The Obama administration is asking the Supreme Court to overrule a 23 year-old decision that stopped police from initiating questions unless a defendant''s lawyer is present, the latest stance that has disappointed civil rights and civil liberties groups.
While President Barack Obama has reversed many policies of his Republican predecessor, George W. Bush, the defendants'' rights case is another stark example of the White House seeking to limit rather than expand rights.
Since taking office, Obama has drawn criticism for backing the continued imprisonment of enemy combatants in Afghanistan without trial, invoking the "state secrets" privilege to avoid releasing information in lawsuits and limiting the rights of prisoners to test genetic evidence used to convict them.
The case at issue is Michigan v. Jackson, in which the Supreme Court said in 1986 that police may not initiate questioning of a defendant who has a lawyer or has asked for one unless the attorney is present. The decision applies even to defendants who agree to talk to the authorities without their lawyers.
Anything police learn through such questioning may not be used against the defendant at trial. The opinion was written by Justice John Paul Stevens, the only current justice who was on the court at the time.
The justices could decide as early as Friday whether they want to hear arguments on the issue as they wrestle with an ongoing case from Louisiana that involves police questioning of an indigent defendant that led to a murder confession and a death sentence.
Kazakhstan introduces Central Asia’s most powerful supercomputer
Tajikistan’s SMEs can drive economic diversification, says EBRD official
Tajikistan Digital Foundations Project officially launched in Dushanbe
Tajikistan imposes seasonal restrictions on heavy trucks to protect roads
Dushanbe Zoo loses land to road expansion, faces uncertain future
Tajikistan’s early cherry harvest shows strong yields, eyes export growth
Half of Danghara Hajj applicants give up pilgrimage to fund district development, says president
President of Tajikistan calls for increased tax collection and greater investment inflows
Top Tajik diplomat says collective security is key to regional peace
Iran, Tajikistan enjoy excellent-level ties, able to further expand cooperation, says Iranian president
All news
Авторизуйтесь, пожалуйста