Sup. Ct. Colo. Motion of Duane Woodard, Attorney General of Colorado, et al. for leave to file a brief as amici curiae granted. Motion of respondent for leave to proceed informa pauperis and certiorari granted. In addition to the question presented by the petition for writ of certiorari, the parties are requested to brief and argue the following question: “Did respondent’s mental condition render his waiver of Miranda rights ineffective?” Application for stay, presented to Justice White, and by him referred to the Court, is granted pending the issuance of the mandate of this Court.
Memorandum of
This grant of certiorari is yet another instance supporting the concern that the Court shows an unseemly eagerness to act as “the adjunct of the State and its prosecutors in facilitating efficient and expedient conviction . . . .”
Wainwright
v.
Witt,
The Court’s treatment of this case provides another clear example of why there is concern that the Court engages in injudicious efforts to assist prosecutors. Today, the Court takes the unprecedented step of rewriting a prosecutor’s certiorari petition for him, enabling him to seek reversal on a ground he did not present himself. 2
Respondent approached a uniformed police officer and stated that “he had killed someone” and wanted to tell the officer about it. Before questioning respondent about the killing, the officer informed respondent of his Miranda rights. Respondent waived *1052 his rights and proceeded to confess to the murder of a young girl. After being charged with murder, respondent moved to suppress his statements as made involuntarily. A psychiatrist testified that respondent believed that the voice of God had commanded him to confess or commit suicide. The psychiatrist testified that respondent was suffering from “chronic paranoid schizophrenia” and “command auditory hallucinations” when he confessed and that respondent’s actions were not the product of a free will. The trial court suppressed statements made both before and after the Miranda warnings were given on the ground that respondent’s mental state rendered these confessions involuntary and tainted his waiver of the Miranda rights. The Colorado Supreme Court affirmed, and this petition followed. The prosecutor carefully limited his petition to this Court to challenge only the suppression of respondent’s initial, unsolicited statements. The petition expressly states that “[respondent’s] later confession, which involves a Miranda issue, is not an issue in this petition.” Pet. for Cert. 15. Despite this, the Court directs the parties to brief and argue that issue.
We do not know why the prosecutor chose not to seek review of the Miranda issue. But, whatever the reason, review was not sought, and it is hardly for this Court to “second chair” the prosecutor to alter his strategy or guard him from mistakes. Under this Court’s Rule 21.1(a), “[o]nly the questions set forth in the petition or fairly included therein will be considered by the Court.” Given petitioner’s express disclaimer that the Miranda issue is presented, that question obviously is not “fairly included” in the question submitted. The Court’s direction that the parties address it anyway makes meaningless in this case the provisions of this Rule and is plainly cause for concern, particularly since it is clear that a similar dispensation would not be granted a criminal defendant, however strong his claim. In asking the parties to address issues that the State chose not to present in the petition for certiorari, the Court goes beyond a mere philosophic inclination to facilitate criminal prosecution: the Court gives the appearance of being not merely the champion, but actually an arm, of the prosecution. 3
*1053
I realize that, in itself, this order is not a matter of great significance. But even matters of small effect can cloak issues of great moment. In making the specific guarantees of the Bill of Rights a part of our fundamental law, the Framers recognized that limitless state power afflicts the innocent as well as the guilty, that even a crime-free world is not worth the fear and oppression that inevitably follow unrestricted police power, and that a truly free society is one in which every citizen — guilty or innocent — is treated fairly and accorded dignity and respect by the State. Of course, the Framers could not foresee the shape our society would take as the Nation developed. Nor could they foresee how the police function would evolve to keep pace. Rather, it has fallen to this Court — the “ultimate interpreter of the Constitution,”
Baker
v.
Carr,
Notes
The four eases since
Florida
v.
Meyers
decided in favor of a criminal defendant are:
Payne
v.
Virginia,
1 am not suggesting that all the summary judgments awarded to the prosecution were incorrect or improper, although I did not agree with the result in many of the cases. It is the Court’s selective employment of its summary disposition power only in favor of the prosecution that is most disturbing.
This action is even less justifiable than the improper decision to order reargument in
New Jersey
v.
T. L. O.,
1 express no views about the merits of the issues on which certiorari is now granted. See
Ohio ex rel. Eaton
v.
Price,
