Guest Editorial
Miranda challenged in federal criminal cases
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit recently held that 18 USCS section 3501 - and not Miranda
- governs the admissibility of confessions in federal court. The
decision has been appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, and if it is
sustained, the protection the Miranda warning has provided for more than
30 years, particularly to the poor and uneducated, will be drastically
reduced.
By Robert W. Landry
On Feb. 8, 1999, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, by
a vote of two judges to one, ruled that the 33-year-old Miranda case was
passé and its famous rubric no longer was required to admit in
evidence a defendant's confession in a federal criminal case. This
decision has dubious precedential merit, but if it is sustained on
appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, the protection the Miranda
warning has provided for more than three decades, particularly to the
poor and uneducated, will be drastically reduced. In addition, there
would be a return to the free-for-all courtroom battles so common in
pre-Miranda trials regarding due process, Fifth Amendment
rights, and equal protection in confession contests.
The Virginia appeals court said, "[W]e hold that Congress, pursuant
to the power to establish rules of evidence and procedure in the federal
courts, acted well within its authority in enacting 18 USCS sec.
3501. As a consequence, sec. 3501 rather than Miranda,
governs the admissibility of confessions in federal court."1
Dickerson was charged with conspiracy, four counts of bank robbery,
and three counts of using a firearm in relation to a crime of violence.
Dickerson filed motions in the trial court to suppress certain
statements, which were granted based on Miranda. The trial
court held that the statements could not be used in the government's
case in chief because the Miranda warning was not timely given
but ruled that they could be used for impeachment purposes, on the
grounds that Dickerson had been accorded due process in the course of
his interrogation by law enforcement officers.
After the government's motion to reconsider the admissibility of
Dickerson's confession was denied by the trial court, the government
appealed, arguing before the Federal Court of Appeals that the trial
court abused its discretion. The government offered to prove that
Dickerson received a Miranda warning prior to giving the
statements in the form of written documents signed by Dickerson
acknowledging that he was timely warned. Because the government failed
to offer this evidence when the motion to suppress was first heard, the
trial court refused to change its original order to suppress. 18 USCS section
3501 was not presented or argued.
The government appealed the order denying the motion to reconsider.
The court of appeals reversed the trial court remanding the case with
instructions to admit the confession. It said the confession was
admissible under section 3501, which replaced Miranda.
Precedential effect
On appeal, neither the government nor Dickerson relied upon section
3501. It was not briefed by them nor was it argued. An amicus brief was
filed by the Washington Legal
Foundation: Safe Streets Coalition arguing that section 3501
replaced Miranda. A majority of the court agreed. It remanded
the case to the trial court with instructions to allow the disputed
statements of Dickerson in evidence.
In his dissent, Circuit Judge Michael said, "We perform our role as
neutral abettors best when we let the parties raise the issues and both
sides brief and argue them fully." And, "It is sound judicial practice
for us to avoid issues not raised by the parties." In further support of
his dissent he cites Davis v. United States: "This is not the
first case in which the United States had declined to invoke sec. 3501
before us - nor even the first case in which the failure has been called
to our attention."2
It is unusual for a case to be decided on a theory of law that is not
argued by the parties. The strength of the American justice system
depends to a large degree on its adversarial nature where disputes are
resolved by an intellectual battle between conflicting points of view.
Arguments on one side are balanced with arguments on the other with a
reasonable expectation that the court will then be able to make a
well-considered decision. This was not done in the Dickerson appeal.
Neither side presented briefs or argument on one side or the other. On
such an important issue as discarding Miranda, it is difficult
to justify the appeal court's impetuosity. It puts the precedential
effect of the decision in peril.
The Miranda decision
On June 13, 1966, the U.S. Supreme Court handed down the momentous
case of Miranda v.
Arizona.3 Some predicted terrible and
disastrous consequences, and a collapse of our criminal justice system.
Others cautiously hoped that it would produce a major improvement by
setting a yardstick for determining due process and voluntariness when
judging admissibility of confessions. After 33 years of use throughout
the United States the debate continues, and each person is free to judge
the historic consequences.
Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote the majority opinion in
Miranda. He said, "As for the procedural safeguards to be
employed, unless other fully effective means are devised to inform
accused persons of their right of silence and to assure a continuous
opportunity to exercise it, the following measures are required. Prior
to any questioning, the person must be warned that he has a right to
remain silent, that any statement he does make may be used as evidence
against him, and that he has a right to the presence of an attorney,
either retained or appointed. The defendant may waive effectuation of
these rights, provided the waiver is made voluntarily, knowingly and
intelligently."
