Recent Changes to Miranda Rights and How they can be Waived

August 3, 2010

By Dallas and Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

(972) 562-7549

texasdefensefirm.com

This Summer the U.S. Supreme Court has made a handful of rulings chipping away at Miranda rights.  Most notably, in Berghuis v. Thompkins the Court ruled that an accused must “unambiguously” invoke his right to remain silent to garner the protection of Miranda.

In Berghuis, the Court held that a Michigan man who was given Miranda warnings sat in silence for three hours while police were present peppering him with questions did not “unambiguously” assert his Miranda rights and therefore waived them when he finally cracked three hours later by admitting that he prayed for forgiveness for the shooting.

In Plain Language

To recap, Miranda rights are necessary because our system of justice is adversarial.  At some point, a neutral police investigation can change into a criminal prosecution which is anything but neutral.  The problem for defendants is that the police make this choice — and often won’t tell the accused.  This can give the police an extremely unfair advantage in pressuring statements and confessions out of criminal suspects.  An accused may give a statement or a confession thinking they’ll avoid criminal prosecution by coming clean — or may tell the police what he thinks they want to hear thinking it will persuade the police to drop the “investigation” when the truth of the situation is that the police are planning their court-room strategy.  In any event, an accused has a 5th Amendment right to remain silent and it’s conceivably triggered when the proceedings become adversarial (in Texas when the person is in custody.)

Everyday Practice

Unfortunately, many police officers are either oblivious to your rights or see your rights as merely an obstacle they can hurdle, slither-around, or something to which the can just give lip-service.  The facts of Berghuis are not uncommon with confessions in criminal cases.  Officers routinely play all sorts of different games when it is clear the suspect isn’t willing to cooperate.  Sometimes the officers can pressure the accused like a used-car salesman trying to make a sale or sometimes the officers can use law-enforcement techniques such as deception.  In any event, merely because someone remains silent or asks for a lawyer doesn’t automatically mean the questioning is necessarily over — even though that is what should happen.

The Rationale Behind Berghuis

Justice Kennedy writing for the 5-4 majority in Berghuis wrote, “If Thompkins wanted to remain silent, he could have said nothing in response to Helgert’s questions, or he could have unambiguously invoked his Miranda rights and ended the interrogation.  The fact that Thompkins made a statement about three hours after receiving a Miranda warning does not overcome the fact that he engaged in a course of conduct indicating waiver.”

I added the italics in the quote from Justice Kennedy above for the reason that it exposes, in my opinion, his lack of understanding of the every-day practice of criminal law and police tactics.  First of all, very rarely does an accused truly understand Miranda with the same depths as even the police-officers much less know how to “unambiguously” know how to assert them.  Often an accused may ask officers follow-up questions about Miranda or give a luke-warm or half-hearted response that they don’t want to answer questions.

Secondly… Justice Kennedy dangerously assumes the police would have ended the interrogation after the “unambiguous” assertion.

Finally, it allows the police to be the judges of what does or does not constitute an “unambiguous” assertion of Miranda rights by an accused.  As a guess, not many police officers that consistently undermine Miranda any-way will give the accused the benefit of the doubt if they just “sort of” invoke Miranda and the accused could be drilled until the police get what they’re after.

Is Miranda Dead?

No.  As with all Supreme Court rulings, only time will tell the true impact of Berghuis.  But make no mistake — police may interpret this ruling as a green-light to ignore people’s attempts at invoking their right to counsel.

*Jeremy Rosenthal is Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and licensed by the Supreme Court of Texas. Nothing in this article is intended to be legal advice.  For legal advice for any specific situation you should directly consult an attorney.


Police Interviews — Questions and Answers

March 19, 2010

By Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

texasdefensefirm.com

(972) 369-0577

Police officers investigate crimes and build criminal cases.  Police use the legal elements of a crime as a check list to determine whether they can make an arrest or not.  Police officers are not judges.  It is not their job to determine who is right and who is wrong and shake the hand of the winner.

Always consult a lawyer if police want to question you.

Miranda rights will typically not apply to voluntary visits to the police station.  While only the police really know the true reason they ask a particular person to come in, it may be because they lack only a technical check-list item to complete their case.

The police may be looking for a minor detail which the suspect assumes is common knowledge, or the police may not have a clue and the suspect confession can be their early Christmas present.  Prison is full of people that should have used their right to remain silent!

“But I’ve Got Nothing to Hide”

Police reports often read like “Soviet History,” meaning you tell the police, “I went to the house for the party for a few minutes and didn’t recognize anyone, so I left.”  The police report will read, “suspect admitted entering the house.”

Got the idea?

If an officer has his mind made up before you even begin the interview, probably nothing you do or say will change his mind.  I’m not saying that people can’t persuade police they’ve done nothing wrong and avoid a huge criminal headache… I’m just saying that is a big gamble.

I Don’t Want to Make the Police Mad

Often times, the only conceivable way they can solve a crime is through your confession or admission.  Police are used to people “lawyering up.”  Getting a lawyer may make the police upset — but they’ll get over it.  Do the officer’s feelings really matter when your future is at stake?

But They Said it’s Just for Routine Questioning

Deception is a legitimate tool for law enforcement.  Many police can be highly manipulative in taking a softer, more friendly approach to an interview suspect.  In Dallas and Collin Counties, jurors will applaud police who can craftily get confessions after trial and the Defendant is on their way to prison.

This article isn’t intended to apply to situations where you may get what is known as a ‘target letter’ of a federal investigation.  In those situations, you should consult a lawyer immediately as well.

*Jeremy Rosenthal is Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and licensed by the Supreme Court of Texas. Nothing in this article is intended to be legal advice.  For legal advice, you should consult an attorney.


Should You Answer Questions After You are Read Miranda Rights?

February 25, 2010

By Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

texasdefensefirm.com

(972) 369-0577

Criminal defense attorneys will universally tell you no — and with good reason.  Prisons are full of people who wish they hadn’t answered questions.

By reading your Miranda warnings, the police are telling you that they have already decided you’re guilty.

At best, they are telling you that they think their investigation may wind-up with you being arrested so they are “crossing their t’s and dotting their i’s.”

“But I’ve got nothing to hide?!?

Maybe so.  But there are some bad assumptions you are making with that good faith rationale.

The main problem is that you are trying to convince someone that has already made-up their mind.  That is like trying to convince the vending machine that stole your dollar to give it back.

Also — you don’t know what the police are looking for with their questions and they do.  They may want just one key admission to satisfy a legal element they may already know but can’t otherwise prove.  You may tell them worlds of information they would have never known and now they’ve got a better case against you that they ever dreamed.  They’re happy letting you think you’re winning them over.

Police bank on the fact most of us were raised to respect and cooperate with authority.  But an officer’s job is to investigate crime and build cases against people.  Either they can prove all the elements of a crime or they cannot.  If they’ve got no evidence of certain elements — the only way they can get it is out of your mouth!  There is no advantage to talking with them — and if there is — there is no harm in consulting a lawyer first!

*Jeremy Rosenthal is Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and licensed by the Supreme Court of Texas. This article is not intended to be legal advice.  For legal advice, you should consult an attorney.