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- Title
NOT SO LEGITIMATE: WHY COURTS SHOULD REJECT AN ADMINISTRATIVE APPROACH TO THE ROUTINE BOOKING EXCEPTION.
- Authors
SIMEONE, JULIE A.
- Abstract
The routine booking exception permits police officers and agents to ask certain questions--typically biographical inquiries such as an arrestee's name, age, and address--in the absence of the Miranda warnings. Since its introduction in Pennsylvania v. Muniz, the exception has been inconsistently defined. This Note addresses the various formulations of the routine booking exception and focuses on the increasingly utilized administrative-centric tests. It concludes that a purely administrative approach to routine booking should be rejected.
- Subjects
UNITED States; CRIMINAL records; EXCEPTIONS (Law); ADMINISTRATIVE procedure; POLICE questioning -- Law &; legislation; LAW enforcement officials; MIRANDA rights; POLICE; PENNSYLVANIA v. Muniz (Supreme Court case); LAW
- Publication
New York University Law Review, 2014, Vol 89, Issue 4, p1454
- ISSN
0028-7881
- Publication type
Article