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Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution

The Fifth Amendment (Amendment V) to the United States Constitution creates several constitutional rights, limiting governmental powers focusing on criminal procedures. It was ratified, along with nine other articles, in 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights.

The Court has extended most, but not all, rights of the Fifth Amendment to the state and local levels. The Supreme Court furthered most protections of this amendment through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

One provision of the Fifth Amendment requires that felonies be tried only upon indictment by a grand jury, which the Court ruled does not apply to the state level. Another provision, the Double Jeopardy Clause, provides the right of defendants to be tried only once in federal court for the same offense. The Self-Incrimination clause provides various protections against self-incrimination, including the right of an individual not to serve as a witness in a criminal case in which he or she is a defendant. "Pleading the Fifth" is a colloquial term often used to invoke the Self-Incrimination Clause when witnesses decline to answer questions where the answers might incriminate them. In the 1966 case of Miranda v. Arizona, the Supreme Court held that the Self-Incrimination Clause requires the police to issue a Miranda warning to criminal suspects interrogated while in police custody. The Fifth Amendment also contains the Takings Clause, which allows the federal government to take private property for public use if the government provides "just compensation".

Like the Fourteenth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment includes a due process clause stating that no person shall "be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law". The Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause applies to the federal government, while the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause applies to state governments. The Supreme Court has interpreted the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause to provide two main protections: procedural due process, which requires government officials to follow fair procedures before depriving a person of life, liberty, or property, and substantive due process, which protects certain fundamental rights from government interference. The Supreme Court has also held that the Due Process Clause contains a prohibition against vague laws and an implied equal protection requirement similar to the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.

Text

The amendment as proposed by Congress in 1789:

No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.

 
The hand-written copy of the proposed Bill of Rights, 1789, cropped to show just the text that would later be ratified as the Fifth Amendment

Background before adoption

On June 8, 1789, Congressman James Madison introduced several proposed constitutional amendments during a speech to the House of Representatives.[1] His draft language that later became the Fifth Amendment was as follows:[1][2]

No person shall be subject, except in cases of impeachment, to more than one punishment or trial for the same offense; nor shall be compelled to be a witness against himself; nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor be obliged to relinquish his property, where it may be necessary for public use, without just compensation. ...[E]xcept in cases of impeachments, and cases arising in the land or naval forces, or the militia when on actual service, in time of war or public danger ... in all crimes punishable with loss of life or member, presentment or indictment by a grand jury shall be an essential preliminary ...

This draft was edited by Congress; all the material before the first ellipsis was placed at the end, and some of the wording was modified. After approval by Congress, the amendment was ratified by the states on December 15, 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights. Every one of the five clauses in the final amendment appeared in Madison's draft, and in their final order those clauses are: the Grand Jury Clause (which Madison had placed last); the Double Jeopardy Clause; the Self Incrimination Clause; the Due Process Clause; and, the Takings Clause.

Grand jury

The grand jury is a pre-constitutional common law institution, and a constitutional fixture in its own right exclusively embracing common law. The Supreme Court ruled against incorporating this right in Hurtado v. People of California, 110 U.S. 516 (1884). Most states have an alternative civil process. "Although state systems of criminal procedure differ greatly among themselves, the grand jury is similarly guaranteed by many state constitutions and plays an important role in fair and effective law enforcement in the overwhelming [p688] majority of the States." Branzburg v. Hayes (No. 70-85) 1972. Grand juries, which return indictments in many criminal cases, are composed of a jury of peers and operate in closed deliberation proceedings; they are given specific instructions regarding the law by the judge. Many constitutional restrictions that apply in court or in other situations do not apply during grand jury proceedings. For example, the exclusionary rule does not apply to certain evidence presented to a grand jury; the exclusionary rule states that evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth, Fifth or Sixth amendments cannot be introduced in court.[3] Also, an individual does not have the right to have an attorney present in the grand jury room during hearings. An individual would have such a right during questioning by the police while in custody, but an individual testifying before a grand jury is free to leave the grand jury room to consult with his attorney outside the room before returning to answer a question.

 
The Bill of Rights in the National Archives

Currently, federal law permits the trial of misdemeanors without indictments.[4] Additionally, in trials of non-capital felonies, the prosecution may proceed without indictments if the defendants waive their Fifth Amendment right.

Grand jury indictments may be amended by the prosecution only in limited circumstances. In Ex Parte Bain, 121 U.S. 1 (1887), the Supreme Court held that the indictment could not be changed at all by the prosecution. United States v. Miller, 471 U.S. 130 (1985) partly reversed Ex parte Bain; now, an indictment's scope may be narrowed by the prosecution. Thus, lesser included charges may be dropped, but new charges may not be added.

The Grand Jury Clause of the Fifth Amendment does not protect those serving in the armed forces, whether during wartime or peacetime. Members of the state militia called up to serve with federal forces are not protected under the clause either. In O'Callahan v. Parker, 395 U.S. 258 (1969), the Supreme Court held that only charges relating to service may be brought against members of the militia without indictments. As a decision, O'Callahan, however, lived for a limited duration and was more a reflection of Justice William O. Douglas's distrust of presidential power and anger at the Vietnam Conflict.[5] O'Callahan was overturned in 1987, when the Court held that members of the militia in actual service may be tried for any offense without indictments.[6]

The grand jury indictment clause of the Fifth Amendment has not been incorporated under the Fourteenth Amendment.[7] This means the grand jury requirement applies only to felony charges in the federal court system. While many states do employ grand juries, no defendant has a Fifth Amendment right to a grand jury for criminal charges in state court. States are free to abolish grand juries, and many (though not all) have replaced them with preliminary hearing.

