law-enforcement-questioning
5 cases — ← All topics
| Case | Title | Lower Court | Docketed | Status | Flags | Tags | Question Presented |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24-7465 | Nikky Nicole Lujan v. United States | Fifth Circuit | 2025-06-18 | Denied | Response WaivedIFP | fourth-amendment investigative-detention law-enforcement-questioning probable-cause reasonable-suspicion traffic-stop | Whether reasonable suspicion exists when an officer relies on a driver's allegedly suspicious answer to an itinerary question without further inquiry,… |
| 24-5715 | Lashaun Casey v. United States | First Circuit | 2024-10-07 | Denied | Response WaivedIFP | criminal-procedure ineffective-assistance law-enforcement-questioning safe-harbor statement-suppression strickland-standard | Whether trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not moving to suppress statements made after the expiration of the 'safe harbor' under 18 U.S… |
| 20-7356 | Eron Michael Spivey v. Texas | Texas | 2021-03-08 | Denied | IFP | custodial-interrogation exclusionary-rule fifth-amendment fourth-amendment involuntary-detention law-enforcement-questioning probable-cause wong-sun wong-sun-doctrine | Do authorities violate the Fourth Amendment when they involuntarily detain, in back of a patrol car for three hours, then at the police station for tw… |
| 18-7202 | Fidel Rios Soto v. California | California | 2019-01-03 | Denied | Response WaivedIFP | 5th-amendment 6th-amendment custodial-interrogation custodial-interview due-process edwards-rule incriminating-statements incriminatory-statements law-enforcement-questioning miranda-rights miranda-v-arizona right-to-counsel smith-v-illinois | When a suspect invokes the right to counsel during a custodial interview, can law enforcement officers continue to question the suspect if their post-… |
| 18-5003 | Rolando Mulet v. United States | Eleventh Circuit | 2018-06-28 | Denied | IFP | 5th-amendment circuit-split constitutional-protection criminal-procedure fifth-amendment law-enforcement-questioning miranda miranda-rights pre-arrest pre-arrest-silence pre-miranda self-incrimination | Whether the Fifth Amendment's Self-Incrimination Clause protects a defendant's pre-arrest, pre-Miranda silence from being used as evidence at trial |