Right to Counsel & Identification Procedures Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three types of pretrial identification procedures?

A

Lineups, Showups, Photo-arrays

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2
Q

When does a suspect have a right to counsel for a lineup or showup?

A

At any post-charge, in-person lineup or showup

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3
Q

When does a suspect not have a right to counsel for an identification procedure?

A

Pre-charge lineups or showups; Non-live identification

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4
Q

If police act in good faith, but D’s lawyer is absent due to his own negligence, can the police proceed with the lineup?

A

No, this is still a 6th Amendment violation

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5
Q

What is the remedy when a post-charge, in-person lineup occurs without counsel present?

A

Identification is inadmissible at trial; Witness will be prohibited from making a subsequent in-court identification of D unless the prosecution can prove that the witness has an independent source of identification

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6
Q

When do pre-trial identification procedures violate due process?

A

If D can show that the police intentionally made the identification unnecessarily suggestive; and the identification produced an irreparable misidentification/is unreliable

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7
Q

Due process applies to which types of identification procedures?

A

All types of ID procedures at all stages of the process

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8
Q

What are examples of impermissibly suggestive lineups?

A

Lineup when suspect is a man and all of the other individuals are women; Lineup where the suspect is one race and all the other individuals are another race; Lineup where the suspect has a different appearance than the other individuals; Lineup where the witness knows all of the individuals except the suspect

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9
Q

When is a suggestive lineup not impermissibly suggestive?

A

When the lineup is justified by exigent circumstances

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10
Q

What is the remedy for a due process violation during the identification process?

A

D can seek to suppress the identification via a suppression hearing. If D meets his burden, evidence will be suppressed and the witness will not be able to subsequently identify D at trial. Exception: if the witness can identify D based upon knowledge from a source that is independent of the impermissible identification, they will be allowed to identify D at trial.

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11
Q

What factors does the court weigh when determining the reliability of witness identification?

A

Opportunity to see D during the criminal act; Discrepancies between the witness’s pre-lineup description of D and D’s actual description; Whether the witness had initially identified a different suspect; The witness’s degree of exposure to D before the in-person identification; Whether the witness failure to identify D on a prior occasion(s); Lapse of time between the crime and identification; How certain the witness is that D is the perpetrator

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12
Q

The right to counsel is found in which 2 Amendments?

A

5th Amendment and 6th Amendment

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13
Q

What is the 6th Amendment right to counsel?

A

Guarantees D the right to counsel during all critical stages of the adversarial process. Only applies to crimes where D may be sentenced to incarceration.

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14
Q

Is there a 6th Amendment right to counsel for misdemeanors?

A

No, unless actual incarceration is imposed

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15
Q

Does the 6th Amendment right to counsel protect D against interrogations about other crimes?

A

No, the 6th Amendment right to counsel is offense-specific

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16
Q

When is the 6th Amendment right to counsel triggered?

A

Begins with the initiation of formal adversarial process. Once right is triggered, D is entitled for counsel for all subsequent proceedings.

17
Q

Under the 6th Amendment, what are considered the critical stages of a proceeding?

A

Post-indictment: In-person lineups and identifications, Preliminary hearings, Bail hearings, Interrogations, Plea bargaining negotiations, Appeals as a matter of right

18
Q

What stages are considered not critical?

A

Discretionary appeals, Fingerprinting, Parol or probation hearings, Photo arrays, Pre-indictment lineups, Probable cause hearings, Taking handwriting, voice, or blood samples

19
Q

How can D waive their 6th Amendment right to counsel?

A

If D knowingly and voluntarily waives his rights; Without government coercion

20
Q

If D has waived his 6th Amendment right to counsel, are statements made without counsel admissible?

A

Yes, but only if D made the statements voluntarily

21
Q

What is the difference between the 5th Amendment right to counsel and the 6th Amendment right to counsel?

A

5th Amendment: Applies to all crimes, not offense-specific; Only applies during custodial interrogations; Must be invoked by a clear statement demanding counsel. 6th Amendment: Only applies to the crime charged, offense specific; Applies to all critical stages of a proceeding; Automatically invoked once criminal proceedings have begun

22
Q

Once formal proceedings have begun, can police elicit statements from D via a confidential informant without the presence of counsel?

A

No, police cannot deliberately induce statements from D about the crime charged without counsel present. Statements will be inadmissible. However, the police can question D about other charges, and they can place a microphone or informant in the cell to ‘listen’ to D, as long as there is no deliberate elicitation of statements.

23
Q

What must D show to reverse a conviction on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel?

A

D has the burden to prove that: Counsel’s performance fell below an ‘objective standard of reasonableness;’ and A reasonable probability that, but for the counsel’s error, the proceeding would have had a different outcome