Infamous crime

Whether a crime is "infamous", for purposes of the Grand Jury Clause, is determined by the nature of the punishment that may be imposed, not the punishment that is actually imposed;[8] however, crimes punishable by death must be tried upon indictments. The historical origin of "infamous crime" comes from the infamia, a punishment under Roman law by which a citizen was deprived of his citizenship.[9][10] In United States v. Moreland, 258 U.S. 433 (1922), the Supreme Court held that incarceration in a prison or penitentiary, as opposed to a correction or reformation house, attaches infamy to a crime. In Mackin v. United States, 117 U.S. 348 (1886), the Supreme Court judged that "'Infamous crimes' are thus, in the most explicit words, defined to be those 'punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary'", while it later in Green v. United States 356 U.S. 165 (1957) stated that "imprisonment in a penitentiary can be imposed only if a crime is subject to imprisonment exceeding one year." Therefore, an infamous crime is one that is punished by imprisonment for over one year. Susan Brown, a former defense attorney and Professor of Law at the University of Dayton School of Law, concluded: "Since this is essentially the definition of a felony, infamous crimes translate as felonies."[11]

Double jeopardy

... nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb ...[12]

The Double Jeopardy Clause encompasses four distinct prohibitions: subsequent prosecution after acquittal, subsequent prosecution after conviction, subsequent prosecution after certain mistrials, and multiple punishment in the same indictment.[13] Jeopardy applies when the jury is empaneled in a jury trial, when the first witness is sworn in during a bench trial, or when a plea is rendered.[14]

Prosecution after acquittal

The government is not permitted to appeal or try again after the entry of an acquittal, whether a directed verdict before the case is submitted to the jury,[15] a directed verdict after a deadlocked jury,[16] an appellate reversal for sufficiency (except by direct appeal to a higher appellate court),[17] or an "implied acquittal" via conviction of a lesser included offense.[18] In addition, the government is barred by collateral estoppel from re-litigating against the same defense, a fact necessarily found by the jury in a prior acquittal,[19] even if the jury hung on other counts.[20]

This principle does not prevent the government from appealing a pre-trial motion to dismiss[21] or other non-merits dismissal,[22] or a directed verdict after a jury conviction,[23] nor does it prevent the trial judge from entertaining a motion for reconsideration of a directed verdict, if the jurisdiction has so provided by rule or statute.[24] Nor does it prevent the government from retrying the defendant after an appellate reversal other than for sufficiency,[25] including habeas,[26] or "thirteenth juror" appellate reversals notwithstanding sufficiency[27] on the principle that jeopardy has not "terminated". There is also an exception for judicial bribery in a bench trial.[28]

Multiple punishment, including prosecution after conviction

In Blockburger v. United States (1932), the Supreme Court announced the following test: the government may separately try to punish the defendant for two crimes if each crime contains an element that the other does not.[29] Blockburger is the default rule, unless the legislature intends to depart; for example, Continuing Criminal Enterprise (CCE) may be punished separately from its predicates,[30] as can conspiracy.[31]

The Blockburger test, originally developed in the multiple punishments context, is also the test for prosecution after conviction.[32] In Grady v. Corbin (1990), the Court held that a double jeopardy violation could lie even where the Blockburger test was satisfied,[33] but Grady was overruled in United States v. Dixon (1993).[34]

Prosecution after mistrial

The rule for mistrials depends upon who sought the mistrial. If the defendant moves for a mistrial, there is no bar to retrial, unless the prosecutor acted in "bad faith", i.e., goaded the defendant into moving for a mistrial because the government specifically wanted a mistrial.[35] If the prosecutor moves for a mistrial, there is no bar to retrial if the trial judge finds "manifest necessity" for granting the mistrial.[36] The same standard governs mistrials granted sua sponte.

Prosecution in different states

In Heath v. Alabama (1985), the Supreme Court held, that the Fifth Amendment rule against double jeopardy does not prohibit two different states from separately prosecuting and convicting the same individual for the same illegal act.

Self-incrimination

The Fifth Amendment protects individuals from being forced to incriminate themselves. Incriminating oneself is defined as exposing oneself (or another person) to "an accusation or charge of crime", or as involving oneself (or another person) "in a criminal prosecution or the danger thereof".[37] The privilege against compelled self-incrimination is defined as "the constitutional right of a person to refuse to answer questions or otherwise give testimony against himself".[38] To "plead the Fifth" is to refuse to answer any question because "the implications of the question, in the setting in which it is asked" lead a claimant to possess a "reasonable cause to apprehend danger from a direct answer", believing that "a responsive answer to the question or an explanation of why it cannot be answered might be dangerous because injurious disclosure could result."[39]

Historically, the legal protection against compelled self-incrimination was directly related to the question of torture for extracting information and confessions.[40][41]

The legal shift away from widespread use of torture and forced confession dates to the turmoil of the late 16th and early 17th century in England.[42]

The Supreme Court of the United States has held that "a witness may have a reasonable fear of prosecution and yet be innocent of any wrongdoing. The privilege serves to protect the innocent who otherwise might be ensnared by ambiguous circumstances."[43]

However, Professor James Duane of the Regent University School of Law argues that the Supreme Court, in a 5–4 decision in Salinas v. Texas,[44] significantly weakened the privilege, saying "your choice to use the Fifth Amendment privilege can be used against you at trial depending exactly how and where you do it."[45]

In the Salinas case, justices Alito, Roberts, and Kennedy held that "the Fifth Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination does not extend to defendants who simply decide to remain mute during questioning. Long-standing judicial precedent has held that any witness who desires protection against self-incrimination must explicitly claim that protection."

