November 2, 2024
In a 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that a defendant who was questioned and confessed without receiving Miranda warnings did not have a claim against the officer.

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The Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision Thursday that a defendant whose written statement admitting to sexual assault despite not being read his Miranda warnings cannot bring a claim against the officer, even when the statement was used against him in court.

The Miranda warnings, which include telling a suspect they have a right to remain silent, are customarily recited upon arrest or before statements are given. The warnings come from the Supreme Court case Miranda v. Arizona. 

“Miranda itself was clear on this point. Miranda did not hold that a violation of the rules it established necessarily constitute a Fifth Amendment violation, and it is difficult to see how it could have held otherwise,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the Court’s opinion, in which he extensively referenced the Miranda decision. “Instead, it claimed only that those rules were needed to safeguard that right during custodial interrogation,” he later added.

Tekoh was a nursing assistant at a hospital where he was accused of sexually assaulting a patient. He was not advised of Miranda warnings and later after questioning wrote a statement in which he confessed and apologized for his actions. 

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That statement was later admitted as evidence against him at trial. He was found not guilty, but then brought a §1983 civil rights claim against Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Deputy Carlos Vega for allegedly violating his constitutional rights by not reading him his rights before the confession.

Alito cited several post-Miranda cases to back up his assertion that Miranda warnings are not themselves a constitutional right, but a “prophylactic” measure to protect a constitutional right. The Court did note that Tekoh could still argue that Miranda rules are “federal law,” and thus could be grounds for a lawsuit.

“But whatever else may be said about this argument,6 it cannot succeed unless Tekoh can persuade us that this “law” should be expanded to include the right to sue for damages under §1983,” the opinion said.

A police officer maintains a watch during a demonstration by victims of gun violence in front of the Supreme Court. 

A police officer maintains a watch during a demonstration by victims of gun violence in front of the Supreme Court.  (Joshua Roberts/Getty Images)

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Alito argued that allowing such a claim would be problematic, as it would result in having a federal court “adjudicate a factual question (whether Tekoh was in custody when questioned) that had already been decided by a state court.” This, Alito wrote, would be “wasteful” and cause “unnecessary friction” between state and federal courts.

Justice Elena Kagan, in a dissenting opinion in which she was joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor, argued that Miranda did establish a constitutional rule that conferred a right, and that therefore failing to provide Miranda warnings violates that right.

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“Today, the Court strips individuals of the ability to seek a remedy for violations of the right recognized in Miranda,” Kagan wrote. She recognized that the majority opinion “observes that defendants may still seek ‘the suppression at trial of statements obtained’ in violation of Miranda’s procedures,” but that in some cases, “such a statement will not be suppressed.”

As a result, Kagan wrote, a defendant would suffer harm, for which §1983 claims provide a remedy, but the Court’s ruling “injures the right by denying the remedy.”