CRIMINAL PROCEDURE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 75
About This Presentation
Title:

CRIMINAL PROCEDURE

Description:

CRIMINAL PROCEDURE Class Six Today s Topics: Fourth Amendment Standing Derivative Evidence Independent Source Inevitable Discovery Good Faith Alternatives Today s ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:530
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 76
Provided by: cbu90
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CRIMINAL PROCEDURE


1
CRIMINAL PROCEDURE
  • Class Six

2
Todays Topics Fourth Amendment
  • Standing
  • Derivative Evidence
  • Independent Source
  • Inevitable Discovery
  • Good Faith
  • Alternatives

3
Todays Topics Fifth Amendment
  • Privilege Against Self Incrimination
  • Policies
  • Scope
  • Compulsion
  • Holder
  • Non-Testimonial Evidence
  • Records Required Documents

4
STANDING
  • Issue Who can claim 4th Amd violation?

5
STANDING
  • Challenging partys relationship to search
    conducted or thing seized
  • Current Supreme Court view more limited than past
  • Personal rights
  • No vicarious assertion

6
Target Standing
  • Defendant does NOT have standing to raise 4th
    Amendment claim merely because he was target of
    search that netted evidence govt now wants to
    introduce against him at trial
  • Rakas v. Illinois

7
Standing Principles
  • D must have reasonable or legitimate expectation
    of privacy in area searched
  • Ds interest does NOT have to reach level or
    recognized property interest

8
Ownership Standing
  • Possible to have possessory interest in property
    seized while failing reasonable expectation of
    privacy requirement

9
Co-Conspirators Standing
  • No co-conspirator exception to standing
    requirements of Rakas

10
EXCLUSIONARY RULE
11
Theories of Admissibility
  • Derivative Evidence Attenuation
  • Independent Source
  • Inevitable Discovery
  • Use in Non-Criminal Proceeding
  • Use for Impeachment
  • Good Faith Exception

12
Derivative Evidence
  • Fruit of the Poisonous Tree
  • Evidence derived from particular illegal search
    or seizure

13
Attenuation
  • Concept What is the connection between the
    illegal search and the proffered evidence
  • Query Has the causal chain been broken?

14
Application in Confession Cases
  • Brown v. Illinois Was confession fruit of
    illegal arrest or was taint attenuated by Miranda
    warnings?
  • Dunaway v. New York

15
Application in Confession Cases
  • Taylor v. Alabama
  • Rawlings v. Kentucky statements spontaneous
    reaction to discovery of evidence
  • New York v. Harris custody not unlawful

16
Independent Source
  • Concept Allows evidence discovered during
    unlawful search if that evidence is discovered
    later through an untainted source
  • Hint Imagine parallel lines of investigation
    that never intersect

17
Relation to Rediscovered Evidence
  • Murray v. United States
  • Restrictions
  • Decision to seek warrant not prompted by what saw
    during initial entry
  • Information obtained during illegal entry cannot
    form any material part of basis for search warrant

18
Inevitable Discovery
  • Hypothetical independent source
  • Prosecution must show illegally obtained evidence
    would have been discovered through legitimate
    means that were independent of official misconduct

19
Example
  • Nix v. Williams
  • Critical feature Govt obtained no benefit from
    constitutional violation

20
Inevitable Discovery, cont.
  • Is doctrine limited to situations where officers
    acting in good faith?
  • Who has burden of proof?
  • What is the standard?

21
Other Uses E/R
  • Concept Exclusionary rule generally will
    operate to prevent introduction of illegally
    obtained evidence during the govt case in chief
  • Exceptions exist Inevitable discovery,
    independent source, good faith
  • Issue Is evidence excludable in scenarios
    other than prosecutions case in chief?

22
Use in Non-Criminal Proceedings
  • Grand Jury
  • Civil Tax
  • Civil Deportation
  • Habeas Actions
  • Sentencing

23
Use in Criminal Trial
  • Issue Although illegally obtained evidence
    cannot be used to establish essential element of
    offense, can it be used for other purposes in a
    criminal trial?