Justice Thomas, siding with Alito, Roberts and Kennedy, in a separate opinion, held that, "Salinas' Fifth Amendment privilege would not have been applicable even if invoked because the prosecutor's testimony regarding his silence did not compel Salinas to give self-incriminating testimony." Justice Antonin Scalia joined Thomas' opinion.[46]

Legal proceedings and congressional hearings

The Fifth Amendment privilege against compulsory self-incrimination applies when an individual is called to testify in a legal proceeding.[47] The Supreme Court ruled that the privilege applies whether the witness is in a federal court or, under the incorporation doctrine of the Fourteenth Amendment, in a state court,[48] and whether the proceeding itself is criminal or civil.[49]

The right to remain silent was asserted at grand jury or congressional hearings in the 1950s, when witnesses testifying before the House Committee on Un-American Activities or the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee claimed the right in response to questions concerning their alleged membership in the Communist Party. Under the Red Scare hysteria at the time of McCarthyism, witnesses who refused to answer the questions were described by McCarthy as "fifth amendment communists"[citation needed]. They lost jobs or positions in unions and other political organizations, and suffered other repercussions after "taking the Fifth".

Senator Joseph McCarthy (R-WI) routinely asked witnesses, "Are you now, or have you ever been, a member of the Communist Party?" while he was chairman of the Senate Government Operations Committee Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. Admitting to a previous Communist Party membership was not sufficient. Witnesses were also required to "name names", i.e. implicate others they knew to be Communists or who had been Communists in the past. Academy Award winning director Elia Kazan testified before the House Committee on Un-American Activities that he had belonged to the Communist Party briefly in his youth. He also "named names", which incurred enmity of many in Hollywood. Other entertainers such as Zero Mostel found themselves on a Hollywood blacklist after taking the Fifth, and were unable to find work for a while in show business.

The amendment has also been used by defendants and witnesses in criminal cases involving the American Mafia.[citation needed]

Statements made to non-governmental entities

The privilege against self-incrimination does not protect an individual from being suspended from membership in a non-governmental, self-regulatory organization (SRO), such as the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), where the individual refuses to answer questions posed by the SRO. An SRO itself is not a law enforcement entity or court of law, and cannot send a person to jail. SROs, such as the NYSE and the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), are generally not considered to be state actors. See United States v. Solomon,[50] D. L. Cromwell Invs., Inc. v. NASD Regulation, Inc.,[51] and Marchiano v. NASD.[52] SROs also lack subpoena powers. They rely heavily on requiring testimony from individuals by wielding the threat of loss of membership or a bar from the industry (permanent, if decided by the NASD) when the individual asserts the Fifth Amendment privilege against compelled self-incrimination. If a person chooses to provide statements in testimony to the SRO, the SRO may provide information about those statements to law enforcement agencies, who may then use the statements in a prosecution of the individual.

Custodial interrogation

The Fifth Amendment limits the use of evidence obtained illegally by law enforcement officers. Originally, at common law, even a confession obtained by torture was admissible. However, by the eighteenth century, common law in England provided that coerced confessions were inadmissible. The common law rule was incorporated into American law by the courts. The Supreme Court has repeatedly overruled convictions based on such confessions, in cases such as Brown v. Mississippi, 297 U.S. 278 (1936).

Law enforcement responded by switching to more subtle techniques, but the courts held that such techniques, even if they do not involve physical torture, may render a confession involuntary and inadmissible. In Chambers v. Florida (1940) the Court held a confession obtained after five days of prolonged questioning, during which time the defendant was held incommunicado, to be coerced. In Ashcraft v. Tennessee (1944), the suspect had been interrogated continuously for thirty-six hours under electric lights. In Haynes v. Washington,[53] the Court held that an "unfair and inherently coercive context" including a prolonged interrogation rendered a confession inadmissible.

Miranda v. Arizona (1966) was a landmark case involving confessions. Ernesto Miranda had signed a statement confessing to the crime, but the Supreme Court held that the confession was inadmissible because the defendant had not been advised of his rights. The Court held "the prosecution may not use statements ... stemming from custodial interrogation of the defendant unless it demonstrates the use of procedural safeguards effective to secure the privilege against self-incrimination." Custodial interrogation is initiated by law enforcement after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of movement before being questioned as to the specifics of the crime. As for the procedural safeguards to be employed, unless other fully effective means are devised to inform accused persons of their right of silence and to assure a continuous opportunity to exercise it, the following measures are required. Before any questioning, the person must be warned that he has a right to remain silent, that any statement he does make may be used as evidence against him, and that he has a right to the presence of an attorney, either retained or appointed.

The warning Chief Justice Earl Warren referred to is now called the Miranda warning, and it is customarily delivered by the police to an individual before questioning. Miranda has been clarified by several further Supreme Court rulings. For the warning to be necessary, the questioning must be conducted under "custodial" circumstances. A person detained in jail or under arrest is, of course, deemed to be in police custody. Alternatively, a person who is under the reasonable belief that he may not freely leave from the restraint of law enforcement is also deemed to be in "custody". That determination of "reasonableness" is based on a totality of the objective circumstances. A mere presence at a police station may not be sufficient, but neither is such a presence required. Traffic stops are not deemed custodial. The Court has ruled that age can be an objective factor. In Yarborough v. Alvarado (2004), the Court held that "a state-court decision that failed to mention a 17-year-old's age as part of the Miranda custody analysis was not objectively unreasonable".[54] In her concurring opinion Justice O'Connor wrote that a suspect's age may indeed "be relevant to the 'custody' inquiry";[55] the Court did not find it relevant in the specific case of Alvarado. The Court affirmed that age could be a relevant and objective factor in J.D.B. v. North Carolina where they ruled that "so long as the child's age was known to the officer at the time of police questioning, or would have been objectively apparent to a reasonable officer, its inclusion in the custody analysis is consistent with the objective nature of that test".[54]

The questioning does not have to be explicit to trigger Miranda rights. For example, two police officers engaging in a conversation designed to elicit an incriminating statement from a suspect would constitute questioning. A person may choose to waive his Miranda rights, but the prosecution has the burden of showing that such a waiver was actually made.

