Confrontation / Trial Rights Flashcards

1
Q

what are ∆’s trial rights

A
  1. right to be present
  2. right to testify
  3. right to (some) control over arguments
  4. right to confront
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2
Q

when does a ∆ not have a right to be present

A

if disruptive or it’s not critical for a hearing

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3
Q

what is the right to control arguments

A

if ∆ acquiesces, counsel can pursue strategy of admitting guilt

if ∆ objects, counsel must not admit guilt. doing so would automatically be a violation for effective assistance

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4
Q

why do we respect right to confront

A

intrinsically important, jury can see, accountability, advances truth seeking

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5
Q

when does hearsay require confrontation

A

testimonial statements not during an ongoing emergency

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6
Q

when is confrontation not needed for hearsay

A

if the hearsay is not testimonial or ∆ personally ensure the witness couldn’t testify

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7
Q

what is testimonial hearsay under crawford

A

an out of court statement that the speaker expects will be used later on at trial

  1. statements to known officers during formal interrogation
  2. grand jury proceedings
  3. prior depositions
  4. any informal setting where the speaker reasonably believes their statement will be used later on at trial
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8
Q

what is the ongoing emergency exception

A

statements made to police during an ongoing emergency are non-testimonial (and don’t require confrontation) because the purpose is to render help

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9
Q

what is a Bruton problem

A

when one non-testifying co-defendant confesses after arrest, implicating other co-defendant

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10
Q

what could solve a Bruton problem

A
  • severing ∆s and trying separately
  • redacting statement for use in joint trial (but must fully redact it in a way that holds co ∆ harmless)
  • have joint trial without using statement
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11
Q

can a defendant open the door to giving up his confrontation right by blaming a third party

A

no - defendant who faults third party for charged offense does not thereby open the door to admission of unconfronted statements by this third party

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12
Q

what counts as prejudicial comments by prosecutor

A
  • can’t say that jury should make adverse inferences from ∆ not testifying
  • can’t interject opinion about the strength of evidence or ∆’s guilt
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13
Q

hat is the test for prosecutor’s prejudicial comments

A

reversal is necessary if comments so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process

BUT invited error doctrine: if defense said it first, prosecutor isn’t at fault

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14
Q

is an Allen charge ok

A

yes

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15
Q

do verdicts have to be consistent

A

no

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16
Q

when is post trial impeachment of verdict allowed

A

-extraneous prejudicial info brought to jury’s attention
-outside influence on jury
-forepersons error in recording verdict on form
-jurors made racist comments