Criminal Procedure I Final Exam Outline
- Basic due process violations
- 14th Am.
- Brown – Torture in securing a confession violates the principles of fundamental fairness
- Accuracy– One argument is that torture in acquiring confessions violates the tenet of accuracy that was considered important for fundamental fairness
- Legality– More importantly, the criminal justice system should not punish anyone before proving one is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, even if we are positive they are guilty
- Ashcraft – Severe sleep deprivation is found to violate principles of fundamental fairness
- Accuracy – Same as in Brown
- The innovation in Ashcraft is that of presumption – no matter what one’s status the standard by which we presume one has involuntarily confessed is universal
- A confession seems to be presumptively involuntary only by means of some specifically reprehensible state action – Miller
- Miller v. Fenton – Upholds the confession of one who is mentally unstable and persuaded to confess as given D’s age and status he should be resistant to this form of persuasion
- Ashcraft – Though we are getting farther and farther away from this notion of reprehensible state action
- State action in persuading a confession
- Intrinsic lies are less problematic and are entirely constitutional as D is in the best position to determine whether evidence is really made up
- Though those really concerned about reliability and accuracy may believe that these lies are unconstitutionally persuasive
- Alschuler would disagree arguing that one should strictly look to whether the state has taken part in an offensive action precluding all understanding of the D’s individual nature
- Extrinsic lies are per se problematic as D has no basis for valuing the validity of evidence outside of D’s experience and may base their confession improperly
- 5th Am.
- Rochin – “Shock the conscience” standard – About an involuntary production of evidence regardless of whether the police action was brutal
- D’s body is being used against D’s will to incriminate D
- Accuracy is not a concern – doesn’t matter that D is in fact guilty
- Though Breithaupt v. Abram – Court does not follow Rochin because they say that taking a blood test sample from a suspect who is unconscious doesn’t shock the conscience
- 4th Am. – Searches and seizures
- Overview
- Text – “The right of the people to be secure in their person, houses, papers and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized”
- Under all historical interpretations, “physical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the 4th Am. is directed – Katz
- Standing – Defendant may not raise a claim of a 4th Am. violation unless she is an alleged victim of the unreasonable search or seizure
- Exclusionary Rule – 4th Am. remedy – Generally provides that evidence seized by the police in violation of the 4th Am. may not be introduced in a criminal trial of the victim of the unreasonable search or seizure
- Not expressly provided for in the federal Constitution, but an implied component – Weeks
- Controversial because its effect is to suppress reliable evidence of D’s guilt
- “Private” Searches and Seizures – Does not extend to searches and seizures, no matter how unreasonable, that are conducted by private person on their own initiative
- A person must be acting as an instrument or agent of the Government – Skinner
- Not always police officer, also public employees
- Extra-territorial searches and seizures – Verdugo-Urquidez
- Following are not entitled to 4th Am. protections
- Nonresident aliens not in the US or its territories and
- Aliens who are temporarily and involuntarily in the US
- Unclear whether 4th Am. extends to
- Illegal aliens living voluntarily in the US
- Nonresident aliens whose prolonged presence in the country obtains sufficient connections (i.e., alien inmate in a state or federal prison)
- Abandoned houses, papers and effects – Not entitled to 4th Am. protections
- Test – D intends to forego any interest or should realize that observation or use by another is likely
- Though not considered abandoned if discarded as the result of unlawful police conduct
- Policy
- No legitimate expectation of privacy
- D’s own act to abandon = no seizure by the police in order to disclose
- Reasonable per se
- Issue Checklist
- Did the police activity constitute a “search” and/or “seizure”?
- Harlan test
- Did the police activity in question implicate a “person, house, paper or effect?”
- Rarely results in litigation
- If so, did the officer have adequate grounds to conduct it?
- What degree of suspicion is legally required to justify the search or seizure?
- Probable cause
- Reasonable suspicion
- Did the officer in fact have the requisite degree of suspicion?
- Did the officer have a warrant?
- If not, was there a valid reason not to secure one?
- Warrantless searches are per se unreasonable but not always unreasonable
- If a search warrant was secured, was it obtained in a proper manner and is it in the proper form?
