So to sum up: currently the police cannot question someone who doesn't have a lawyer present once they've asked for one. The DOJ is trying to change that so that the police can deny people their attorneys and interrogate them anyway.More true colors?
The Justice Department is asking the Supreme Court to overrule Michigan v. Jackson, the 1986 Supreme Court decision that held that if police may not interrogate a defendant after the right to counsel has attached, if the defendant has a lawyer or has requested a lawyer.
This isn't the first time the Justice Department, under President Obama, has sought to limit defendants' rights.[T]he protection offered by the court in Stevens' 1986 opinion is especially important for vulnerable defendants, including the mentally and developmentally disabled, addicts, juveniles and the poor,
Since taking office, Obama has drawn criticism for backing the continued imprisonment of enemy combatants in Afghanistan without trial, invoking the "state secrets" privilege to avoid releasing information in lawsuits and limiting the rights of prisoners to test genetic evidence used to convict them.
The idea of overruling the decision originated with Justice Alito during oral arguments in the case of Jesse Montejo, a Louisiana death row inmate. Even some prominent former prosecutors and judges are not on board with changing the rule:
Their amicus brief is here (pdf.)Former Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson and former FBI Director William Sessions are among 19 one-time judges and prosecutors urging the court to leave the decision in place because it has been incorporated into routine police practice and establishes a rule on interrogations that is easy to follow.
The Supreme Court ordered additional briefing in March. It could decide as early as tomorrow whether it wants to hear argument on the issue.Allowing the police to initiate interrogation of a represented defendant and to use any resulting statements would strip away protections the attorney can provide, interfere with the relationship between counsel and client, and undercut the integrity of criminal trials. It would also contradict the commitment made to defendants through Miranda warnings.
Wow. That's a huge miscarriage of justice and puts Obama on the same level as banana republic juntas. If the police are allowed to deny people their right to an attorney, that's pretty much the end of due process.
I mean, we already knew that Obama rejects the rule of law and supports a two-tiered justice system, but I don't think anyone thought he'd go this far. Although I suppose we probably should have. Once someone demonstrates the level of contempt for the rule of law that Obama has, pretty much anything is possible. I expect pretty soon he'll start writing Bills of Attainder and General Warrants.