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- Title
ANOTHER TWEAK TO MIRANDA: THE SUPREME COURT SIGNIFICANTLY LIMITS THE EDWARDS PRESUMPTION OF INVOLUNTARINESS IN CUSTODIAL INTERROGATION.
- Authors
Davis, Jessica A.
- Abstract
The article analyzes the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Maryland v. Shatzer limiting its presumption of involuntariness in custodial interrogation in Edwards v. Arizona by holding that police may re-open questioning of a suspect who has asked for counsel if there has been a 14-day or more break in Miranda custody. It explains a prophylactic rule of the Supreme Court that determines whether a violation of Self-Incrimination Clause of the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution has taken place.
- Subjects
UNITED States; UNITED States. Supreme Court; LEGAL judgments; POLICE questioning; SELF-incrimination; MIRANDA rights; MARYLAND v. Shatzer (Supreme Court case); EDWARDS v. Arizona (Supreme Court case)
- Publication
Southern Illinois University Law Journal, 2012, Vol 36, Issue 3, p593
- ISSN
0145-3432
- Publication type
Article