24
Impeachment
  • D opens door e.g., Ive never, ever been
    arrested before.
  • Rationale E/R should not be used as license for
    perjury
  • Cross-examination of D raises issue
  • LimitationCross-examination of defense witnesses

25
Good Faith
  • Exception to general rule that illegally obtained
    evidence cannot be used during prosecutions case
    in chief
  • Usually encountered when search warrants are
    found defective, but Supreme Court has extended
    further

26
Good Faith Reliance on Defective Warrant
  • Issue What goal of exclusionary rule is
    furthered by prohibiting evidence obtained by
    officers relying on search warrant ultimately
    found not to be supported by probable cause?
  • United States v. Leon

27
Exceptions to the Exception
  • Magistrate misled by information affiant knew or
    should have known was false
  • Issuing magistrate wholly abandoned judicial role
    of neutral and detached
  • Affidavit so lacking indicia of probable cause
    that unreasonable for officer to rely on it
  • Profoundly facially deficient

28
Justifying Good Faith Exception
  • E/R designed to deter police misconduct, not
    punish judge error
  • No evidence suggests judges magistrates
    inclined to ignore 4th Amd
  • No basis to believe exclusion will have
    significant deterrent effect on issuing magistrate

29
Application to Warrantless Searches
  • Issue Can there be good faith objectively
    reasonable warrantless searches?
  • Illinois v. Krull (statute)
  • Arizona v. Evans (clerical error)

30
Alternatives to E/R
  • Tort recovery
  • Criminal
  • Administrative

31
Exercise Evaluating Proposed Solutions
  • Describe your understanding of each alternative
    tort recovery, criminal prosecution,
    administrative action and be prepared to give a
    definition or example of each
  • Identify a minimum of 3 problems with each of the
    3 proposed alternatives

32
Chapter Three CONFESSIONS
  • Self-Incrimination and Confessions

33
Privilege Against Compelled Self Incrimination
  • Seen in variety of contexts
  • traditional confessions to police
  • trial testimony
  • subpoenas
  • production of records

34
The Debate Con
  • Inconsistent with values we teach and prize in
    most of our relationships
  • Impedes assessment of truth
  • Stands in the way of convictions
  • Can prevent restitution to crime victims
  • Frequently protects the guilty

35
The Debate Pro
  • Cruel trilemma
  • self-accusation, contempt, perjury
  • Protect the innocent
  • Unreliability of coerced statements
  • US preference for accusatorial system
  • cf inquisitorial systems
  • Deter improper police practices
  • Fair balance between State individual

36
Scope of Privilege
  • Fifth Amendment
  • Nor shall any person be compelled in any
    criminal case to be a witness against himself
  • Fundamental Questions
  • What is criminal
  • Where in what forum can privilege be asserted

37
Fifth Amendment Privilege A Quiz
  • When
  • Where
  • How

38
Quiz In which forum can D successfully assert?
  • Forfeiture Proceeding
  • Grand Jury
  • Civil Trial
  • Criminal Trial
  • Bankruptcy Action
  • Administrative License Revocation

39
Quiz Criminal under Privilege?
  • Probation Revocation?
  • Juvenile Adjudication of Delinquent Conduct?
  • Divorce?
  • Foreign Prosecution?
  • Forfeiture Proceeding?
  • Civil Commitment (sexual violent predator)?
  • Wrongful Death Action following Vehicular
    Homicide?

40
Quiz Sufficient Compulsion?
  • You receive subpoena
  • You are threatened with contempt for refusing to
    testify
  • You refused to testify and are offered immunity

41
Quiz Sufficient Compulsion?
  • State law requires you to give information as
    condition of maintaining current contract and
    securing future contracts
  • You are required to file annual IRS return

42
Quiz Sufficient Compulsion?
  • Prosecution secures your journal, which you have
    written in faithfully since college
  • Your uncle is incarcerated as a sex offender for
    a crime he did not commit. He is offered
    incentives to participate in sex offender
    program

43
Scope Criminal Proceedings
  • Boyd
  • Hitchcock
  • In re Gault

44
Non-Criminal Proceeding
  • Murphy
  • Piedmont
  • L.O. Ward
  • Allen

45
Forum of Invocation
  • Judicial?
  • Administrative?
  • Legislative?

46
Basis of Invocation
  • To protect against use of incriminating
    statements in subsequent criminal prosecutions

47
Foreign Prosecution
  • Issue Does 5th Amd protect against the risk of
    foreign prosecution?
  • Scenario X is asked questions in deportation
    hearing. X fears that truthful answers will
    provide evidence that could be used against him
    by other nations

48
Potential Use in Foreign Prosecution, cont
  • Balsys
  • 5th Amd does not provide personal testimonial
    inviolability
  • Conditional protection e.g. impact of
    immunity
  • When might be applicable -- stalking horse

49
COMPULSION
  • 5th Amd protection against self incrimination
    only triggered when self incrimination is
    compelled by government
  • Issue How is compulsion shown?

