No. 18-5211

Taylor B. v. California

Lower Court: California
Docketed: 2018-07-11
Status: Denied
Type: IFP
Response WaivedIFP
Tags: 14th-amendment 5th-amendment custodial-interrogation due-process false-evidence fifth-amendment fourteenth-amendment juvenile-justice miranda-rights police-interrogation
Key Terms:
DueProcess FifthAmendment CriminalProcedure Privacy JusticiabilityDoctri
Latest Conference: 2018-09-24
Question Presented (from Petition)

1) When the subject of a police custodial interrogation is a child, should investigating officers be required to obtain an express waiver of Miranda before beginning the interrogation?

2) When the subject of an interrogation is a child, should police officers be allowed to fabricate incriminating evidence, often referred to as a ruse, to elicit incriminating statements from the child?

Question Presented (AI Summary)

when-child-interrogated-miranda-waiver

Docket Entries

2018-10-01
Petition DENIED.
2018-07-26
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 9/24/2018.
2018-07-18
Waiver of right of respondent California to respond filed.
2018-04-24
Petition for a writ of certiorari and motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis filed. (Response due August 10, 2018)

Attorneys

California
Michael J. WiseAttorney General's Office, Respondent
Taylor B.
Sean K. KennedyCenter for Juvenile Law and Policy, Petitioner