Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Criminally Yours: What Does ‘Miranda’ Really Mean?


I got an inquiry this week from a potential client who was arrested for shoplifting (a crime worthy of its own Criminally Yours column), but her question didn’t concern the allegation. What she wanted to ask me was — because police hadn’t read her Miranda rights when they arrested her — wouldn’t that mean the whole case had to get thrown out?

The answer is no.

Miranda warnings go to one and only one very specific thing — if you’re arrested and police question you, they are supposed to read your Miranda warnings first. If not, the statements you make risk being thrown out of court — or, in legal terms, suppressed.  By not reading the Miranda warnings, the cops risk forfeiting your statements, not the arrest itself.

Here’s the rule: if you’ve been detained or arrested (detention is a stop, short of arrest), and police begin to question you about a suspected crime, they are obligated to read your Miranda rights.  Miranda rights are the four things you’ve heard a million times on cop shows: 1) You have the right to remain silent, 2) Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law, 3)You have the right to an attorney, and 4) If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you.

Police carry the warnings around with them printed on little business cards. At trials, they often have to refer to the card, so infrequently do they actually read the warnings.

That’s because unlike the way television depicts arrests — as soon as the cops slap the cuffs on you they read you your Miranda rights — this rarely happens in real life.  Why?  Because they don’t have to.  They only have to read you your rights if they intend on questioning you about the crime for which they are arresting you.

Should you volunteer something about your guilt without having been asked a question, anything you admit could come into evidence, Miranda or not.

For example, you’re stopped for drunk driving and you volunteer, “But I only had two drinks, officer.”  That will come into evidence. It wasn’t the subject of questioning, thus Miranda was not necessary.

If on the other hand, if you’re stopped by police and they ask you affirmatively whether you’ve been drinking and you give the same answer, arguably the statement shouldn’t be admitted.  However, there are nuances.  Technically if you’re sitting in your car when you make the statement, and haven’t been officially detained or arrested (that’s a legal call, not what it felt like to you), the prosecutor will argue no rights were necessary because you hadn’t been detained or arrested.

Here’s another recent example. Let’s say you jump a turnstile without paying the fare and the cops pull you off to the side.  The first thing out of your mouth is: “I’m sorry officer, I was just in a hurry.” That statement can be used against you.  You volunteered it without a single question from police.  Too bad for you.

Or let’s say you’re in the back of a cop car and the police in the front are having a chat about what to charge you with.

You decide to say, “I f *cked up, just don’t charge me with robbery.”  That statement will come in even though they’ve laid the groundwork for you to want to volunteer something.

This seems like pretty basic stuff, but you’d be surprised at how many people volunteer information that’s later used against them, and at how long cops wait to read you your Miranda rights, hoping you’ll do just that.

So back to the basics: even if a cop doesn’t read your Miranda rights, the arrest and subsequent prosecution does not get thrown out.  Maybe a statement you made in response to questioning could get suppressed, but cops are pretty clever at how they draw things out of you without questioning you.

The best answer always when stopped by police or asked to come in during an investigation, is “I’m not saying anything until I have a lawyer” or even more simple — just shut up.

That way whether they’ve read you your Miranda rights or not, you’re protected.


No comments:

Post a Comment