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Admissibility of Confessions 18 USC 3501 (1968)
Betts v. Brady
316 U.S. 455 (1942)
Brown v. Mississippi
297 U.S. 278 (1936)
Crooker v. California
357 U.S. 433 (1958)
Dickerson v. United States
530 U.S. 428 (2000)
Edwards v. Arizona
451 U.S. 477 (1981)
Escobedo v. Illinois
378 U.S. 478 (1964)
Fulminante v. Arizona
499 U.S. 279 (1991)
Gideon v. Wainwright
372 U.S. 355 (1962)
Harris v. New York
401 U.S. 222 (1978)
Jackson v. Denno
378 U.S. 368 (1964)
Mallory v. United States
354 U.S. 449 (1957)
Malloy v. Hogan
378 U.S. 1 (1964)
Mapp v. Ohio
367 U.S. 643 (1961)
Massiah v. United States
377 U.S. 201 (1964)
McNabb v. United States
318 U.S. 332 (1943)
Miranda v. Arizona
384 U.S. 436 (1966)
People v. Dorado
398 P.2nd 361 (1964)
Powell v. Alabama
287 U.S. 45 (1932)
Spano v. New York
360 U.S. 315 (1959)
United States v. Dickerson
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Altman, David B. “Fifth Amendment - Coercion and Clarity: The Supreme
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Constitutional Rule, but Does It Really Matter?” 55 Arkansas Law
Review 1277, 2002.
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1990’s: An Empirical Study of the Effects of Miranda” 43 UCLA Law
Review 839, 1996.
Cassell, Paul G., and Richard Fowles. “Handcuffing the Cops? A
Thirty-Year Perspective on Miranda’s Harmful Effects on Law Enforcement”
50 [4] Stanford Law Review 1055, 1998.
Crawford, K. A. “Intentional Violations of Miranda: A Strategy for
Liability” 66[8] FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin 27, 1997.
Donohue, John J., III. “Did Miranda Diminish Police Effectiveness?”
50[4] Stanford Law Review 1147, 1998.
Dripps, Donald A. “Is Miranda Caselaw Really Inconsistent? A Proposed
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Mary Law Review 1, 2001.
Garrison, Arthur H. “Rehnquist v. Scalia - The Dickerson and Miranda
Cases: A Debate on What Makes a Decision Constitutional” 91 American
Journal of Trial Advocacy 2001.
Gerhardt, Michael. “The Rhetoric of Judicial Critique: From Judicial
Restraint to the Virtual Bill of Rights” 10 William & Mary Bill of
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Grano, Joseph, William H. Erickson, and Philip Johnson. “Miranda
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Hancock, Catherine. “Due Process before Miranda” 70 Tulane Law Review
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Criminal Law Bulletin 135, 1967.
Huh, Richard H. “Interrogation of Criminal Defendants: Some Views on
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Huitema, David. “Miranda: Legitimate Response to Contingent Requirements
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Inbau, Fred E. “Police Interrogation - A Practical Necessity” 52
Journal of Criminal Law - Criminology and Police Science 16, 1961.
Ingram, Roderick R. “A Clash of Fundamental Rights: Conflicts between
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Bill of Rights Journal 299, 1996.
Kamisar, Yale. 1984 Survey of Books Relating to the Law: Crime and
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Leiken, Lawrence S. “Police Interrogation in Colorado: The
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Macnair, Michael R. T. “The Early Development of the Privilege against
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Markman, Stephen J. “The Fifth Amendment and Custodial Questioning: A
Response to ‘Reconsidering Miranda’” 54 University of Chicago Law
Review 938, 1987.
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Mason, Christopher. “Dickerson v. United States - The Supreme Court’s
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Medalie, Richard J., et al.
“Custodial Police Interrogation in Our Nation’s Capital: The Attempt to
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Morgan, Edmund M. “The Privilege against Self-Incrimination” 34
Minnesota Law Review 1, 1949.
Muller, Andrew W. “Congress’ Right to Remain Silent in Dickerson v.
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Payne, Brian K., and Victoria M. Time. “Support for Miranda among Police
Chiefs: A Qualitative Examination” 1 American Journal of Criminal
Justice 65, 2000.
Pearce, Gene A. “Constitutional Law - Criminal Law: The United States
Supreme Court Affirms the Use of “Miranda” Rights by Police to Determine
the Admissibility of Statements Made during Custodial Interrogation in
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2001.
Pepinsky, Harold E. “A Theory of Police Reaction to Miranda v
Arizona: Crime and Delinquency” 16[4] Crime and Delinquency
379, 1970.
Prebble, Amanda L. “Manipulated by Miranda: A Critical Analysis of
Bright Lines and Voluntary Confessions under United States v.
Dickerson” 68 University of Cincinnati Law Review 555, 2000.
Robinson, Cyril D. “Police and Prosecutor Practices and Attitudes
Relating to Interrogation as Revealed by Pre- and Post-Miranda
Questionnaires: A Construct of Police Capacity to Comply” 3 Duke Law
Journal 425, 1968.