A confession not preceded by a Miranda warning where one was necessary cannot be admitted as evidence against the confessing party in a judicial proceeding. The Supreme Court, however, has held that if a defendant voluntarily testifies at the trial that he did not commit the crime, his confession may be introduced to challenge his credibility, to "impeach" the witness, even if it had been obtained without the warning.

In Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada (2004), the Supreme Court ruled 5–4 that being required to identify oneself to police under states' stop and identify statutes is not an unreasonable search or seizure, and is not necessarily self-incrimination.

Explicit invocation

In June 2010, the Supreme Court ruled in Berghuis v. Thompkins that a criminal suspect must now invoke the right to remain silent unambiguously.[56] Unless and until the suspect actually states that he is relying on that right, police may continue to interact with (or question) him, and any voluntary statement he makes can be used in court. The mere act of remaining silent is, on its own, insufficient to imply the suspect has invoked those rights. Furthermore, a voluntary reply, even after lengthy silence, can be construed as implying a waiver. The new rule will defer to police in cases where the suspect fails to assert the right to remain silent. This standard was extended in Salinas v. Texas in 2013 to cases where individuals not in custody who volunteer to answer officers' questions and who are not told their Miranda rights. The Court stated that there was no "ritualistic formula" necessary to assert this right, but that a person could not do so "by simply standing mute".[57][58]

Production of documents

Under the Act of Production Doctrine, the act of an individual in producing documents or materials (e.g., in response to a subpoena) may have a "testimonial aspect" for purposes of the individual's right to assert the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination to the extent that the individual's act of production provides information not already in the hands of law enforcement personnel about the (1) existence; (2) custody; or (3) authenticity, of the documents or materials produced. See United States v. Hubbell. In Boyd v. United States,[59] the U.S. Supreme Court stated that "It is equivalent to a compulsory production of papers to make the nonproduction of them a confession of the allegations which it is pretended they will prove".

By corporations

Corporations may also be compelled to maintain and turn over records; the Supreme Court has held that the Fifth Amendment protections against self-incrimination extend only to "natural persons".[60] The Court has also held that a corporation's custodian of records can be forced to produce corporate documents even if the act of production would incriminate him personally.[61] The only limitation on this rule is that the jury cannot be told that the custodian personally produced those documents in any subsequent prosecution of him, but the jury is still allowed to draw adverse inferences from the content of the documents combined with the position of the custodian in the corporation.

Refusal to testify in a criminal case

In Griffin v. California (1965), the Supreme Court ruled that a prosecutor may not ask the jury to draw an inference of guilt from a defendant's refusal to testify in his own defense. The Court overturned as unconstitutional under the federal constitution a provision of the California state constitution that explicitly granted such power to prosecutors.[62]

Refusal to testify in a civil case

While defendants are entitled to assert the right against compelled self-incrimination in a civil court case, there are consequences to the assertion of the right in such an action.

The Supreme Court has held that "the Fifth Amendment does not forbid adverse inferences against parties to civil actions when they refuse to testify in response to probative evidence offered against them." Baxter v. Palmigiano,[63] "[A]s Mr. Justice Brandeis declared, speaking for a unanimous court in the Tod case, 'Silence is often evidence of the most persuasive character.'"[64] "'Failure to contest an assertion ... is considered evidence of acquiescence ... if it would have been natural under the circumstances to object to the assertion in question.'"[65]

In Baxter, the state was entitled to an adverse inference against Palmigiano because of the evidence against him and his assertion of the Fifth Amendment right.

Some civil cases are considered "criminal cases" for the purposes of the Fifth Amendment. In Boyd v. United States, the U.S. Supreme Court stated that "A proceeding to forfeit a person's goods for an offence against the laws, though civil in form, and whether in rem or in personam, is a "criminal case" within the meaning of that part of the Fifth Amendment which declares that no person "shall be compelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness against himself."[66]

In United States v. Lileikis, the court ruled that Aleksandras Lileikis was not entitled to Fifth Amendment protections in a civil denaturalization case even though he faced criminal prosecution in Lithuania, the country that he would be deported to if denaturalized.[67]

Federal income tax

In some cases, individuals may be legally required to file reports that call for information that may be used against them in criminal cases. In United States v. Sullivan,[68] the United States Supreme Court ruled that a taxpayer could not invoke the Fifth Amendment's protections as the basis for refusing to file a required federal income tax return. The Court stated: "If the form of return provided called for answers that the defendant was protected from making[,] he could have raised the objection in the return, but could not on that account refuse to make any return at all. We are not called on to decide what, if anything, he might have withheld."[69]

In Garner v. United States,[70] the defendant was convicted of crimes involving a conspiracy to "fix" sporting contests and to transmit illegal bets. During the trial the prosecutor introduced, as evidence, the taxpayer's federal income tax returns for various years. In one return the taxpayer had showed his occupation to be "professional gambler". In various returns the taxpayer had reported income from "gambling" or "wagering". The prosecution used this to help contradict the taxpayer's argument that his involvement was innocent. The taxpayer tried unsuccessfully to keep the prosecutor from introducing the tax returns as evidence, arguing that since the taxpayer was legally required to report the illegal income on the returns, he was being compelled to be a witness against himself. The Supreme Court agreed that he was legally required to report the illegal income on the returns, but ruled that the right against self-incrimination still did not apply. The Court stated that "if a witness under compulsion to testify makes disclosures instead of claiming the right, the Government has not 'compelled' him to incriminate himself."[71]

