Crim PRO Bar Flashcards

1
Q

4th Amendment…

A

prohibition against unreasonable search and seizure

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2
Q

5th Amendment…

A

1) privilege against compulsory self-incrimination

2) prohibition against double jepoardy

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3
Q

6th Amendment…

A

1) righ tto a speedy trial
2) right to a trial by jury
3) right to confont witnesses
4) right to assistance of counsel

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4
Q

8th amendment….

A

prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment

1) the death penalty
2) prisoner rights

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5
Q

Exclusionary Rule:

A

remedy of american con law procedure where someone who has ben the victim of an illegal searh or a coerced confession can have the product of that illegal search or that coerced staement exlcuded from any subsequent criminal prosecution.

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6
Q

5 Limitations on exclusion (evidence can come in despite some illegality.)

A

1) exclusion does not apply to GRAND JURY proceedings.
* a grand jury Witness may be compelled to testify based on illegally seized evidence.

2) Exclusion is not an available remedy in civil proceedings
3) Exclusion is not an available remedy in parole revocation

4) exclusion does not apply to the use of excluded evidence for impeachment purposes
* ALL illegally seized evidence may be admitted to impeach teh credibility of the D’s trial testimony. Miranda violations qualify here (info obtained in violation of miranda excluded, but info can still come in to impeach trial test. of D when D takes stand); This only applies to D’s trial testimony, not the testimony of other defense witnesses.

5) Exclusion is not an available remedy for violations of the Knock and Announce Rule in execution of search warrants.

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7
Q

The Fruit of the Poisonous Tree Doctrine

A

Doctrine will NOT only exclude illegally seized evidence, but will also exclude ALL Evidence obtained or derived from Police Illegality.

This doctrine does not apply to Miranda violations, unless the police act in bad faith in obtaining such information.

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8
Q

3 ways Gov can break chain between an original unlawful police action and some suposedly derived piece of evidence.

*break the link between the fruit and the tree of police illegality..

A

‘3 IN’s of Breaking the Chain to the Fruit’

1) Independent Source
2) Inevitable Discovery
3) Intervening Acts of Free will

1) Gov could show that it had an ind. source for that evidence, ind. of original police illegality.
2) Inevitable discover, police would have inevitably discovered evidence anyway
3) intervening acts of free wil on part of Def. (voluntary)

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9
Q

Exclusionary Rule and Convictions

A
  • A conviction will not necessarily be overturned b/c improperly obtained evidence was admitted at trial
  • On appeal, a court will apply the harmless error test
  • under the test, a conviction will be upheld if the conviction would have resulted despite the improper evidence.
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10
Q

Fourth Amendment (bulk of crim pro on bar)

Protects citizens from unreasonble searches and seizures

A

1) Arrests and Detentions
2) Investigatory Detentions (terry stops)
3) Search and Seizure
4) Wiretapping and Eavesdropping

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11
Q

Arrests and Detentions 4th Amend issue (1 of 4)

A

Any arrest must be based on PROBABLE CAUSE.

Arrest warrants are generally not required before arresting someone in a public place.

A non-emergency arrest of an individual in his home DOES REQUIRE an arrest warrant.

Station House Detention: Police need probable cause to arrest you and compel you to come to the police station either for FINGERPRINTING or INTERROGATION. (don’t need prob cause to ask you, but to compel/arrest you)

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12
Q

Investigatory Detentions (terry stops) 4th Amend issue (2 of 4)

A

Police have authoirty to BRIEFLY DETAIN a person even if they lack probable cause to arrest. To make a TERRY STOP, police must have a reasonable suspicion supported by Articuable facts of criminal activity (*hunch is never enough)

*whether police have reasonable suspicion depends on the totality of the circumstances.

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13
Q

Investigatory Detentions (terry stops) 4th Amend issue (2 of 4)

Auto STops….

A
  • AUTO STOPS: police may stop a car if they have at least REASONABLE SUSPICION that the law has been violated.
  • **EXCEPTION - checkpoint road blocks. DUI Checkppoint or road block must be NEUTRALLY APPLIED. Can’t pick and choose. Stop every 3rd car.
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14
Q

Investigatory Detentions (terry stops) 4th Amend issue (2 of 4)

Traffic Stops and Police Dogs..

