Objective Test for Interrogation in Nebraska, An

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Huber, Jeffrey J.

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1993

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26

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INTRODUCTION|In Miranda v. Arizona, a five to four majority of the United States Supreme Court articulated the potentially endangered status of the Fifth Amendment. Specifically, the Court in Miranda was concerned that a suspect's psychological disadvantage during police interrogation would severely undermine the suspect's ability to invoke the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. To preserve this right, the Court outlined several procedural safeguards that must be executed before a suspect is subjected to custodial "interrogation." The Court spelled out the now-familiar procedural safeguards known as the Miranda warnings..

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26 Creighton L. Rev. 117 (1992-1993)

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Creighton University School of Law

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