50
Examples
  • Contempt
  • Other state-imposed sanctions
  • Contrast Lefkowitz v. Turley with McKune v. Lile

51
Contempt Scenario A Preview
  • Question asked
  • Assertion
  • Responses to assertion, either
  • honor, or
  • seek judicial determination that applicable
  • If not, witness must answer
  • If yes, 2 options
  • Let stand on privilege
  • Apply for immunity
  • If granted, refusal to answer may be contempt

52
Invocation Consequences at Trial
  • Comment on invocation prohibited Griffin rule
    --- Fact that D did not take stand cannot be
    used as evidence against him
  • Jury instructions re adverse inferences
  • Carter (required if requested)
  • Lakeside (can be given over Ds objection)

53
Invocation Consequences, cont
  • Adverse Inferences at Sentencing?
  • Application to Civil proceedings

54
HOLDER
  • Privilege against self-incrimination is personal
  • Cannot be vicariously asserted
  • Belongs only to person who is himself
    incriminated by his own testimony

55
Holder in the Business Context
  • Taxpayers accountants
  • Taxpayers lawyers
  • Partnerships
  • Sole proprietorship
  • Corporation
  • Corporation wholly owned operated by single
    person

56
What is protected
  • Non-testimonial evidence outside scope of
    privilege, including
  • blood sample
  • fingerprint
  • photograph
  • measurements
  • voice or handwriting exemplar

57
Analytical Key
  • Communicative/testimonial
  • Not physical characteristic
  • Query Does witness face cruel trilemma in
    disclosing?

58
Is it testimonial?
  • Tip An express or implied assertion of fact
    which can be true or false

59
Documents
  • Contexts
  • Govt subpoenas evidence from third party
  • Govt uses Ds business records, seized pursuant
    to valid warrant

60
Example Fisher v. U.S.
  • Subpoena of records
  • Aspects of potential incrimination
  • Contents of documents
  • Act of production

61
Fisher Contents
  • Privilege inapplicable
  • Rationale
  • Subpoena does not compel oral testimony
  • Does not compel taxpayer to restate, repeat or
    affirm truth of contents
  • Pre-existing documents preparation voluntary
  • No compulsion by govt to make incriminating
    records

62
Fisher Act of Production
  • Communicative aspects distinct from what
    document itself might say
  • existence
  • possession/control
  • authenticity
  • belief that same
  • Facts here do not support claim

63
Recently U.S. v. Hubbell
  • Facts Whitewater
  • Held 5th Amd privilege applies
  • Rationale Govt had shown no independent, prior
    knowledge of existence or whereabouts
  • Contrast Fisher

64
Act of Production People
  • Bouknight order to produce child subject to
    protective order
  • Issue Can mother claim act of producing is
    potentially incriminating as implicit
    communication of control over child?

65
Required Records
  • General rule If voluntarily prepared, no valid
    claim that compelled by govt at time made
  • Issue What if documents are prepared at govt
    direction? Are they compelled for 5th Amd
    purposes?

66
Required Records Doctrine
  • Shaprio
  • Critical fact documents kept for legitimate
    administrative purpose, which cannot be focused
    solely on those inherently suspected of criminal
    activity
  • Contrast, Marchetti, Haynes targeting group
    suspected of criminal activity

67
Analyzing Legislation under Required Records
Doctrine
  • Issue When does law have non-criminal
    regulatory purpose and when is it essentially
    criminal?
  • California v. Byers compelled reporting of
    accident

68
Procedural Considerations
  • Invoking privilege, followed by grant of immunity
  • Waiver of privilege

69
Immunity
  • Types
  • Transactional no transaction about which
    witness testifies can be subject of future
    prosecution against that witness
  • Use/Derivative prevents use of testimony or
    other information directly or indirectly derived
    from it. Prosecution for transaction still
    possible

70
Immunity Constitutional Limitations
  • Kastigar
  • Does 5th Amd require transactional immunity?
  • If immunity granted and witness compelled to
    testify, who has burden of proof to show that
    evidence proffered by govt is free from
    immunized statement?

71
Mechanics of Immunity
  • If no privilege found, witness must answer
  • If privilege exists, questioner must either
  • Let witness stand on privilege
  • Apply for immunity
  • Question asked
  • Assertion of privilege by witness
  • Response
  • honor, or
  • seek judicial determination

72
Judges Role in Immunity
  • Typically limited to insuring that procedural
    aspects of statute are met
  • Many statutes do not permit judge to refuse to
    grant on grounds she believes prosecutors
    decision to offer is incorrect or not in public
    interest

73
Asserting Privilege
  • Ohio v. Reiner
  • Can privilege be asserted by someone claiming
    that she is innocent?
  • Does witnesss assertion, standing alone,
    establish risk of incrimination?

74
Waiver
  • General rule Person must refuse to answer and
    rely on 5th Amd privilege in order to invoke its
    protection
  • Once person answers, privilege against
    self-incrimination is waived

75
Exercise
  • Assume you are drafting a Policies Procedures
    Manual for a prosecutors office. List at least
    5 factors you would include as items that should
    be considered by a prosecutor in deciding whether
    to offer immunity
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com