A

During routine traffic stops, a sniff is not a search so long as police do not extend stop beyond time needed to issue a ticket or conduct normal inquiries.

  • 2013 SCOTUS: during a traffic stop, a dog ‘alert’ to the presence of drugs can form the basis for Probable Cause for a search.
  • BUT, 2013 SCOTUS also held the police, w/o probable cause, cannot use a drug sniffing dog directly outside the home of a suspected drug dealer.
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15
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) *most often tested on essay; 6-7 MBE.

Model to Answer any search and seizure Q: 5 STEPS

A

STEP 1) Government Conduct?
STEP 2) Reasonable expectation of privacy?
STEP 3) Did the police have a valid search warrant?
STEP 4) If warrant is not valid, does an officer’s good faith defense save the defective search warrant?
STEP 5) If a warrant is invalid and cannot be saved by good faith defense or if police never had any warrant at all, then you move to last step: EXCEPTIONS TO THE WARRANT REQUIREMENT.

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16
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 1: Government Conduct?

A
  • publicly paid police, on or off duty
  • any private individual acting at the direction of the public police turns into Gov conduct.
  • — privately paid police actions do NOT constitute gov conduct UNLESS they are deputized with the power to arrest you.
  • —- Examples of privately paid police
    (a) Store security guards
    (b) subdivison police
    (c) Campus police (assume not deputized)
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17
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 2: REasonable Expectation of Privacy (STANDING, must have standing to object to gov search)

A

Automatic categories of standing:

1) if you OWN THE PREMISES searched you always have standing to object to the search of the place you own.
2) You LIVE ON the premises searched, whether you have ownership interest or now. Ex: Grandchild living at Grandma’s
3) OVERNIGHT GUESTS have standing to object to the legality of the search of the place they are staying.

Sometimes categories of standing
1) if you own the property seized you have standing ONLY IF you have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the item or area searched.

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18
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 2: Reasonable Expectation of Privacy (STANDING)

The NO STANDING categories…

A

Where you have NO expectation of privacy and therefore no standing for anything that you HOLD OUT TO THE PUBLIC everyday.

Seizure of the following implicates NO RIGHT TO PRIVACY:

1) sound of your voice
2) style of your handwriting
3) paint on outside of your car
4) account records held by a bank.
5) monitoring the location of your car on a public street or in your driveway
* NOTE, 2012 SCOTUS (Jones Case) held that installation of GPS on suspects car constitutes a search within the 4th Amendment so need PROBABLE CAUSE.
6) Anything that can be seen across the Open Fields (Open Fields Doctrine)
7) Anything that can be seen from flying over in the PUBLIC AIR SPACE
8) The Odors emanating from your luggage or car.
9) Your GARBAGE SET OUT ON THE CURB for collection (not garbage beside the house)

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19
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 3: Did Police Have Valid Search Warrant?

2 P’s: Probable Cause and Particularity required for facially valid search warrant

(WHY, WHO, WHERE)

A

1) standard for probable cause: a FAIR PROBABILITY that contraband or evidence of a crime will be found in the area searched.
2) PARTICULARITY: warrant must state with particularity the PLACE to be searched and the THINGS to be seized.

3) Warrants and the use of informants
- –a) if officer’s affidavit or probable cause is based on informant info, its sufficient is determined by the TOTALITY OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES.
- —–b) An informant’s credibility, and basis of knowledge are all relevant factors in making this determination.
- ——c) Valid warrant can be based IN PART on an informant’s tip even though the informant is anonymous (can’t be used solely for warrant, but in part)

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20
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 3: Did Police Have Valid Search Warrant?

No Knock Entry permitted in execution of search warrants if EXIGENT Circumstances exist….

