Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Symposium issue on Miranda at 40
Donald J. Kochan, Chapman University School of Law, has posted an essay, Symposium Introduction - Miranda at 40: Applications in a Post-Enron, Post-9/11 World. The symposium issue appeared in the Chapman Law Review. The symposium itself is webcast. Follow the links from here. I had trouble accessing the webcast, but it may be my computer (time for an upgrade...). Perhaps you'll have more luck. Here's Kochan's abstract: The groundbreaking case of Miranda v. Arizona "raise[d] questions which go to the roots of our concepts of American criminal jurisprudence: the restraints society must observe consistent with the Federal Constitution in prosecuting individuals for crime." This Introduction to the 2007 Chapman Law Review Symposium summarizes the contemporary examination of Miranda's influence, past and present, along with the continuing debate today. The experiences and precedents that have evolved in the past 40 years helps to explore the evolution of the criminal law and procedural dictates set forth in Miranda. Complications with custodial interrogation—and the impulses and incentives involved by both the interrogator and the interrogated—have long been an exploration in law, literature, and other forums. This Introduction sets the stage and summarizes the articles presented herein that provide a valuable contribution to the scholarship on Miranda's evolution and its effects today. Thanks go to all the participants, including: The Honorable Edwin Meese III, Maurice Suh, Keith Bishop, Henry N. Butler, Sherri L. Burr, Marisa S. Cianciarulo, Russell Covey, M. Katherine Baird Darmer, Roman E. Darmer, Steven B. Duke, Jim Fleissner, Mark A. Godsey, Steve Goorvitch, Thomas E. Holliday, Sam Kamin, Linda Keller, Donald J. Kochan, Joan L. Larson, Jeremy M. Miller, Stephen F. Rohde, Lawrence Rosenthal, Ronald J. Rychlak, Paul Shechtman, Ronald Steiner, and J. Kelly Strader. The first panel addressed "Miranda and the War on Terror." The second panel focused on "Miranda and the Media." The third panel contemplated "Miranda and Modern Practice." The final panel examined "Miranda and Corporate Crime."