Sullivan and Garner are viewed as standing, in tandem, for the proposition that on a required federal income tax return a taxpayer would probably have to report the amount of the illegal income, but might validly claim the right by labeling the item "Fifth Amendment" (instead of "illegal gambling income", "illegal drug sales", etc.)[72] The United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit has stated: "Although the source of income might be privileged, the amount must be reported."[73] The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has stated: "... the amount of a taxpayer's income is not privileged even though the source of income may be, and Fifth Amendment rights can be exercised in compliance with the tax laws 'by simply listing his alleged ill-gotten gains in the space provided for "miscellaneous" income on his tax form'."[74] In another case, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit stated: "While the source of some of [the defendant] Johnson's income may have been privileged, assuming that the jury believed his uncorroborated testimony that he had illegal dealings in gold in 1970 and 1971, the amount of his income was not privileged and he was required to pay taxes on it."[75] In 1979, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit stated: "A careful reading of Sullivan and Garner, therefore, is that the self-incrimination privilege can be employed to protect the taxpayer from revealing the information as to an illegal source of income, but does not protect him from disclosing the amount of his income."[76]

Grants of immunity

If the government gives an individual immunity, then that individual may be compelled to testify. Immunity may be "transactional immunity" or "use immunity"; in the former, the witness is immune from prosecution for offenses related to the testimony; in the latter, the witness may be prosecuted, but his testimony may not be used against him. In Kastigar v. United States,[77] the Supreme Court held that the government need only grant use immunity to compel testimony. The use immunity, however, must extend not only to the testimony made by the witness, but also to all evidence derived therefrom. This scenario most commonly arises in cases related to organized crime.

Record keeping

A statutorily required record-keeping system may go too far such that it implicates a record-keeper's right against self-incrimination. A three part test laid out by Albertson v. Subversive Activities Control Board,[78] is used to determine this: 1. the law targets a highly selective group inherently suspect of criminal activities; 2. the activities sought to be regulated are already permeated with criminal statutes as opposed to essentially being non-criminal and largely regulatory; and 3. the disclosure compelled creates a likelihood of prosecution and is used against the record-keeper. In this case, the Supreme Court struck down an order by the Subversive Activities Control Board requiring members of the Communist Party to register with the government and upheld an assertion of the privilege against self-incrimination, on the grounds that statute under which the order had been issued was "directed at a highly selective group inherently suspect of criminal activities."

In Leary v. United States,[79] the court struck down the Marijuana Tax Act because its record keeping statute required self-incrimination.

In Haynes v. United States,[80] the Supreme Court ruled that, because convicted felons are prohibited from owning firearms, requiring felons to register any firearms they owned constituted a form of self-incrimination and was therefore unconstitutional.

Combinations & passwords

While no such case has yet arisen, the Supreme Court has indicated that a respondent cannot be compelled to turn over "the contents of his own mind", e.g. the password to a bank account (doing so would prove his control of it).[81][82][83]

Lower courts have given conflicting decisions on whether forced disclosure of computer passwords is a violation of the Fifth Amendment.

In In re Boucher (2009), the US District Court of Vermont ruled that the Fifth Amendment might protect a defendant from having to reveal an encryption password, or even the existence of one, if the production of that password could be deemed a self-incriminating "act" under the Fifth Amendment. In Boucher, production of the unencrypted drive was deemed not to be a self-incriminating act, as the government already had sufficient evidence to tie the encrypted data to the defendant.[84]

In January 2012 a federal judge in Denver ruled that a bank-fraud suspect was required to give an unencrypted copy of a laptop hard drive to prosecutors.[85][86] However, in February 2012 the Eleventh Circuit ruled otherwise—finding that requiring a defendant to produce an encrypted drive's password would violate the Constitution, becoming the first federal circuit court to rule on the issue.[87][88] In April 2013, a District Court magistrate judge in Wisconsin refused to compel a suspect to provide the encryption password to his hard drive after FBI agents had unsuccessfully spent months trying to decrypt the data.[89][90] The Oregon Supreme Court ruled that unlocking a phone with a passcode is testimonial under Article I, section 12 of the state constitution, thus compelling it would be unconstitutional. Its ruling implied, however, that unlocking via biometrics may be allowed.[91]

Employer coercion

As a condition of employment, workers may be required to answer their employer's narrowly defined questions regarding conduct on the job. If an employee invokes the Garrity rule (sometimes called the Garrity Warning or Garrity Rights) before answering the questions, then the answers cannot be used in criminal prosecution of the employee.[92] This principle was developed in Garrity v. New Jersey, 385 U.S. 493 (1967). The rule is most commonly applied to public employees such as police officers.

Due process

The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution each contain a due process clause. Due process deals with the administration of justice and thus the due process clause acts as a safeguard from arbitrary denial of life, liberty, or property by the government outside the sanction of law.[93][94][95] The Supreme Court has interpreted the due process clauses to provide four protections: procedural due process (in civil and criminal proceedings), substantive due process, a prohibition against vague laws, and as the vehicle for the incorporation of the Bill of Rights.

Takings Clause

Eminent domain

The "Takings Clause", the last clause of the Fifth Amendment, limits the power of eminent domain by requiring "just compensation" be paid if private property is taken for public use. This provision of the Fifth Amendment originally applied only to the federal government, but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the 1897 case Chicago, B. & Q. Railroad Co. v. Chicago that the Fourteenth Amendment incidentally extended the effects of that provision to the states. The federal courts, however, have shown much deference to the determinations of Congress, and even more so to the determinations of the state legislatures, of what constitutes "public use". The property need not actually be used by the public; rather, it must be used or disposed of in such a manner as to benefit the public welfare or public interest. One exception that restrains the federal government is that the property must be used in exercise of a government's enumerated powers.

The owner of the property that is taken by the government must be justly compensated. When determining the amount that must be paid, the government does not need to take into account any speculative schemes in which the owner claims the property was intended to be used. Normally, the fair market value of the property determines "just compensation". If the property is taken before the payment is made, interest accrues (though the courts have refrained from using the term "interest").

