What's interesting about that? These four liberals always vote together. Hell...the way they pamper criminals the cops would be required to give the suspects a nap, take 'em out to dinner, give 'em a massage (with HE), and then beg them to confess.
This ruling means absolutely nothing! If you aren't smart enough to keep your mouth shut, you got no room to bitch. This guy didn't get convicted because the big bad police violated his "rights", he murdered a child and then confessed. I'm sorry the "wise latina" on the high court wants to let him go, but I say fry the sonofabitch.
Originally Posted by swarmyone
Swarmy, I swear that occasionally you strike me more and more like LE everyday . . . In an article about Justice John Paul Stevens published in March 2010, Jeffrey Toobin stated that "so far, Sotomayor seems to be voting much like Souter, an ally of Stevens, whom she replaced". Since Sotomayor's appointment at the start of the October 2009 term of the Court, only a handful of opinions have resulted in a closely divided Court with the justices divided along the commonly perceived ideological lines, with Justices Stevens, Ginsburg, and Breyer on one side, and Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Scalia, Thomas, and Alito on the other (Justice Kennedy being the "swing vote"); in all these cases as of June 1, 2010, Justice Sotomayor has voted with Justices Stevens, Ginsburg, and Breyer.
BUT THEY DO NOT VOTE TOGETHER IN EVERY CASE - ONLY WHEN IT HAS BEEN A CLOSELY DIVIDED COURT!!! In fact, most had pegged
Sotomayor (a former prosecutor) to "join the other side" in this case!!!
This ruling means A LOT. Your failure to see the implications of it simply demonstrates your ignorance of the magnitude of the decision as it impacts all of us . . . perhaps you simply missed the salient point(s) and it was a simple error and that may explain how you may have overlooked them, I admit that the decision is rather long and a tedious read . . . HOWEVER,
AS IT STANDS NOW BASED ON THIS RULING - If you are ever arrested (or questioned and given a Miranda warning), you must now specifically state to the officer immediately that you do indeed invoke your right to counsel and to remain silent. You must then restate this over and over to every investigator, every clerk and every official, no matter their rank or standing (even an utterance to a janitor or another prisoner may invalidate your right to remain silent unless and until you restate it implicitly). If you don't restate to EVERYONE at all times that you are invoking your right, law enforcement is simply able to interrogate you for as long as they please, and, as they have demonstrated in Berghuis v. Thompkins, they will do exactly that.
This is a great departure from the status quo policies that now require most LE agencies to obtain a written waiver from you prior to interrogation specifically stating that you waive your right to remain silent.
If you invoke your right now, under this ruling, and open your mouth to use the bathroom or make a phone call or utter a sigh, LE may then determine that you have given up your right to remain silent, you MUST NOW RESTATE THAT YOU ARE INVOKING YOUR RIGHT AFTER ANY INCONSEQUENTIAL UTTERANCE YOU MAKE ONCE YOU HAVE BEEN READ MIRANDA- EVERY TIME YOU SPEAK. What the Court is saying is that any response or utterance ("No, I don't want a mint" or "This chair is uncomfortable") is evidence to the interrogators that you are willing to speak, and they can continue the interrogation, in any legal manner without coercion, regardless of your making it clear to them that you have invoked your right to remain silent previously.
<begin sarcasm> Yeah, that ruling means absolutely nothing (obviously it means a lot if you're ever questioned or detained and read Miranda) . . . or is it just that you'd like us to believe otherwise? </end sarcasm>
And by the way, why do you bring the "race issue" to the discussion? "Wise Latina"?? Do I have to point out how ethnocentric and racist you sound by making such comment? Are we to believe that because a person is a Latina they are somehow less capable or less a person?? Apparently, one may infer from your comments that you feel as such.
The erosion of Miranda in Berghuis v. Thompkins reflects our legal system's sharp tilt in favor of the prosecution.
The implications here have little to do with the specific reprehensible act of the defendant and everything to do with the erosion of your rights (and everyone else's).
- Jackie
----------------------------------------------
"After this week's 5-4 decision in
Berghuis v. Thompkins (PDF), we may well expect a conversation on the scope of
Miranda to make an appearance again in a solicitor general's confirmation hearing for the Supreme Court when hearings for Elena Kagan open later this month. In
Berghuis, the Supreme Court peels back some of the protection of
Miranda by ruling that police need not to curtail their interrogation of a criminal detainee unless that detainee asks for a lawyer.
"Merely remaining silent is not enough to demonstrate that one seeks to exercise the right to remain silent. In
Berghuis, Van Chester Thompkins was arrested and questioned about a homicide that occurred at a mall in Michigan. He was questioned for nearly three hours by police and remained silent. Finally, police detectives asked whether he believed in God, whether he prayed to God and whether he prayed for forgiveness for the shooting. Thompkins haltingly answered ''yes'' to each of the questions. He refused to provide a written confession and the interrogation ended. Thompkins' one word ''statement'' was used against him in charging and prosecuting him. He was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole.
"So police officers may now interrogate detainees for hours on end--no limit is suggested by the court--and so long as the detainee does not use the magic words that expressly indicate a refusal to answer questions or the desire for an attorney, any words uttered--no matter how few--may be used against him. As Justice Sonia Sotomayor says in dissent,
today's decision, ''turns Miranda upside down,'' requiring criminal defendants to ''unambiguously invoke their right to remain silent--which counter-intuitively, requires them to speak.''
"
It's ironic that the strongly worded dissent comes from Justice Sotomayor--a career prosecutor. They could well have come from Justice Marshall, whose Oklahoma client ''voluntarily confessed'' after being beaten by police. But Sotomayor's hands-on experience with criminal prosecutions, fully on display in her real-world understanding of the pressures of interrogation in custody and the incentives of police that she articulates in her dissent, demonstrates the importance of having justices on the Supreme Court whose practical experience can inform the court's approach to criminal cases."
- theroot.com