A

EXIGENT Circumstances exist when:

1) Cop need not knock and announce if knocking and announcing would be DANGEROUS, FUTILE, OR INHIBIT THE INVESTIGATION.
2) Biggest fear of inhibiting the investigation = destruction of evidence

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21
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4d) STEP 4: If warrant not valid, did cop’s GOOD FAITH DEFENSE save the defective search warrant?

A

General Rule: Officer’s good faith reliance on search warrant overcomes defects with the probale cause or particularity requirements.

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22
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 4:

Four exceptions to a good faith reliance by cop on defective search warrant…

A

1) affidavit underlying that warrant is so lacking in probable cause that no reasonable cop would have relied on it.
2) affidavit underlying the warrant is so LACKING IN PARTICULARITY that no reasonable officer would have relied on it.
3) the police officer or prosecutor LIED TO OR MISLED the magistrate when seeking the warrant.
4) If the magistrate is BIASED, and therefore has wholly abandoned his or her neutrality.

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23
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5: Warrant invalid and can’t be saved….

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT

A

1) Search incident to arrest
2) The automobile exception
3) Plain View
4) Consent
5) Stop and Frisk (terry stop)
6) Evanescent Evidence, Hot Pursuit, and Special Needs Searches

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24
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #1: Search incident to arrest

A

1) arrest must be lawful. If arrest unlawful then search unlawful.
2) arrest and search must be contemporaneous in TIME AND PLACE.
3) Geographic Scope limitation: Person can be searched and areas within the person’s WINGSPAN.
4) The GANT RULE - SEarch incident to arrest and autos, police may search the INTERIOR of the Auto Incident to arrest ONLY IF (i) arrestee is unsecured and still may gain access to interior of vehicle OR (ii) police reasonably believe that evidence of the offense for which the person was arrested may be found in the vehicle (ex: DUI arrest, can search vehicle for evidence; not for speeding arrest). INTERIOR DOES NOT INCLUDE TRUNK.

if SEARCH valid, ANY contraband will be found admissible (gun and drugs found during DUI search)

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25
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #1: Search incident to arrest — GANT RULE —- Community Care Taker Exception

A

Community Care Taker Exception to GANT RULE

Justifies a warrantless search if an officer faces an emergency that threatens the HEALTH AND SAFETY of an individual or the public.

Sometimes called the EMERGENCY AID EXCEPTION

NOTE: 2014 SCOTUS - police, w/o warrant, may not search digital info on a cell phone seized from an arrested individual.

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26
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #2: The Automobile Exception

A

The Automobile Exception

1) in order for cops to search anything or anybody and full under auto exception must have PROBABLE CAUSE.
2) BUT ONLY IF, before searching anybody or anything the police have probabl cause then they can search the ENTIRE CAR. Includes entire interior compartment and trunk

Police may also open any container, package, or luggage, without a warrant, that could reasonably contain the item they had probable cause to look for wehether that package is owned by the passenger or the driver.

3) probable cause necessary to justify the warrantles search of auto under this exception CAN arise AFTER THE CAR IS STOPPED, BUT the probable cause must arise before anything or anybody is searched.

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27
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #3: Plain View

A

1) To constitute plain view seizure the police must be legitimately present at the location where he/she does the viewing of the item seized.
2) It must be Immediately Apparent that he item is contraband or a fruit of a crime (brown sack is not immeidatley apparent)

28
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #4: CONSENT

A

1) For consent to be valid, must be voluntary.
2) Third Party Consent: RULE - where 2 or more peole have an equal right to use property, either can consent to its warrantless search. However, if both people are present and one consents and the other does not consent, then the one who DOES NOT consent controls.

BUT NOTE, if co-occupant who does not consent to a search is removed from the premises for a reason unrelated to the refusal (i.e. a lawful arrest), the cop may search upon consent of the other occupant.