Property under the Fifth Amendment includes contractual rights stemming from contracts between the United States, a U.S. state or any of its subdivisions and the other contract partner(s), because contractual rights are property rights for purposes of the Fifth Amendment.[96] The United States Supreme Court held in Lynch v. United States, 292 U.S. 571 (1934) that valid contracts of the United States are property, and the rights of private individuals arising out of them are protected by the Fifth Amendment. The court said: "The Fifth Amendment commands that property be not taken without making just compensation. Valid contracts are property, whether the obligor be a private individual, a municipality, a state, or the United States. Rights against the United States arising out of a contract with it are protected by the Fifth Amendment. United States v. Central Pacific R. Co., 118 U. S. 235, 238; United States v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 256 U. S. 51, 64, 67. When the United States enters into contract relations, its rights and duties therein are governed generally by the law applicable to contracts between private individuals."[97]

The federal courts have not restrained state and local governments from seizing privately owned land for private commercial development on behalf of private developers. This was upheld on June 23, 2005, when the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Kelo v. City of New London. This 5–4 decision remains controversial. The majority opinion, by Justice Stevens, found that it was appropriate to defer to the city's decision that the development plan had a public purpose, saying that "the city has carefully formulated a development plan that it believes will provide appreciable benefits to the community, including, but not limited to, new jobs and increased tax revenue." Justice Kennedy's concurring opinion observed that in this particular case the development plan was not "of primary benefit to ... the developer" and that if that was the case the plan might have been impermissible. In the dissent, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor argued that this decision would allow the rich to benefit at the expense of the poor, asserting that "Any property may now be taken for the benefit of another private party, but the fallout from this decision will not be random. The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process, including large corporations and development firms." She argued that the decision eliminates "any distinction between private and public use of property—and thereby effectively delete[s] the words 'for public use' from the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment". A number of states, in response to Kelo, have passed laws and/or state constitutional amendments which make it more difficult for state governments to seize private land. Takings that are not "for public use" are not directly covered by the doctrine,[98] however such a taking might violate due process rights under the Fourteenth amendment, or other applicable law.

The exercise of the police power of the state resulting in a taking of private property was long held to be an exception to the requirement of government paying just compensation. However the growing trend under the various state constitution's taking clauses is to compensate innocent third parties whose property was destroyed or "taken" as a result of police action.[99]

Just compensation

The last two words of the amendment promise "just compensation" for takings by the government. In United States v. 50 Acres of Land (1984), the Supreme Court wrote that "The Court has repeatedly held that just compensation normally is to be measured by "the market value of the property at the time of the taking contemporaneously paid in money." Olson v. United States, 292 U.S. 246 (1934)  ... Deviation from this measure of just compensation has been required only "when market value has been too difficult to find, or when its application would result in manifest injustice to owner or public". United States v. Commodities Trading Corp., 339 U.S. 121, 123 (1950).

Civil asset forfeiture

Civil asset forfeiture[100] or occasionally civil seizure, is a controversial legal process in which law enforcement officers take assets from persons suspected of involvement with crime or illegal activity without necessarily charging the owners with wrongdoing. While civil procedure, as opposed to criminal procedure, generally involves a dispute between two private citizens, civil forfeiture involves a dispute between law enforcement and property such as a pile of cash or a house or a boat, such that the thing is suspected of being involved in a crime. To get back the seized property, owners must prove it was not involved in criminal activity. Sometimes it can mean a threat to seize property as well as the act of seizure itself.[101]

In civil forfeiture, assets are seized by police based on a suspicion of wrongdoing, and without having to charge a person with specific wrongdoing, with the case being between police and the thing itself, sometimes referred to by the Latin term in rem, meaning "against the property"; the property itself is the defendant and no criminal charge against the owner is needed.[100] If property is seized in a civil forfeiture, it is "up to the owner to prove that his cash is clean"[102] and the court can weigh a defendant's use of their 5th amendment right to remain silent in their decision.[103] In civil forfeiture, the test in most cases[104] is whether police feel there is a preponderance of the evidence suggesting wrongdoing; in criminal forfeiture, the test is whether police feel the evidence is beyond a reasonable doubt, which is a tougher test to meet.[102][105] In contrast, criminal forfeiture is a legal action brought as "part of the criminal prosecution of a defendant", described by the Latin term in personam, meaning "against the person", and happens when government indicts or charges the property which is either used in connection with a crime, or derived from a crime, that is suspected of being committed by the defendant;[100] the seized assets are temporarily held and become government property officially after an accused person has been convicted by a court of law; if the person is found to be not guilty, the seized property must be returned.

Normally both civil and criminal forfeitures require involvement by the judiciary; however, there is a variant of civil forfeiture called administrative forfeiture which is essentially a civil forfeiture which does not require involvement by the judiciary, which derives its powers from the Tariff Act of 1930, and empowers police to seize banned imported merchandise, as well as things used to import or transport or store a controlled substance, money, or other property which is less than $500,000 value.[100]