- Warrants must
- Be issued by a “neutral and detached magistrate” based on information “supported by Oath or affirmation”
- Describe in particularly “the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized”
- Does D have standing to raise a 4th Am. challenge to the evidence in question?
- Analyze separately for each D
- Assuming that the preceding questions justify the conclusion that the police conducted an unreasonable search or seizure in violation of D’s rights, what evidence, if any, must be excluded from the criminal trial?
- Secondary evidence (i.e., evidence indirectly secured as a result of the original illegality, is sometimes inadmissible as a fruit of the poisonous tree
- “Persons, houses, papers and effects”
- Persons include
- D’s body as a whole
- As when arrested – Chimel
- Exterior of D’s body
- Including clothing as when patted down for weapons – Terry
- Interior of D’s body
- As when blood is extracted to test for alcoholic content -- Schmerber
- D’s conversations
- As when electronically monitored – Katz
- Houses include
- Virtually all structures that people commonly use as a residence, whether on a temporary basis (Stoner) or a long-term basis (Clinton)
- Encompasses buildings connected to the residence, such as a garage – Taylor
- Includes the curtilage of the home – “the area to which extends the intimate activity associated with the ‘sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of life.’” – Oliver
- NOT including open fields – unoccupied and undeveloped real property outside the curtilage of the home – Hester and Oliver
- Offices, stores and other commercial buildings – Oliver
- Papers include
- Personal items, such as letters and diaries, as well as impersonal business records – Andresen
- Effects include
- Residual component of the constitutional phrase
- Automobiles
- Luggage and other containers
- Clothing
- Weapons and fruits of the crime
- Though less inclusive than the word “property” – open fields, which are not houses are also not effects – Oliver
- Search
- Katz – Harlan’s 2-prong “reasonable expectation of privacy” test has both a subjective and an objective test
- Test
- Individual must have manifested an actual, or subjective, expectation of privacy – subjective
- Expectation is one that “society is prepared to recognize as reasonable” – objective
- Police activity does not constitute a search if either prong is lacking
- Subjective – No search had D known the telephone booth was bugged
- Although people in general may have a legitimate expectation of privacy, D’s subjective realization that his conversations were not private would have undermined his 4th Am. claim
- Objective – No search had D incriminated himself in the open
- Society is not prepared to recognize as reasonable an expectation of privacy in words spoken out in the open
- Analysis and Critique of the Harlan test
- Subjective
- Technology advances coupled with increased crime and urbanization accustom us to a less private way of life
- Once people know that the government is reading their mail, listening to their conversations, and generally intruding on their privacy they will have no subjective expectation of privacy
- Objective
- “Reasonable” has come to be replaced by “legitimate” or “justifiable” – based on use of “society is prepared to recognize language”
- Reasonable – A reasonable person would not expect her privacy to be invaded
- D chooses to commit crime in a secluded park
- Justifiable or legitimate – Draws a normative conclusion about the privacy to which one has a right
- Less privacy in homes in high crime or urban areas vs. rural areas
- Harlan later supported the more normative analysis in White – Suspect talking to person he believes to be a friend, invited into suspect’s home and friend transmits conversation to FBI agents outside the house (like Hoffa but there informant went and told)
- White – There’s no way that the suspect here could have legitimate expectation of privacy after Hoffa
- Harlan believes this is disingenuous and he is dissenting here so what does this tell us about he wants the 2nd prong of his test interpreted? – “The question must, in my view, be answered by assessing the nature of a particular practice and the likely extent of its impact on the individual’s sense of security balanced against the utility of the conduct as a technique of law enforcement...extensive intrusions that significantly jeopardize the sense of security which is the paramount concern of the 4th Am.”