The privilege against self-incrimination, an essential mainstay of
the American adversary system, has its constitutional foundation in the
respect a government, state or federal, must accord to the dignity and
integrity of its citizens. The poor, the uneducated, the inexperienced,
and minorities are particularly vulnerable to interrogation tactics of
law enforcement officers. It may not be presumed that they know their
rights, nor is circumstantial evidence sufficient to constitute a waiver
of their rights. They are easier targets to extract confessions from
than the rich, intelligent, experienced, and powerful. Some will argue
that that is okay. The Supreme Court did not think so, and prescribed
the warning that we now take for granted. The warning, of course, does
not make a confession admissible automatically. The defendant must
freely, voluntarily, and intelligently waive his or her right to remain
silent. That subjective test is made after there is sufficient evidence
that the warning was properly given. With a few exceptions, the warning
requirement works well, and the prediction that confessions would dry up
as a consequence has not happened.
Effect of Miranda at trial
In spite of the warning given to an accused required under
Miranda, confessions continue to be used in the prosecution of
criminal cases. Surprisingly, the number of confessions has not
perceptibly changed, but the ease with which the issues pertaining to
them has. A judicial hearing out of the presence of the jury is
conducted to determine whether or not the confession may be admitted in
evidence. If it is allowed in evidence, the case before the jury
proceeds including testimony surrounding the confession. The defendant
may challenge the weight to be given to the confession - as is the case
with all evidence. However, the trial pattern is completely different
from pre-Miranda trials.
In pre-Miranda trials the issue of voluntariness of the
confession frequently became the main issue in the case. The government
was placed on the defensive, and the accusatory claims of the defendant
about the misconduct of the officers became more important than the
charges against the accused. Even when there was little or no defense
offered, the trial would be extended because the defendant would raise
the specter of a coerced confession and change the focus of the trial to
misconduct on the part of law enforcement - sometimes with good
reason.
Under Miranda, those issues are decided in a motion before
the court on whether the warning was properly and timely given and
whether there was a free and intelligent waiver of the defendant's
rights. This explicit standard gives notice to law enforcement exactly
what it has to do to meet constitutional requirements. Prior to
Miranda even judges were in doubt about those requirements. So,
for the first time in American judicial history, a uniform standard was
established on the admissibility of confessions. More uniform
application of the law (equal protection), more orderly and efficient
administration of justice, and a better focus on the substantive issues
at trial are all benefits that the court system has enjoyed because of
Miranda, without compromising either the rights of the accused
or the best interests of the public.
Conclusion
In conclusion, I believe that Miranda is good law for the
following reasons:
- It accomplishes the purposes for which it was intended - to protect
the individual against the powers of the state in accordance with the
U.S. Constitution;
- It is accepted by sheriffs and police as a workable and reasonable
guideline that does not compromise the effectiveness of law
enforcement;
- Criminal trials are conducted with greater integrity and efficiency
due to the sanitizing effect of Miranda; and
- The Dickerson case fails to weigh in as reliable
precedentiaal authority for substituting 18 USCS section 3501 (1998) for
Miranda v. Arizona.
The fate of this case will be exciting to follow because it may
forecast the posture of the U.S. Supreme Court relative to other Warren
Court decisions. If review is accepted and the decision is affirmed, its
effect may be postponed because it is the policy of the Department of
Justice not to substitute the federal statute for Miranda and
it is unlikely that Attorney General Janet Reno will change that policy
in spite of affirmation.
It is ominous that a high federal court would take an
uncharacteristic prosecutorial role in an opinion that undermines a
long-standing constitutional protection in the guise of enlightened
public interest and scholarship. If decisions such as this go unnoticed,
no one can predict what mischief they may cause. Vigilance and
assertiveness are essential to protect the legal system from erosion
whether by judges with personal agendas or by persons with special
interests.
Endnotes
1 United
States v. Dickerson, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth
District, No. 97-4750 (1999).
2 Davis v. United
States, 512 U.S. 452 (1994) at 463.
3 Miranda v.
Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).
Robert W. Landry, U.W. 1949, is a
retired Wisconsin circuit court judge, having served on the trial bench
in Milwaukee for 40 years. He participated in the transition from pre-
to post-Miranda.
Wisconsin
Lawyer