See also

References

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  85. ^ See docket entry 247, "ORDER GRANTING APPLICATION UNDER THE ALL WRITS ACT REQUIRING DEFENDANT FRICOSU TO ASSIST IN THE EXECUTION OF PREVIOUSLY ISSUED SEARCH WARRANTS", United States v. Fricosu, case no. 10-cr-00509-REB-02, Jan. 23, 2012, U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, at [1].
  86. ^ Jeffrey Brown, Cybercrime Review (January 27, 2012). . Archived from the original on October 28, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  87. ^ In Re Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum Dated March 25, 2011 671 F.3d 1335 (11th Cir. 2012) (the cited reporter is incorrect and leads to Minesen Co. v. McHugh, 671 F.3d 1332, 1335 (Fed. Cir. 2012).).
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  91. ^ "State Court Docket Watch: State of Oregon v. Pittman". fedsoc.org. Retrieved 2022-03-10.
  92. ^ International Association of Fire Chiefs (2011). Chief Officer: Principles and Practice. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7637-7929-0.
  93. ^ Madison, P.A. (2 August 2010). "Historical Analysis of the first of the 14th Amendment's First Section". The Federalist Blog. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
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  95. ^ "Honda Motor Co. v. Oberg, 512 U.S. 415 (1994), at 434". Justia US Supreme Court Center. June 24, 1994. from the original on January 14, 2021. Retrieved August 26, 2020. There is, however, a vast difference between arbitrary grants of freedom and arbitrary deprivations of liberty or property. The Due Process Clause has nothing to say about the former, but its whole purpose is to prevent the latter.
  96. ^ Timothy Stoltzfus Jost (Professor of Law at the Washington and Lee University School of Law) (January 2, 2014). (PDF). House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the United States Congress. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 16, 2020.
  97. ^ "Lynch v. United States, 292 U.S. 571 (1934)". Justia US Supreme Court Center. June 4, 1934. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  98. ^ See Berman v. Parker.
  99. ^ Wegner v.Milwaukee Mutual, City of Minneapolis 479 N.W.2d 38 (Minn. 1991) and Steele v. City of Houston 603 S.W.2d 786 (1980)
  100. ^ a b c d US Department of Justice (January 2013). . United States Department of Justice. Archived from the original on March 8, 2015. Retrieved October 14, 2014. ... (Source: A Guide to Equitable Sharing of Federally Forfeited Property for State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies, U.S. Department of Justice, March 1994)
  101. ^ Brenda J. Buote (January 31, 2013). "Tewksbury motel owner glad to close book on seizure threat". Boston Globe. Retrieved October 11, 2014. ... Motel Caswell ... free from the threat of seizure by US Attorney Carmen Ortiz ...
  102. ^ a b John Burnett (June 16, 2008). "Seized Drug Assets Pad Police Budgets". NPR. Retrieved October 11, 2014. ... Every year, about $12 billion in drug profits returns to Mexico from the world's largest narcotics market—the United States. ...
  103. ^ Craig Gaumer; Assistant United States Attorney; Southern District of Iowa (November 2007). "A Prosecutor's Secret Weapon: Federal Civil Forfeiture Law" (PDF). United States Department of Justice. Retrieved October 24, 2014. November 2007 Volume 55 Number 6 '... One of the main advantages of civil forfeiture is that it has less stringent standards for obtaining a seizure warrant ...' see pages 60, 71 ...
  104. ^ Note: the legal tests used to justify civil forfeiture vary according to state law, but in most cases the tests are looser than in criminal trials where the "beyond a reasonable doubt" test is predominant
  105. ^ John R. Emshwiller; Gary Fields (August 22, 2011). "Federal Asset Seizures Rise, Netting Innocent With Guilty". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 11, 2014. ... New York businessman James Lieto ... Federal agents seized $392,000 of his cash anyway. ...

Further reading

  • Amar, Akhil Reed; Lettow, Renée B. (1995). "Fifth Amendment First Principles: The Self-Incrimination Clause". Michigan Law Review. The Michigan Law Review Association. 93 (5): 857–928. doi:10.2307/1289986. JSTOR 1289986.
  • Bugh, Gary (2023). Incorporation of the Bill of Rights: An Accounting of the Supreme Court’s Extension of Federal Civil Liberties to the States. New York: Peter Lang.
  • Davies, Thomas Y. (2003). (PDF). Tennessee Law Review (70): 987–1045. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-06-12. Retrieved 2010-04-06.
  • Fifth Amendment with Annotations
  • "Fifth Amendment Rights of a Resident Alien After Balsys". Lloyd, Sean K. In: Tulsa Journal of Comparative & International Law, Vol. 6, Issue 2 (Spring 1999), pp. 163–194.
  • "An analysis of American Fifth Amendment jurisprudence and its relevance to the South African right to silence". Theophilopoulos C. In: South African Law Journal, Mar 2006, Vol. 123, Issue 3, pp. 516–538. Juta Law Publishing, 2006.
  • "Fifth Amendment: Rights of Detainees". The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. 70(4):482–489; Williams & Wilkins Company, 1979.
  • "FBAR Reporting and the Required Records Doctrine: Continued Erosion of Fifth Amendment Rights". COMISKY, IAN M.; LEE, MATTHEW D. Journal of Taxation & Regulation of Financial Institutions. Mar/Apr 2012, Vol. 25 Issue 4, pp. 17–22.
  • "Fifth Amendment Rights of a Client regarding Documents Held by His Attorney: United States v. White". In: Duke Law Journal. 1973(5):1080–1097; Duke University School of Law, 1973.
  • Matthew J. Weber. "Warning—Weak Password: The Courts' Indecipherable Approach to Encryption and the Fifth Amendment", U. Ill. J.L Tech & Pol'y (2016).

External links

  • Cornell Law Information
  • 1954 essay on reasons to plead the 5th
  • Don't Talk to the Police Video