29
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #5: Stop and Frisk

A

1) a Terry stop is a brief detention for the purpose of investigating suspicious conduct.
2) the legal standard for stopping: Reasonable Suspicion
3) The Reasonable Suspicion standard is LESS THAN the probable cause standard.
4) A TERRY FRISK is a PAT DOWN of the outer clothing and body to check for weapons. ]
* PLAIN FEEL RULE: If officer reasonably believes by the ‘plain feel’ that something is a weapon or contraband, then it is admissable. (if officer manipulated the feel, not a valid frisk)
5) if probable cause arises during investigatory stop, detention can become an arrest and cop could then conduct a full search incident to arrest.
6) Auto STOPS: if car properly stopped for traffic violation and officer reasonably believes that driver or passenger may be armed and dangerous, officer may (1) Conduct a Frisk of suspected person and (2) may Search the Vehicle so long as it is limited to the areas in which a weapon may be place.

30
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #6: EVANESCENT EVIDENCE

A

EVANESCENT Evidence:

evidence that MIGHT DISAPPEAR QUICKLY if police took time to get warrant. EX: cop can scrape under a suspect’s fingernails w/o getting warrant b/c if time taken to get warrant D might go wash his hands.

NOTE: SCOTUS 2013 - cops need to get a warrant before taking a BLOOD SAMPLE for a DUI arrest (if practical to do so)

31
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #6: HOT PURSUIT

A

HOT PURSUIT is a fleeing felon.

Rule of thumb: if cops are not within 15 minutes behind the fleeing felon, it is NOT a valid hot pursuit exception.

Note: if cops are truly in hot pursuit they can enter anyone’s home w/o a warrant and any evidence they see IN PLAIN VIEW is admissable.

32
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #6: INVENTORY SEARCHES

A

INVENTORY SEARCHES

Before incarceration of arestee, cop may search 1 the arrestee’s personal belongings and/or 2) the arrestee’s entire vehicle (includes closed containers in car)

33
Q

Search and Seizure (4th Amend Issue 3 of 4) STEP 5;

EXCEPTIONS to the WARRANT REQUIREMENT, #6: Public School Searches

A

Public school kids engaged in extra curricular activities can be randomly drug tested

Warrantless searches of public school childrens affects, such as purses and/or backpacks is permissible to investigate violations of school rules.

    • A school search will be held to be reasonable only if:
      1) it offers a MODERATE CHANCE of finding evidence of wrongdoing. AND
      2) the measures adopted to carry out the search are REASONABLY RELATED to the objectives of the search, AND
      3) The search is NOT EXCESSIVELY INTRUSIVE.
34
Q

WIRETAPPING AND EAVESDROPPING (4th Amend Issue 4 of 4)

All wiretapping and eavesdropping requires a WARRANT.

A

exceptions to eavesdropping rule: UNRELIABLE EAR AND UNINVITED EAR (No Warrant necessary, Gov can listen in)

1) Everybody in society assumes risk that person to whom he is speaking will eitehr consent to gov monitoring or will be wired and therefore has no 4th amendment objection on basis that it was warrantless case.
2) A speaker has no 4th amendment right if she makes no attempt to KEEP THE CONVO PRIVATE

35
Q

CONFESSIONS (#2 most heavily tested crim pro on Essay and MBE)

Miranda Warnings.

When required, suspect must be given the following info:

A

1) you have right to remain silent.
2) anything that you say can be used against you in court.
3) you have the right to attorney.
4) if you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you if you so desire.

*warnings need not be verbatim so long as the substance of the warning is conveyed.

36
Q

Trigger required for MIRANDA warnings:

Custodial Interrogation = 2 part analysis, each with distinct rule…..CUSTODY=

A

CUSTODY:

1) legal standard for custody = you are in custody if, at the time of the interrogation, a reasonable person would not feel free to leave (objective)
- - in making this determination, court will determine whether the situation presents the same inherently coercive procedures as a station house questioning.
- - the ‘not free to leave’ standard covers being in a police car or jail, but you could also be in your home or in a hospital bed.

*1984 SCOTUS said that probation interviews and routine traffic stops are NOT custodial (don’t need miranda warning from officer, anything you say can be used against you)

37
Q

Trigger required for MIRANDA warnings:

Custodial Interrogation = 2 part analysis, each with distinct rule……………Interrogation =

A

Interrogation:

1) under the 5th Amend. Miranda Doctrine, interrogation is defined as any conduct where the police knew or should have known that they might elicit an incriminating response from the suspect.
- more than just a cop asking Q’s; rigorous questioning not enough. Must be Q that elicits an incriminating response.
2) Miranda warnings are not required prior to the admissibility of what’s known as a SPONTANEOUS STATEMENT.
* blurted out = spontaneous statement that is admissable.

