Recently in 6th Amendment Category

November 18, 2009

Washington Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Defendant on Speedy Trial Issue

The Washington State Supreme Court ruled in State v. Kenyon that continuing a trial date beyond the time mandated in the speedy trial rule is in violation of a defendant's 6th amendment right to a speedy trial. A defendant who is detained in jail must have a trial set within 60 days of arraignment, or within 30 days if the respondent is being charged in juvenile court. If a defendant does not have his or her trial within the rule's time limits, the court must dismiss the charges with prejudice provided that the defendant objects within 10 days after notice of trial date is mailed. Some periods of time are excluded when computing the date for trial. For instance, continuances granted by the court are excluded, as well as "unavoidable or unforeseen circumstances" such as unavailability of witnesses.

Many courts have been finding a good cause to continue trial when courtroom congestion prevents a defendant from having his or her trial on the scheduled date. Now, under State v. Kenyon, courts will no longer be able to do so. This is particularly noteworthy as most counties in Washington are experiencing budget reductions, which leads to further court delay. With fewer prosecutors to try cases and fewer judges and clerks to staff the courtrooms, courtroom congestion is becoming a greater problem throughout many counties in the state. Based on this ruling, judges may now be forced to dismiss more criminal charges due to lack of available trial dates.

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July 21, 2009

Law Update: Is Melendez-Diaz in Danger?

The US Supreme Court's recent ruling in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts that prosecutors must call lab chemists to testify in order to admit that chemist's lab reports has played out interestingly in courts throughout the nation. Defense is asking the courts to apply this rule to other less obvious forms of testimony by arguing that the Melendez-Diaz rule not only applies to scientist who create reports when testing substances in drug and DUI charges, but also also to employees who create documentation that is used in litigation. For example, when employees at department of licensing create reports indicating whether or not a defendant had a suspended license at the time he or she was pulled over.

But is the ruling in danger? Among the 5 majority is Justice Souter, who is soon to be replaced most likely by Judge Sotomayor if confirmed. Sotomayor, who though nominated by a democratic President has demonstrated a rather conservative record on criminal law issues, may come down on the other side of the fence with regards to this issue. That, combined with a rather scathing dissent in Melendez-Diaz suggests that this ruling may not be very long-lived. Indeed, the Court announced that next term, it will review the case of Briscoe et al., v. Virginia (07-11191). The issue in Briscoe is whether a defendant's right to confront witnesses is violated when the state presents a report without live testimony of the person who created that report, but notifies defense who that analyst is so it can call that analyst in its case in chief. This issue was rather clearly decided in Melendez-Diaz, with the court ruling that the state has to call such a witness. As such, it makes sense that the only reason the Justices would review this case next term is if they anticipate a ruling that either limits or overrules Melendez-Diaz entirely.

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June 30, 2009

US Supreme Court Rules on Two Key Criminal Cases

952313_gavel.jpgThe US Supreme Court ruled last week in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts that, absent stipulation by the defendant, prosecutors must call lab chemists to testify in order to admit that chemist's lab reports. Thus, rather than just admitting a document stating a certain substance is an identified drug, prosecutors must call to the stand the chemist who made that determination so the defendant is permitted to "weed out not only the fraudulent analyst, but the incompetent one as well." Melendez-Diaz further defines the right to confront those who testify against a defendant, as laid out in the 6th Amendment and in the seminal US Supreme Court ruling Crawford v. Washington, a case that originated in Thurston County Superior Court. Justice Scalia authored the Melendez-Diaz opinion, joined by Brennan, Thomas, Ginsburg, and Souter. Justice Kennedy wrote a rather scathing dissent, joined by Chief Justice Roberts, Alito, and Stevens, who is thought to be one of the more liberal members of the court.

Interestingly, the 5-4 breakdown in Melendez- Diaz is identical to that in the recent decision of Arizona v. Gant, in which the Court held that in order for an officer to search a vehicle incident to arrest, he or she must either face an actual and continuing threat to safety, or must have the need to search for evidence relating to the original criminal violation. Gant dramatically redefined the 4th Amendment protections afforded to drivers and occupants of vehicles. Prior to Gant, it was commonplace for officers to pullover and cite defendants for driving with a suspended license, then briefly detain defendants in the back of their patrol cars. During this time, the officers would search the vehicle for contraband of any kind, including drugs, drug paraphernalia and illegal weapons. As driving with a suspended license does not typically yield any sort of evidentiary traces within a vehicle, officers will now only be able to search vehicles after violation of this law only if they can establish an actual and continuing threat to safety.

Though the 4th Amendment protections from federal intrusion are extended to State by the 14th Amendment, the federal protections are a floor rather than ceiling. States are permitted to enhance constitutional protections within their own legislature. Indeed, The Washington State Constitution, in Article 1 Section 7 provides greater protection than its federal counterpart as it is "not limited to subjective expectations of privacy but, more broadly, protects 'those privacy interests which citizens of this state have held, and should be entitled to hold, safe from governmental trespass absent a warrant." State v. Parker, 139 W.2d 486, 494 (1999). It is notable that even though The Washington State Constitution clearly provides greater protection from illegal search and seizure, prior to Gant , Washington Courts routinely upheld vehicular searches for contraband of any sort incident to arrest except in very rare cases of select non-custodial arrests.

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June 29, 2009

DUI Arrest Results in Linebacker's Dismissal

Khiry Battle was arrested on suspicion of Driving Under the Influence on June 28th. Battle, a linebacker for the Arkansas Razorbacks, has been charged with DUI and violating the state's implied consent law for refusing the breath alcohol test. As a result of this pending charge, Battle has been dismissed from the team for violation of team rules.

Though Battle has been charged with DUI, the law mandates that he be presumed innocent of that crime until the government proves his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The presumption of innocence, though not explicitly spelled out in the constitution, was laid out in 1895 by The United States Supreme Court in Coffin v. United States. The 5th, 6th and 14th amendments also afford criminal defendants constitutional protections associated with trial. A policy that mandates taking away a privilege, such as membership in a sports team, based on pending charges helps to strip away these important constitutional protections. Battle apparently had a prior non-DUI charge , which is also still pending resolution. Though he did have the prior unresolved charge, he was allowed to play until these new allegations surfaced. Thus, the school based its decision to dismiss on the mere charging of a crime, therein trampling on any notion that he is innocent until proven otherwise.

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