Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Under Edwards v. Arizona,
Virginia police arrested petitioner in conneсtion with the abduction, rape, and murder of 10-year-old Charity Powers. Petitioner was advised of his Miranda rights and agreed to talk to a detective and an FBI agent. During the interrogation, petitioner asked the detective: “‘Dо you think I need an attorney here?’”
It has been nearly a decade since the Court acknowledgеd the existence of three “conflicting standards” used by state and fedеral courts for determining the consequences of ambiguous or equivocal assertions of the right to counsel. Smith v. Illinois,
“[s]ome courts have held that all questioning must cease upon any request for or reference to counsel, however equivocal or ambiguous. Others have attempted to define a threshold standard of clarity for such requests, and have held that requests falling below this threshold do not trigger the right to counsel. . . . Still others have adopted a third approach, holding that when an аccused makes an equivocal statement that ‘arguably’ can be construed as a request for counsel, all interrogation must immediately cease except for narrow questions designed to ‘clarify’ the earlier statement and the accused’s desires respecting сounsel.” Id., at 96, n. 3 (citations omitted).
This disagreement has not abated. Although a number of Circuits have since adopted what Smith described as the “third approach,” see United States v. Porter,
As it is apparent that a substantial number of criminal defendants who are identically situated in the eyes of the Constitution have rеceived, and will continue to receive, dissimilar treatment becаuse of the different approaches taken by the lower courts, I would grant certiorari.
Lead Opinion
Sup. Ct. Va. Certiorari denied.
