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Miranda The Story of America's Right to Remain Silent

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ISBN-10: 0816527636

ISBN-13: 9780816527632

Edition: 2nd

Authors: Gary L. Stuart, Janet Napolitano

List price: $19.95
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Description:

One of the most significant Supreme Court cases in U.S. history has its roots in Arizona and is closely tied to the states leading legal figures. Miranda has become a household word; now Gary Stuart tells the inside story of this famous case, and with it the legal history of the accuseds right to counsel and silence. Ernesto Miranda was an uneducated Hispanic man arrested in 1963 in connection with a series of sexual assaults, to which he confessed within hours. He was convicted not on the strength of eyewitness testimony or physical evidence but almost entirely because he had incriminated himself without knowing itand without knowing that he didnt have to. Stuart also updates the story to…    
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Book details

List price: $19.95
Edition: 2nd
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Publication date: 4/1/2008
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 212
Size: 6.00" wide x 9.00" long x 0.50" tall
Weight: 0.836
Language: English

Foreword
Preface
Miranda
Crimes, Confessions, and Convictions
Ernest Miranda Confesses to Carroll Cooley
Miranda's Robbery Trial
Miranda's Rape Trial
The Case File of Coerced Confessions
Sylvester Cassidy and Stanley Johnson
Michael Vignera
Roy Allen Stewart
Carl Calvin Westover
The Law
Law and Order in '64
The American Right to Counsel
The American Privilege against Self-Incrimination
Escobedo
Miranda and the Arizona Supreme Court
Robert J. Corcoran-The Birth of the Miranda Warnings
John P. Frank and the Miranda Briefs
The Oral Arguments
Oral Argument in Miranda v. Arizona
John J. Flynn
Gary K. Nelson
Duane R. Nedrud
Oral Argument in Vignera v. New York
Victor M. Earle III
William I. Siegel
Oral Argument in Westover v. United States
F. Conger Fawcett
Solicitor General Thurgood Marshall
Oral Argument in California v. Stewart
Gordon Ringer
William A. Norris
Oral Argument in Johnson and Cassidy v. New Jersey
Stanford Shmukler
Norman Heine
M. Gene Haeberle
The Aftermath
The Miranda Opinion
The Miranda Warnings
The Right to Remain Silent
The Second Warning
The Right to the "Presence" of an Attorney
The Right to Counsel, Free of Charge
Waiving Miranda Rights
Miranda's Retrials
Miranda's Death
The Ongoing Debate
Miranda in the Twenty-First Century
The Dickerson Case
Miranda Revisited
The National Debate about Dickerson's Chances in the United States Supreme Court
The Dickerson Oral Arguments
The Dickerson Opinion
Continuing Legal Challenges to the Miranda Doctrine in the Wake of Dickerson
Fellers v. United States, U.S. Supreme Court Docket No. 02-6320, October Term, 2003-2004
United States v. Patane, U.S. Supreme Court Docket No. 02-1183, October Term, 2003-2004
Missouri v. Seibert, U.S. Supreme Court Docket No. 02-1371, October Term, 2003-2004
The Global Reach
Miranda in the Wake of September 11
Miranda and the al Qaeda Terror
The Other American Taliban-Jose Padilla and Esam Hamdi
A Broader Perspective
Looking Back on Miranda
John P. Frank, Esq.
Peter D. Baird, Esq.
Dean Paul Bender
Judge J. Thomas Brooks
Captain Carroll Cooley
Justice Robert J. Corcoran
John Dowd, Esq.
Judge Joseph Howe
Robert Jensen, Esq.
Chris Johns, Esq.
Barry Kroll, Esq.
Senator Jon Kyl, R-Arizona
Rex E. Lee, Esq.
Professor Tom Mauet
Craig Mehrens, Esq.
Attorney General Gary K. Nelson
Detective Ron Quaife
Charles Roush, Esq.
Chief Judge Mary Schroeder
Mara Siegel, Esq.
Judge Barry Silverman
Robert Storrs, Esq.
Paul Ulrich, Esq.
Judge Warren Wolfson
Did Miranda Retard Law Enforcement?
False Confessions, the Temple Murder Case, and the Tucson Four
If Miranda Was a Liberal Decision, Why Was Dickerson a Conservative Decision?
Why Did the Court Switch from the Sixth Amendment in Escobedo to the Fifth Amendment in Miranda?
Was It Police Methodology or Political Ideology?
When Did Miranda Become a "Constitutional" Decision?
The Future
Gideon's Legacy
Dickerson's Legacy
The Evolution of Miranda
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Affidavits, Reports, Witness Statements, Photographs and Transcripts
Personal Records, Correspondence, and Notes
Court Filings and Records
Author Interview Notes and Correspondence Files
Audio, Video, and Multimedia Materials
Secondary Sources
Books
Principal Supreme Court Cases and Federal Statutes
Law Review Articles
Selected Print Media
Index