38
Q

Miranda Waiver

‘would you like to wavie and talk to cops?’

A

A Miranda waiver must be KNOWING AND VOLUNTARY

Courts will employ a TOTALITY OF CIRCUMSTANCES test in making this determination.

39
Q

Invoking your MIRANDA rights…

A

Right to remain silent:

1) invoking right to remain silent must be unambigous
2) Police may reinstate questioning after D has invoked right of silent if they wait a significant amount of time, D is re-mirarandized, and the questions are limited to a crime that was NOT the subject of the earlier questioning.

Invoking RIght to Counsel:

1) Request for counsel can be invoked only by an unambigous request
2) If accused invokes his right to counsel, all questions must cease until (1) the accused is given an attorney or (2) the accused initiates further questioning.
3) However, if there is a break in custody (released back into general prison population), police can come back and ask D to waive his Miranda rights after 14 DAYS.

40
Q

5th Amendment right to Counsel versus 6th Amendment Right to Counsel

Court Created 5th right to counsel arises when suspect invokes his Miranda Rights and requests an attorney.

5th Right to Counsel IS NOT offense specific and thus applies to the entire process of custodial police interrogation. = Attorney must be there for ALL Q’s from police.

A

Conversely, 6th Right to Counsel IS OFFENSE SPECIFIC. Means counsel only need to be present if D were being asked Qs about the specific case for which D has retained counsel.

But NOTE, SCOTUS 2009 - held when a D has not specifically requested counsel, and has merely been given appointed counsel (e.g. at prelim hearing), police can come back and ask D to waive his 6th right to counsel and talk to them about the crime for which he was charged.

41
Q

Pretrial Identification - two substantive bases which you can attack a pretrial identification:

A

1) denial of right to counsel

2) denial of due process

42
Q

Pretrial Identification 1) denial of right to counsel

A

a) post charge line-ups (standing in a line) and show-ups (one-on-one) give rise to the right to counsel
b) But note, there is no right to counsel when police go out to show the victim or witness photographs.

c) Other stages where there is NO right to counsel (not critical)
- taking blood samples
- taking hand writing samples
- pre-charge lineups
- brief recess during D’s testimony at trial
- parole and probation revocation proceedings
- the taking of fingerprints

43
Q

Pretrial Identification 2) Denial of Due Process

A

Certain pretrial identification techniques are so unnecessarily suggestive and so substantially likely to produce misidentification that they deny due process of law.

EX: victim says white guy did it and lineup only includes 1 white guy.

REMEDY for unconst. pretrial ID is to EXCLUDE the in-court identification, unless the state can show it had adequate independent source for that in-court identification (independent of the bad lineup)

Most common ind. source is that the victim or witness had an adequate opportunity to observe the D at the time of the crime. EX: Saw guy w/o mask during robbery for few minutes.

44
Q

Pretrial Procedures - BAIL

A

Bail issues are immediately appeal able.

Preventative detention is Constitutional

45
Q

Pretrial Procedures - Grand Juries

A

Exclusion does not apply to the conduct of grand juries.

Accordingly, A grand jury witness may be compelled to testify based on illegally seized evidence.

The proceedings of grand juries are SECRET. D has no right to appear and no right to send in a witness.

46
Q

Prosecutioral duty to disclose exculpatory information

‘Brady Material’

A

A prosecutor’s failure to disclose evidence, whether willful or inadvertent, violates Due Process and may be grounds for reversal of a conviction.

A failure to disclose exculpatory information will constitute grounds for reversing conviction IF:

1) the evidence is Favorable to the D AND
2) Prejudice has resulted, meaning there is a Reasonable Probability that the result would have been different had the information been disclosed.

47
Q

Trial

Right to an unbiased judge.

A

Bias means having a financial interest int he outcome of the case or some actual malice against D.

