1 / 56

Criminal Law Update & Review NC Conference of Superior Court Judges November, 2004 Jessica Smith

Criminal Law Update & Review NC Conference of Superior Court Judges November, 2004 Jessica Smith School of Government, UNC-Chapel Hill. Retroactivity of Blakely Crawford update Recent case potpourri. Retroactivity of Blakely. Retroactivity of Blakely. Retroactivity of Blakely.

finn
Télécharger la présentation

Criminal Law Update & Review NC Conference of Superior Court Judges November, 2004 Jessica Smith

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Criminal Law Update & Review NC Conference of Superior Court Judges November, 2004 Jessica Smith School of Government, UNC-Chapel Hill

  2. Retroactivity of Blakely • Crawford update • Recent case potpourri

  3. Retroactivity of Blakely

  4. Retroactivity of Blakely

  5. Retroactivity of Blakely Apprendi: Any fact other than prior conviction that increases punishment beyond statutory maximum must be proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.

  6. Retroactivity of Blakely Lucas: To determine statutory maximum for purposes of Apprendi, assume aggravated sentence & PRL VI.

  7. Retroactivity of Blakely Blakely: Statutory maximum for purposes of Apprendi is the max. a judge can impose based on jury verdict or guilty plea.

  8. Retroactivity of Blakely • Implications: • Aggravating factors • PRL points not based on prior conviction • Non-SSL misd. like DWI

  9. Retroactivity of Blakely What cases are affected? (1) Future cases (2) Pending cases (3) Old cases

  10. The Anti-Retroactivity Bar: If a rule is both “new” and “procedural,” it does not apply retroactively unless it is a “watershed rule of criminal procedure.”

  11. Retroactivity Analysis • Is it a new rule? • Is it procedural? • Is it a watershed rule of criminal procedure?

  12. Retroactivity Analysis • Is it a new rule? • Is it procedural? • Is it a watershed rule of criminal procedure? 

  13. Is it a “New” Rule? First, determine when D’s conviction became final.

  14. Is it a “New” Rule? Then, look at the law as it then existed and ask: Was the new rule “dictated” by precedent? Was the unlawfulness of the conviction apparent to all reasonable jurists at the time?

  15. Retroactivity Analysis • Is it a new rule? • Is it procedural? • Is it a watershed rule of criminal procedure? 

  16. Is it substantive or procedural? Substantive rules: narrow the scope of a criminal statute by interpreting its terms; or place particular conduct or persons covered by the statute beyond the State’s power to punish

  17. Retroactivity Analysis • Is it a new rule? • Is it substantive or procedural? • Is it a watershed rule of criminal procedure? 

  18. Is it a watershed rule of criminal procedure? • Various formulations • Gideon is the example • But no rule ever held to fall within this exception

  19. Retroactivity of Blakely • Is it a new rule? • Is it substantive or procedural? • Is it a watershed rule of criminal procedure?

  20. Is Blakely a new rule? 6/26/00 6/24/02 6/24/04 Apprendi Ring Blakely

  21. Is Blakely a new rule? 6/26/00 6/24/02 6/24/04 x Apprendi Ring Blakely

  22. Is Blakely a new rule? 6/26/00 6/24/02 6/24/04 x Apprendi Ring Blakely

  23. Is Blakely a new rule? 6/26/00 6/24/02 6/24/04 x Apprendi Ring Blakely

  24. Is Blakely substantive or procedural? • Ring has been held to be procedural

  25. Is Blakely a watershed rule of criminal procedure? • Ring is not

  26. Crawford Update

  27. Crawford Update • Overruled Roberts • “Testimonial”statements of non-testifying declarants cannot come in unless declarant is unavailable & there has been a prior opportunity to cross examine.

  28. Victim’s statements to the police • Forrest: non-testimonial

  29. Victim’s statements to the police • Forrest: non-testimonial • Lewis: testimonial

  30. Victim’s statements to the police • Forrest: non-testimonial • Lewis: testimonial • Bell: testimonial

  31. 911 calls • Not yet decided in NC • Around the nation . . .

  32. Excited Utterances • Forrest? • Around the nation . . .

  33. Statements of Child Victims/Child Witnesses • To police officers

  34. Statements of Child Victims/Child Witnesses • To police officers • To social workers

  35. Statements of Child Victims/Child Witnesses • To police officers • To social workers • To medical personnel

  36. Statements to Family & Friends • It’s unanimous! They’re non-testimonial

  37. Forfeiture by Wrongdoing • Cases involving act separate from the crime • Bootstrapping cases

  38. Statements Offered for Purpose Other than Truth of Matter Asserted • Clark • Around the nation . . .

  39. Availability for Cross-Examination • Assertion of privilege • Forgetful witness

  40. Availability for Cross-Examination • Assertion of privilege • Forgetful witness • Judge’s restrictions

  41. Unavailability • Clark • Bell

  42. Crawford Retroactivity • New rule? • Procedural? • Watershed?

  43. New Case Potpourri • Hiibel v. Sixth Jud. District Court of Nev. (US S.Ct. p. 1)

  44. New Case Potpourri • Hiibel v. Sixth Jud. District Court of Nev. (US S.Ct. p. 1) • Law requiring disclosure of name consistent with 4th Amend. • Conviction did not violate privilege against compelled self-incrimination

  45. US v. Patane (U.S. S.Ct. p. 2) • Facts: • -After arrest, Officer starts to give warnings but D interrupts, saying he knows his rights • -Officer asks about a gun, D admits he has one & consents to allow officers to get it

  46. US v. Patane (U.S. S.Ct. p. 2) • Held: • Failure to give Miranda warnings didn’t require suppression of firearm obtained as a result of D’s unwarned but voluntary statement

  47. Missouri v. Seibert (U.S. S.Ct. p. 2) • Facts: • -D arrested • -Officer intentionally fails to give warnings & gets a confession • -Gives D a break, gives warnings & gets 2nd confession

  48. Missouri v. Seibert (U.S. S.Ct. p. 2) • Held: • When an officer as part of interrogation technique deliberately fails to give Miranda warnings, gets a confession & then gives warnings & gets another confession, neither confession is admissible

More Related