- White is thinking of reasonableness as an empirical matter but Harlan says we have to worry about other things – “form and project as well reflect” society’s expectations
- Harlan argues that we want to make sure that people continue to have a preference for more privacy which we concerned about because of Katz’s subjective standard – one way we can do that is by keying our standard for privacy to those who respect it the most
- SC has applied Harlan test strictly – 3 factors have proved particularly important in post-Katz “search” jurisprudence
- Nature of the property inspected is critical – Some property is linked more directly to activities that the Court wishes to protect from scrutiny than others – open fields vs. curtilage
- Extent to which a person has taken measures to keep information, property, or an activity private – A person can not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in that which she knowingly exposes to the public or is in open view
- One who voluntarily conveys information or property to another person assumes the risk that the latter individual will transmit the information or hand over the property to the government
- As limited exposure is not protected, 4th Am. is eliminated from a great many aspects of modern life
- Degree of intrusion caused by the police activity – Analyzed at times under the pre-Katz standard of “disruption of legitimate activities”/trespass standards
- Applications of the Harlan test
- Surveillance of Conversations by “False Friends”
- “False friends” – White (per Hoffa)
- Restated in terms of Katz, SC held that a person does not have “a justifiable and constitutionally protected expectation that a person with whom he is conversing will not then or later reveal the conversation to the police”
- Criticisms
- Does not necessarily follow, however, that people should be expected to assume the risk in a free society that their “friends” are government agents
- Jeopardizes the conversational confidentiality “necessary for the maintenance of personal autonomy and the development of creative individuality
- “Wired” false friends – White
- No constitutional difference between pure false-friend cases and the situation in which the false friend uses the more reliable technique of recording the conversations
- Criticisms
- Though Harlan dissented – the practice of monitoring conversations undermines “that confidence and sense of security with one another that is characteristic of individual relationships between citizens in a free society” and goes “beyond the impact on privacy occasioned by the ordinary type of [false-friend] investigation upheld in Hoffa”
- People will measure their words more carefully if they fear that their conversations are being transmitted to 3rd persons, than they will in the pure false-friend situation
- Open Fields – Entry into and exploration of so-called “open fields does not amount to a search within the meaning of the 4th Am. – Oliver (federal officers entered on foot, ignoring “No Trespassing” signs and walking around a locked gate and a stone wall)
- Policy – People do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in activities occurring in open fields, even if that activity could not be observed from the ground except by trespassing in violation of civil and criminal law
- Bright-line rule – Expectation of privacy in open field is never legitimate
- Definition – Any occupied or undeveloped area outside the curtilage, though need not be either “open” or a “field” as those terms are used in common speech
- Curtilage – “Land immediately surrounding and associated with the home to which the extends the intimate activity associated with the sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of life”
- 4 determining factors – Dunn
- Proximity to the home
- Whether the area is included within enclosures surrounding the house
- Nature of the use to which the area is put
- Steps taken by the resident to protect the area from observation
- Backyard is almost always curtilage, though front yard can vary depending on the above factors
- Though search occurs if police while in an open field enter an enclosed structure – Dunn
- Technological Information-Gathering
- Pen registers – Smith v. Maryland
- Electronic tracking devices – Knotts – Use of such a device to monitor a person’s movements is not a search if the only information that it reveals is available at large, or at least to people who theoretically obtain the information from a lawful vantage point
- Yet indiscriminate monitoring of property that has been withdrawn from public view would present far too serious a threat to privacy interests in the home to escape entirely some sort of 4th Am. oversight – Karo
- Policy – As long as it is hypothetically conceivable albeit unlikely as a practical matter, for people to obtain information in a non-technologically-enhanced manner, it is irrelevant that an electronic tracking device is used
- Policy – The difference in the 2 cases might come down to little more than that the chemical drum in Knotts was placed outside the cabin rather than inside
- Aerial Surveillance
- Rule – Non-technologically-enhanced aerial surveillance by the government of activities occurring within the curtilage (open field is not protected at all)of a house does not constitute a search if the surveillance
- Occurs from public navigable airspace and
- Is conducted in a physically non-intrusive manner