48
Q

Right to Jury Trial:

Const. right to jury trial attached anytime D is tried for an offense for which max authorized sentence EXCEEDS 6 MONTHS. If max authorized sentence is up to or including 6 months, there is no constitutional right to jury trial.

A

Min. number of jurors permissible is 6. IF court uses the minimum number, the verdict must be unanimous.

There is no federally protected const. right to a unanimous 12 verdict juror. SCOTUS has approved non-unanimous verdicts of 10 to 2 and 9 to 3.

49
Q

Jury Trial:

You have right to have jury pool reflect a FAIR CROSS SECTION of the community. BUT, you have no right to htave the impaneled jury reflect a fair cross section of the community.

A

ONLY THE POOL

50
Q

Use of peremptory challenges….

peremptory challenge is a challenge to exclude a prospective juror for any reason whatsovever.

A

BUT, Unconst. for prosecutor or defense to exercise peremptory challenges to exclude from jury, juror based on race or gender.

51
Q

RIGHT TO COUNSEL

Criminal D right to counsel applies to all critical stages of a prosecution, including trial.

A

Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

Rule - there must be deficient performance by counsel and but for such deficiency there is a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different.

Typically, such a claim can only be made out by specifying PARTICULAR ERRORS of trial counsel.

52
Q

Right to Self Representation

A D has the right to defend himself so long as his waiver of trial counsel is KNOWING and INTELLIGENT and he is COMPETENT to proceed pro se

A

NOTE - a D can be found mentally competent to stand trial, yet incompetent to rep himself, as determined by the Trial Judge’s discretion.

53
Q

RIGHT TO CONFRONT WITNESSES (6th Amendment Confrontation Clause Right)

A

The Absence of Face to face confrontation between D and the accuser DOES NOT violate 6th when preventing such confrontation serves AN IMPORTANT PUBLIC PURPOSE and the RELIABILITY of the witness testimony is assured. (testifying child)

A D who is disruptive may be removed from the courtroom, thereby relinquishing his right of confrontation.

54
Q

Guilty Pleas and Plea Bargaining

General Rule: A court will not disturb guilty pleas AFTER SENTENCING.

A

If a D pleads guilty, the judge must specifically address the D on the record about the following:

1) nature of the charge, AND
2) Judge must tell D the Max Authorized penalty and any Mandatory Minimum penalty, AND
3) Judge must tell him that he has a right to plead not guilty and to demand a trial, AND
4) All of this must be ON THE RECORD (plea taking ceremony)

55
Q

Four good bases for D withdrawing a guilty plea after sentence….

A

1) the plea was INVOLUNTARY (some mistake in plea ceremony)
- — (a plea is not involuntary merely b/c it was entered in response to the prosecution’s threat to charge the D with a more serious crime)
2) Lack of Jurisdiction
3) Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
4) Failure of the prosecutor to keep an agreed upon plea bargain.

56
Q

Death Penalty

Any death penalty statute that does not give D a chance to present MITIGATING facts and circumstances is unconstitional

A

There can be no automatic category for imposition of the death penalty.

The State may not by statute limit the mitigating factors; all relevant mitigating evidence must be admissible or the death penalty statute is unconst.

Only a JURY, not a judge, may determine the aggravating factors justifying the imposition of the death penalty.

57
Q

Double Jeopardy:

D cannot be retried for the same offense.

Jeopardy attaches in jury trial when the Jury is SWORN. In a bench Trial, Jeopardy attached when the first witness is sworn.

A

Jeopardy does not generally attach when the proceedings are civil. EX: it is ok to have a criminal prosecution for tax fraud, then Civil proceeding to collect back taxes.

58
Q

Exceptions permitting retrial:

1) Jury is unable to AGree upon a verdict = hung jury. prosecutor can try again.
2) Mistrials for Manifest Necessity = medical emergency during trial (D has heart attack). Mistrial, start again later on.

A

A retrial after succesful appeal is NOT double jeopardy.

But NOTE - upon retrial after a succesful appeal, the D cannot be retried for a MORE SERIOUS offense than he was convicted at the first trial.