Schulhofer, Stephen J. “Reconsidering Miranda” 54 University of
Chicago Law Review 435, 1987.
- - - . “Miranda, Dickerson and the Puzzling Persistence of Fifth
Amendment Exceptionalism” 99 Michigan Law Review 941, 2001.
Seeburger, Richard H., and R. Stanton Wettick. “Miranda in Pittsburgh: A
Statistical Study” 29 University of Pittsburgh Law Review 1,
1967.
Seidman, Louis Michael. “Brown and Miranda” 80 California Law Review
673, 992.
Stephens, Otis H. “Police Interrogation and the Supreme Court: An
Inquiry into the Limits of Judicial Policy-making” 17[2] Journal of
Public Law 241, 1968.
Stephens, Otis H., Robert L. Flanders, and J. Lewis Cannon. “Law
Enforcement and the Supreme Court: Police Perceptions of the Miranda
Requirements” 39[3] Tennessee Law Review 407, 1972.
Ulrich, Jackie. “Criminal Procedure: The Court Distinguishes between the
Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel and the Fifth Amendment Miranda Right
against Self-Incrimination” 31 Washburn Law Journal 629, 2000.
White, Welsh S. “Defending Miranda: A Reply to Professor Caplan” 39
Vanderbilt Law Review 1, 1986.
Witt, James W. “Non-Coercive Interrogation and the Administration of
Criminal Justice - The Impact of Miranda on Police Effectuality” 64
Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology 320, 1973.
Zeitlin, Jonathan B. “Voluntariness with a Vengeance: Miranda and a
Modern Alternative” 14 St. Thomas Law Review 109, 2001.
Zeitz, Leonard, Richard J. Medalie, and Paul Alexander. “Anomie,
Powerless and Police Interrogation” 60[3] Journal of Criminal
Law - Criminology and Police Science 314, 1967.
Selected Print Media
1965: “High Court Will Review Rapist’s Case.” The Arizona Republic,
November 23.
1966: “Danny Escobedo - Moving the Constitution into the Police
Station.” Time Magazine, Vol. 87, No. 17, April 29, cover story.
1966: Miranda v. Arizona, ACLU news release, No. 207, June.
1966: “Some Moderation (Miranda Not Retroactive).” The Arizona
Republic, June 23.
1967: “Homicides Increase in Chicago but Confessions Drop by 50%.”
The New York Times, by Donald Janson, July 24, p. 24.
1968: “Right of Confession.” The Phoenix Gazette, January 29.
1968: “Criminal Justice: Doubts about Miranda.” Time Magazine,
November 1.
1976: “Police Search for Suspect in Miranda Death.” The Arizona
Republic, January 25, 1976.
1976: “Ernesto Miranda Is Killed; Subject of Landmark Case.” The
Arizona Republic, February 1.
1976: “Miranda Dies of Stabbing.” Mesa Tribune, February 2.
1976: “Parole Officer Says Miranda Was Adjusting.” The Arizona
Republic, February 3.
1982: “Miranda - To the High Court and Back.” The Harvard Law Record,
Vol. 75, No. 6, by John Morris, October 29.
1982: “Court’s Decision Leaves Miranda in Jail.” (Part Two) The
Harvard Law Record, by John Morris, November 5.
1990: “Miranda Memories.” ABA Litigation Magazine, Vol. 16, No. 2
(winter), by Peter D. Baird, p. 43.
1991: “The John J. Flynn Award.” The Defender - Arizona Attorneys
Criminal Justice, by Michael Kimerer, April.
1991: “Critics Must Confess, Miranda Was the Right Decision.” The
Wall Street Journal, Counterpoint, by Peter D. Baird, June 13.
1991: “The Confessions of Arturo Ernesto Miranda.” The Arizona
Attorney, by Peter D. Baird, October, p. 20.
1994: “Ten People Who Changed the Way You Live - John Flynn.”
American Heritage Magazine, December.
1996: “A Member of the Legal Team Recalls the Landmark Miranda Case.”
Phoenix Magazine, by Peter D. Baird, June, p. 38.
1996: “Police vs. Miranda: Has the Supreme Court Really Hampered Law
Enforcement?” The Wall Street Journal, by Wayne E. Green,
December 15, p. 16.
1999: “High Court Should Leave Miranda Rule.” The Arizona Republic,
Editorial, January 15.
1999: “Miranda Law Benefits Most Vulnerable, Needs to Stay.” The
Arizona Republic, by Steve Wilson, February 2.
1999: “Miranda Rights Up for Review - Should Police Have Some Leeway?”
The Arizona Republic, by Jon Kamman, December 7.
2000: “The Miranda Rule: It Works Well So Let’s Keep It.” The Arizona
Daily Star, by John P. Frank, May 7.
2001: “Judges and the GOP: The Rehnquist Court, Miranda v. Arizona and
Dickerson v. United States.” The Wall Street Journal, by Kenneth
W. Starr, May 3.
2002: “Will [John Lindh] Walker’s Statements Be Admitted against Him?”
Jurist, The Legal Education Newspaper, by Prof. Marjorie Cohn,
January 18.
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