosec...
Stein v. People of State of New York, a coerced confession case decided by the Supreme Court last Ju...
Every individual in our society needs confidence in our criminal justice system to know that one can...