EXAMPLE: Manslaughter/murder: If D convicted of manslaughter at first trial, but succesfully appeals to get new trial, most serious offense D can be tried for is manslaughter.

59
Q

Breach of an agreed upon plea bargain by D….

A

RULE: when D breaches a plea bargain agreement, his please and sentence can be withdrawn and the original charges reinstated.

60
Q

Two crimes do not constitute the same offense if each crime requires proof of AN ADDITIONAL ELEMENT that the other does not.

A

LESSER INCLUDED OFFENSES: Being put in jeopardy for a greater offense BARS RETRIAL for any lesser included offense.

Example: Crime of robbery includes lesser crimes of larceny and assault. if tried for robbery, CANNOT be retried for lesser included offense of larceny. IF first put in jeopardy for the lesser included offense (larceny), CANNOT later be retried for the greater offense (Robbery).

EXCEPTION - Battery/Murder = If D tried and convicted on a charge of battery, and victim of batter later dies due to injuries, D can also then be prosecuted for Murder.

61
Q

SEPARATE SOVEREIGNS

Double Jeopardy bars retrial for the same offense by the same sovereign. (fed and state different sovereigns)

A

!

62
Q

5th Amendment Privilege Against Compelled Testimony (likely on BAR)

5th Amend. privelege against self-incrimination can be asserted by anyone in ANY TYPE OF CASE. Anyone asked a Q under oath in any kind of case, wherein the response might tend to incriminate him, is entitled to 5th Amend. privilege.

A

1) You must assert that privilege the FIRST TIME the Q is asked or it is WAIVED for all subsequent criminal prosecutions.
2) Privilege must be claimed in CIVIL PROCEEDINGS to prevent the privilege from being waived for a later criminal prosecution
3) IF individual responds to questions instead of claiming the privilege during a civil proceeding, he CANNOT later bar that evidence on 5th amendment grounds. ***MUST INVOKE DURING CIVIL to PREVENT LATER CRIMINAL Q.

63
Q

Scope of 5th Amendment Privilege Against Compelled Testimony Protection…

A

1) 5th protects citizens from COMPELLED TESTIMONY.
2) 5th DOES NOT protect citizens from having the government use PHYSICAL EVIDENCE in ways to incriminate them.

Examples of non-testimonial evidence that the prosecution can compel a person to produce:

  • a persons blood sample
  • a persons handwriting sample
  • a persons voice sample
  • a persons hair sample.
64
Q

5th Amendment and Prosecutorial Conduct

1) it is unconst. for prosecutor to make a negative comment on the D’s failure to testify or on a D’s choosing to remain silent after being given Miranda warnings.

EXCEPTION: Prosecutor CAN comment on D’s failure to take the stand when the comment is IN RESPONSE to defense counsel’s assertion that the D was not allowed to explain his side of the story.

A

NOTE: 2013 SCOTUS - held that if a suspect chooses to remain silent BEFORE police read him his MIRANDA rights, that silence CAN BE used against him in court.

When a prosecutor impermissibly comments on D’s silence, the HARMLESS ERROR test applies, and thus, the prosecutor’s conduct may not be fatal to an otherwise sound conviction.

65
Q

5th Amend. privilege can be eliminated in 3 ways:

A

1) Under Grant of Immunity

2) No possibility of incrimination
EX: if the Statute of limitations has run on the underlying crime, you are not entitled to a 5th Amendment privilege.

3) Waiver - the criminal defendant who TAKES THE WITNESS STAND waives the 5th amendment privilege as to all legitimate subjects of cross examination.

66
Q

SCOTUS - its okay to take a DNA cheek swab after an arrest for a serious crime.

A

!

67
Q

Ulterior Motives:

Police can have an ulterior motive (another reason) for stopping a car so long as the stop is VALID.

A

EX: Cop running radar, car going at speed but driver did not have seatbelt on.

Driver is reputed drug dealer.

Driver is pulled over for no seatbelt.

On essay discuss it’s ok to have ulterior motive to pull over car as long as valid reason to pull over car.