- Airplanes – Ciraolo – Police need not shield their eyes from objects or activities which are knowingly exposed to them even in the curtilage
- Court noted that the airplane had been flown at an altitude of approximately 1,000 feet which was within public navigable airspace for fixed wing aircraft as required by FAA regulations
- Policy
- Fact that a person has taken measures to restrict some views of her activities within the curtilage does not preclude the police from observing them from a public vantage point where they have a right to be
- “In an age where private and commercial flights in the public airways are routine,” it is unreasonable for D to expect privacy from the air
- Helicopters – Riley – Not a search for the same reasons above, D had offered no evidence “that such flights were unheard of” in the vicinity of the house
- Police action might have constituted a search if an airplane rather than a helicopter had surveyed D’s greenhouse from precisely the same vantage point
- Though greater likelihood that helicopter might interfere with D’s normal use of the house or its curtilage – SC found it significant in Riley that no intimate details connected with the use of the house were revealed
- Testing for Contraband
- Dog sniffs – Place – Not a search based on 2 facts
- Information was secured in a comparatively non-intrusive manner
- The luggage, which was in a public place when it was sniffed, was not opened and, thus, non-contraband items were never exposed to the public eye
- Information revealed was very limited, as it disclosed only the presence or absence of narcotics, a contraband item
- “No other investigative procedure that is so limited both in the manner in which the information is obtained and in the content of the information revealed by the procedure”
- In-the-field chemical testing – Jacobsen – Any chemical test that “merely discloses whether or not a particular substance is [illegal] does not compromise any legitimate interest in privacy” and is therefore not a search
- In contrast, if a substance is not tested to determine if it is contraband, but rather to find out whether it contains evidence of the use of contraband, the test is a search – Skinner (tests of blood and urine for drug usage is a search)
- Inspection of Garbage – Greenwood – D has no reasonable expectation of privacy in garbage enclosed in a bag left for collection outside the curtilage of a home
- Subjective – D might have a subjective expectation that the trash would not be opened by the police
- Major holding in Greenwood – Fact that incriminating evidence was sealed in a container didn’t matter as “mere possibility that unwelcome meddlers [could] open and rummage through the containers” was enough to make D’s expectation of privacy illegitimate
- Objective – D’s 4th Am. Claim failed on objective grounds because “it is common knowledge” that plastic garbage bags left on the curb for pickup “are readily accessible to animals, children, scavengers, snoops, and members of the public”
- 2 related search rules
- 4th Am. does not protect information knowingly exposed to the public – Katz
- One cannot have a reasonable expectation of privacy in information voluntarily turned over to others
- Seizure
- Seizure of Property – Tangible property is seized in 4th Am. terms “when there is some meaningful interference with an individual’s possessory interest in that property” – Jacobsen
- Seizure occurs when
- Government destroys property
- Property is removed from D’s actual or constructive possession – Place
- House is secured to prevent individuals from entering or taking away property – Segura
- Officer merely picks up an object to look at it or moves it a small distance – Hicks (officer lifted stereo equipment in order to read a serial number on the back or bottom
- Any interference with D’s possessory interest in such circumstances is not meaningful
- Seizure does NOT occur when – Installation of electronic devices on or in property – Karo
- No seizure occurred when the bug-infested can was transferred to D
- Placement of beeper in the can was not a seizure since the container at that time did not belong to D, and thus did not invade his possessory interests
- “Although the can may have contained an unknown and unwanted foreign object, it cannot be said that anyone’s possessory interest was interfered with in a meaningful way”
- Seizure of Persons – Occurs when a police officer, by means of physical force or show of authority, intentionally restrains the individual’s liberty in such a manner that, in view of all the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would believe that she is not free to leave
- Purely objective test, no subjective element
- Examples
- Physically restrained so that he can be frisked – Terry
- Placed under arrest – Henry
- Intentionally shot by the officer – Garner
- Taken into custody and brought in for questioning – Dunaway
- Fingerprinting – Hayes
- Traffic stop/citation – Hensley
- Roadblock – Brower
- Police confrontation alone does NOT amount to a seizure unless the officer adds to the pressures inherent in the situation “by engaging in conduct significantly beyond that accepted in social intercourse” by
- Displaying a weapon
- Encircling a suspect
- Roughly touching a suspect
- Using a tone which would indicate that “compliance with his request might be compelled” – Mendenhall
- Seizure by Questioning – Questioning by itself is unlikely ever to amount to a seizure – INS v.