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Ruling upholds Miranda rights: deep divisions on the US Supreme
Court
By John Andrews
28 June 2000
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The United States Supreme Court on June 26 released its decision
in the closely watched case Dickerson v. United States, rebuffing
by a 7-2 vote an orchestrated right-wing challenge to the landmark
1966 decision in Miranda v. Arizona. The Miranda decision established
the requirement that police inform those being held as criminal
suspects of their right to remain silent and their right to legal
counsel prior to any interrogation.
The case decided by the Court last Monday arose as a result
of a legal attack on the Miranda rule spearheaded by a close associate
of Justice Antonin Scalia, who has emerged as the most consistent
and extreme advocate of attacks on democratic rights of the nine
high court justices.
Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who has been an outspoken
critic of Miranda since he joined the Court almost 30 years ago
and generally sides with Scalia and Associate Justice Clarence
Thomas in an ultra-conservative block, wrote the majority opinion.
He affirmed the basic principle that Miranda warnings were devised
to counter abusive police questioning and are needed to protect
the Constitution's Fifth Amendment guarantee against self-incrimination.
He held that both federal and state police must follow the Miranda
guidelines, and that Congress cannot pass laws cutting back on
that protection.
Scalia issued an angry dissent, which was joined in by Thomas.
Scalia repeatedly referred to recent court decisionsmany
written by Rehnquistwhich chiseled away at Miranda's foundations.
His disgust at his right-wing colleagues for their failure to
join with him in throwing Miranda out altogether pervades the
dissent, which is replete with explicit references to prior positions
taken by Rehnquist as well as Associate Justices Anthony Kennedy
and Sandra Day O'Connor, who usually vote with him on issues restricting
civil liberties.
The notion that the police are required to give the four Miranda
warningsYou have a right to remain silent; what you
say can be used against you; you have a right to counsel; if you
cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed has
become deeply embedded in public consciousness. Many believe that
police cannot legally arrest someone without at the same time
reciting the warnings. That is not the case, however. Police are
only required to recite the warnings before interrogating an arrested
person.
Often people arrested are not interrogated. The Miranda rule
provides that, subject to certain exceptions, statements made
by persons under arrest, without the warnings first being given,
or after the right to remain silent or to consult a lawyer has
been invoked, are inadmissible in a subsequent criminal case.
Although generally loathed by the police, the Miranda rule
has widespread support from prosecutors as well as defense attorneys
because of the increased certainty it brings to the admissibility
of confessions. Opponents of Miranda claim that its application
has resulted in criminals escaping conviction due to a mere technicality.
But public support for Miranda is high. Most people feel instinctively
that the rule protects them against notorious third-degree
interrogation techniques.
Right-wing hostility to Miranda is bound up with opposition
to a series of Supreme Court rulings from the 1950s and 1960s,
under Chief Justice Earl Warren, curtailing police and prosecutorial
practices that flagrantly violate constitutionally protected civil
liberties. After Miranda, the next logical target of right-wing
zealots is the Warren Court's exclusionary rule, which
prohibits the use in criminal trials of evidence illegally seized
by the police.
The machinations behind the Dickerson case suggest the possibility
of support by Scalia for a legal attack aimed at short-circuiting
traditional procedures to eradicate Miranda. United States attorneys
prosecuted Dickerson for his alleged involvement in a bank robbery
that netted less than $1,000. The trial judge found that certain
statements Dickerson made to FBI interrogators could not be used
at trial because Miranda warnings had not been given. The government
lawyers appealed, claiming that proper warnings had been given.
They did not argue that Miranda should be overruled, but disagreed
over whether its guidelines had been violated in this case.
It is a fundamental juridical principle of Anglo-American law
that when both sides to a legal dispute agree on an issue, there
is no controversy for a court to decide. But this case went to
the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Virginia, West
Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Maryland. This court
has distinguished itself over the last several years as a pillar
of the extreme right in the federal judiciary, issuing, for example,
several death penalty rulings which even the Rehnquist Supreme
Court had to disavow.
In the Dickerson case, the Fourth Circuit ignored the principle
that the parties must disagree about an issue before a court can
decide it, by inviting a complete outsider to argue a positionfor
the overthrow of Mirandadisavowed by both sides to the dispute.
That outsider was University of Utah Professor Paul G. Cassell,
who began his legal career as a law clerk for Scalia when the
latter was a Court of Appeals judge.
Cassell based his challenge to Miranda on the claim that Congress
legislated away the Miranda requirements in a 1968 federal law-and-order
bill passed for the purpose of negating the Miranda holding. The
provision in question, Section 3501 of the United States Criminal
Code, states that warnings are not required for a suspect's statement
to be admitted in evidence, so long as the confession is voluntary.
This law had been dormant on the books for more than 30 years
because every federal administration, from Nixon to Clinton, considered
it an unconstitutional infringement on the power of the Supreme
Court to define civil liberties.
In 1994, Scalia issued a concurring opinion lambasting the
executive branch for failing to raise Section 3501 in Miranda
cases, and suggesting that the Court should reach out and decide
the issue itself. Cassell and the Dickerson case provided a useful
vehicle to do so. The Fourth Circuit provided a sympathetic forum
for Cassell's arguments, and one of its three-judge panels held,
in a 2-1 decision, that Section 3501 nullified Miranda.
The Supreme Court accepted review. Because the Clinton administration,
which is prosecuting Dickerson, supports Miranda, the Supreme
Court invited Professor Cassell to defend the Fourth Circuit ruling.
He, in turn, recruited police agencies and advocacy groups to
file friend of the court briefs supporting his position.
Many commentators expressed dismay at the possibility that
the Supreme Court would dismantle such an established and popular
precedent. At the oral argument earlier this year, however, the
two swing justices, O'Connor and Kennedy, indicated
that they intended to join the four liberals and vote
in favor of Miranda, suggesting that Cassell's attack would fail.
In his majority ruling, Rehnquist disavowed the argument that
language in certain recent casesmuch of which he draftedmeant
that the Constitution did not require Miranda warnings. He reaffirmed
that Congress is powerless to enact laws depriving people of constitutional
rights established through decisions of the Supreme Court.
In any event, the Dickerson case had the opposite effect desired
by Scalia. Rather than eliminating the precedent, the decision
has, at least for the present, shored up Miranda, removing any
doubt about its constitutional status. This development was underscored
by another July 26 ruling by the Supreme Court. It denied review
of a case arising in southern California which ruled that people
can sue for violations of their civil rights when the police question
them without having read them their Miranda rights.
The split between Rehnquist and Scalia in the Dickerson case,
though bitter, suggests a difference over tactics rather than
principle. In essence, Rehnquist and those conservatives who voted
with him rebuffed an aggressive move by Scalia and his side-car
Clarence Thomas to take the radical course of directly overturning
one of the key decisions of the Warren Court. This does not, however,
indicate a basic change in course by the right-wing high court
majority, which has for years attacked the foundations of Miranda
and other legal safeguards of civil and democratic rights.
See Also:
US
Supreme Court rules rape victims cannot sue in federal court
[18 May 2000]
US
Supreme Court hears arguments on state-imposed abortion limits
[26 April 2000]
US
Supreme Court to consider reversing Miranda decision
[8 December 1999]
US
Circuit Court strikes down suspects' rights
[11 February 1999]
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