-Caveat Lector-

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0,1282,-2211667,00.html

Supreme Court Could End Miranda Warnings


Sunday December 1, 2002 6:30 PM


LOS ANGELES (AP) - For five years, Oliverio Martinez has been blind and paralyzed as 
the
result of a police shooting. Now he is at the center of a U.S. Supreme Court case that 
could
determine whether decades of restraints on police interrogations should be discarded.

The blanket requirement for a Miranda warning to all suspects that they have the right 
to
remain silent could end up in the rubbish bin of legal history if the court concludes 
police
were justified in aggressively questioning the gravely wounded Martinez while he 
screamed
in agony.

``I am dying! ... What are you doing to me?'' Martinez is heard screaming on a 
recording
of the persistent interrogation by police Sgt. Ben Chavez in Oxnard, a city of 182,000 
about
60 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

``If you are going to die, tell me what happened,'' the officer said. He continued the
questioning in an ambulance and an emergency room while Martinez pleaded for
treatment. At times, he left the room to allow medical personnel to work, but he 
returned
and continued pressing for answers.

No Miranda warning was given.

A ruling that minimizes defendants' rights would be useful to the administration, which
supports Oxnard's appeal, in its questioning of terrorism suspects, experts said.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed with a federal judge that the confession 
was
coerced and cannot be used as evidence against Martinez in his excessive-force civil 
case
against the city. It said Chavez should have known that questioning a man who had been
shot five times, was crying out for treatment and had been given no Miranda warning 
was a
violation of his constitutional rights.

Oxnard appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. Justice Department filed a 
friend-
of-the-court brief along with police organizations and the conservative Criminal 
Justice
Legal Foundation.

They contend that unfettered police questioning is allowable so long as the information
obtained from a suspect is not used against that person in court.

Opponents of the government position say a ruling diluting the Miranda protections 
would
be another nail in the coffin of individual rights sacrificed in the interest of 
rooting out
terrorists.

``This is a case to be concerned about,'' said Charles Weisselberg, a University of
California, Berkeley, law professor. ``To see the (U.S.) solicitor general arguing that
there's no right to be free from coercive interrogation is pretty aggressive.''

On Nov. 28, 1997, Martinez, a farm worker, was riding his bicycle through a field where
police were questioning a man suspected of selling drugs. The police ordered Martinez 
to
stop. When an officer found a sheathed knife in his waistband, they scuffled and the
officer's partner, perceiving that Martinez was reaching for the officer's gun, shot 
him five
times, in the eyes, spine and legs.

Chavez eventually got an acknowledgment from Martinez that he did grab for the 
officer's
gun. But Martinez's lawyers said that statement was coerced and is inadmissible in the
damage case that Martinez filed.

Martinez was never charged with a crime.

The Oxnard appeal argues that the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination
applies only at a criminal trial and the 14th Amendment guarantee of due process of 
law is
violated only if the questioning of a suspect is so excessive that it ``shocks the 
conscience''
of the community.

Martinez is represented by R. Samuel Paz, a frequent critic of police practices.

``I think it will turn on whether the court is going to stand up and say what it said 
before,''
Paz said, ``that the Fifth and Fourteenth amendments protect people, and that we do 
have
rights that extend beyond having a coerced confession admitted into a criminal case.''

Martinez, 34, blind and paraplegic, lives in a one-room trailer in a remote rural area,
tended by his father.

``It's tragic,'' said Alan E. Wisotsky, the lawyer for the city of Oxnard, ``but you 
can't look
at it from a philanthropic standpoint. He tried to kill police officers or they 
thought he was
trying to kill them .... Does the tape (of the interrogation) sound bad? Yes, the guy 
is in
agony. But the questioning was to get at the truth.''

The Miranda warning takes its name from the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in a 1966 case
involving the use of a confession in the rape prosecution of Ernesto Miranda.

``A generation of Americans has grown up since 1966 confident that, if brought to the
police station for questioning, we have the right to remain silent, that the police 
will warn
us of that right and, above all, that they will respect its exercise,'' said a 
friend-of-the-court
brief on behalf of Martinez by the American Civil Liberties Union and California 
Attorneys for
Criminal Justice.

``... If petitioners' theory of the Fifth Amendment is correct, then the public's 
confidence
has been misplaced for all these decades and is about to be shattered,'' it said.

^---

On the Net:

Supreme Court's 1966 Miranda ruling: http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/ scripts/getcase.pl?
court=US&vol=384&in vol=436









Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2002

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