Friday, March 25, 2011

Setting the Record Straight on Miranda

While I wrote my comment on the extraterritorial application of Miranda v. Arizona, I felt that I had to spend what I felt to be an undue amount of time dispelling the myths around “Miranda rights.” Unfortunately these myths are being further perpetuated as we speak.  

The FBI released a memorandum this week titled “Custodial Interrogation for Public Safety and Intelligence-Gathering Purposes of Operational Terrorists Inside the United States.” [1]  Unfortunately, this document has been utterly misconstrued by every single news article I have seen.  Take as an example the headlines: “Rights are Curtailed for Terror Suspects” by the Wall Street Journal, “Obama administration curtails rights for terror suspects“ by the Daily Kos, and my personal favorite “So Long, Miranda” in the self-identified neo-conservative Commentary Magazine.  I’ve read the short memo several times now, and I have yet to find anything controversial or even new about the guidelines.  

As I wrote in my comment:[2]
In popular culture, the phrase “Miranda rights” is often used to mean the Miranda warnings. But the issue of Miranda warnings is a red herring; there is not, and never has been, a right to be given Miranda warnings.  Although Miranda has made its way into the public realm, belief that there is a right to Miranda warnings is a misconception held by both sides of the political aisle.
This misconception defines the public debate of Miranda. Recently Senator John McCain was criticized from right and left alike when he suggested that an American citizen suspected of terrorism should not have been given Miranda warnings.  Politics aside, the Senator was right and the pundits on both sides got it wrong; the self-incrimination clause prevents a suspect from being compelled to be a witness against himself “in any criminal case.”  Miranda v. Arizona does not convey a right to Miranda warnings at the time of interrogation; it instead conveys a right to exclude un-Mirandized statements at criminal trial.
Even within the territory of the United States no one, from an accused jaywalker to an accused terrorist mastermind, is entitled to Miranda warnings because Miranda is a right that only occurs at trial.  Thus, the true question is whether the Constitution requires any particular statement, made in the absence of Miranda warnings, to be excluded at criminal trial.
There are several exceptions where un-Mirandized statements can be admitted at trial which include among others, an exception where public safety is at stake.  

The FBI memo walks almost the exact line that I outline in my comment.  It notes that the “Supreme Court has strongly suggested that an arrestee's Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination is not violated at the time a statement is taken without Miranda warnings, but instead may be violated only if and when the government introduces an unwarned statement in a criminal proceeding against the defendant” and cites Chavez v. Martinez.  I’ve read that case more than a few times, and take the FBI’s characterization as only “strongly suggesting” instead of “holding” that the Fifth Amendment is a right at trial to be a limited reading of the case.[3]

The Obama administration came up with an unnecessarily limited reading of one of the seminal cases on the issue which is actually leaning toward civil rights, not against them.  And not to belabor the point, but the Obama administration cannot “curtail” rights that never existed in the first place.  


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Footnotes
[1] The New York Times published the full memo here, an hour before I wrote this article.  It is worth noting that the New York Times was far more measured and accurate in its analysis: ”Delayed Miranda Warning Ordered for Terror Suspects.”
[2] While my comment Domestic Trials, Overseas Interrogations, and the Territorial Scope of Miranda v. Arizona currently awaits a publication decision, I have created an abridged version to use as a writing sample which may be found here.  This includes the following excerpt with full legal citations.
[3] The issue is whether Chavez is a binding majority opinion or a non-binding plurality opinion on the question of whether Miranda is a right only available at trial. I count a five justice majority on this holding: Thomas, Scalia, Kennedy, Stevens & Ginsburg.  Chavez v. Martinez, 538 U.S. 760, 789 (2003).

Thursday, March 3, 2011

The Fourth Amendment Overseas, a brief summary

In the past few months, I have written extensively on which parts of the constitution apply to non-citizens outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.  As I await official publication on my Miranda and Habeas articles, I wrote a brief explanation of the Fourth Amendment to share with a class.  Rather than keep it to myself, I decided to post it online and share it here.

Verdugo after Boumediene: Why the Guantanamo Litigation is Not Limited to Obscure Habeas Corpus Issues, and Should Matter to Everyone Who Works With Non-Citizens

Note: This is the same United States v. Verdugo-Urquidez that Professor Vladeck and I debated in Blog Cross-Pollination.