fifth, amendment, united, states, constitution, fifth, amendment, amendment, united, states, constitution, creates, several, constitutional, rights, limiting, governmental, powers, focusing, criminal, procedures, ratified, along, with, nine, other, articles, 1. The Fifth Amendment Amendment V to the United States Constitution creates several constitutional rights limiting governmental powers focusing on criminal procedures It was ratified along with nine other articles in 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights The Court has extended most but not all rights of the Fifth Amendment to the state and local levels The Supreme Court furthered most protections of this amendment through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment One provision of the Fifth Amendment requires that felonies be tried only upon indictment by a grand jury which the Court ruled does not apply to the state level Another provision the Double Jeopardy Clause provides the right of defendants to be tried only once in federal court for the same offense The Self Incrimination clause provides various protections against self incrimination including the right of an individual not to serve as a witness in a criminal case in which he or she is a defendant Pleading the Fifth is a colloquial term often used to invoke the Self Incrimination Clause when witnesses decline to answer questions where the answers might incriminate them In the 1966 case of Miranda v Arizona the Supreme Court held that the Self Incrimination Clause requires the police to issue a Miranda warning to criminal suspects interrogated while in police custody The Fifth Amendment also contains the Takings Clause which allows the federal government to take private property for public use if the government provides just compensation Like the Fourteenth Amendment the Fifth Amendment includes a due process clause stating that no person shall be deprived of life liberty or property without due process of law The Fifth Amendment s Due Process Clause applies to the federal government while the Fourteenth Amendment s Due Process Clause applies to state governments The Supreme Court has interpreted the Fifth Amendment s Due Process Clause to provide two main protections procedural due process which requires government officials to follow fair procedures before depriving a person of life liberty or property and substantive due process which protects certain fundamental rights from government interference The Supreme Court has also held that the Due Process Clause contains a prohibition against vague laws and an implied equal protection requirement similar to the Fourteenth Amendment s Equal Protection Clause Contents 1 Text 2 Background before adoption 3 Grand jury 3 1 Infamous crime 4 Double jeopardy 4 1 Prosecution after acquittal 4 2 Multiple punishment including prosecution after conviction 4 3 Prosecution after mistrial 4 4 Prosecution in different states 5 Self incrimination 5 1 Legal proceedings and congressional hearings 5 2 Statements made to non governmental entities 5 3 Custodial interrogation 5 3 1 Explicit invocation 5 4 Production of documents 5 4 1 By corporations 5 5 Refusal to testify in a criminal case 5 6 Refusal to testify in a civil case 5 7 Federal income tax 5 8 Grants of immunity 5 9 Record keeping 5 10 Combinations amp passwords 5 11 Employer coercion 6 Due process 7 Takings Clause 7 1 Eminent domain 7 2 Just compensation 7 3 Civil asset forfeiture 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksText EditThe amendment as proposed by Congress in 1789 No person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury except in cases arising in the land or naval forces or in the Militia when in actual service in time of War or public danger nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself nor be deprived of life liberty or property without due process of law nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation The hand written copy of the proposed Bill of Rights 1789 cropped to show just the text that would later be ratified as the Fifth AmendmentBackground before adoption Edit James Madison drafter of the Bill of Rights by John Vanderlyn On June 8 1789 Congressman James Madison introduced several proposed constitutional amendments during a speech to the House of Representatives 1 His draft language that later became the Fifth Amendment was as follows 1 2 No person shall be subject except in cases of impeachment to more than one punishment or trial for the same offense nor shall be compelled to be a witness against himself nor be deprived of life liberty or property without due process of law nor be obliged to relinquish his property where it may be necessary for public use without just compensation E xcept in cases of impeachments and cases arising in the land or naval forces or the militia when on actual service in time of war or public danger in all crimes punishable with loss of life or member presentment or indictment by a grand jury shall be an essential preliminary This draft was edited by Congress all the material before the first ellipsis was placed at the end and some of the wording was modified After approval by Congress the amendment was ratified by the states on December 15 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights Every one of the five clauses in the final amendment appeared in Madison s draft and in their final order those clauses are the Grand Jury Clause which Madison had placed last the Double Jeopardy Clause the Self Incrimination Clause the Due Process Clause and the Takings Clause Grand jury EditFurther information Grand juries in the United States The grand jury is a pre constitutional common law institution and a constitutional fixture in its own right exclusively embracing common law The Supreme Court ruled against incorporating this right in Hurtado v People of California 110 U S 516 1884 Most states have an alternative civil process Although state systems of criminal procedure differ greatly among themselves the grand jury is similarly guaranteed by many state constitutions and plays an important role in fair and effective law enforcement in the overwhelming p688 majority of the States Branzburg v Hayes No 70 85 1972 Grand juries which return indictments in many criminal cases are composed of a jury of peers and operate in closed deliberation proceedings they are given specific instructions regarding the law by the judge Many constitutional restrictions that apply in court or in other situations do not apply during grand jury proceedings For example the exclusionary rule does not apply to certain evidence presented to a grand jury the exclusionary rule states that evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Fifth or Sixth amendments cannot be introduced in court 3 Also an individual does not have the right to have an attorney present in the grand jury room during hearings An individual would have such a right during questioning by the police while in custody but an individual testifying before a grand jury is free to leave the grand jury room to consult with his attorney outside the room before returning to answer a question The Bill of Rights in the National Archives Currently federal law permits the trial of misdemeanors without indictments 4 Additionally in trials of non capital felonies the prosecution may proceed without indictments if the defendants waive their Fifth Amendment right Grand jury indictments may be amended by the prosecution only in limited circumstances In Ex Parte Bain 121 U S 1 1887 the Supreme Court held that the indictment could not be changed at all by the prosecution United States v Miller 471 U S 130 1985 partly reversed Ex parte Bain now an indictment s scope may be narrowed by the prosecution Thus lesser included charges may be dropped but new charges may not be added The Grand Jury Clause of the Fifth Amendment does not protect those serving in the armed forces whether during wartime or peacetime Members of the state militia called up to serve with federal forces are not protected under the clause either In O Callahan v Parker 395 U S 258 1969 the Supreme Court held that only charges relating to service may be brought against members of the militia without indictments As a decision O Callahan however lived for a limited duration and was more a reflection of Justice William O Douglas s distrust of presidential power and anger at the Vietnam Conflict 5 O Callahan was overturned in 1987 when the Court held that members of the militia in actual service may be tried for any offense without indictments 6 The grand jury indictment clause of the Fifth Amendment has not been incorporated under the Fourteenth Amendment 7 This means the grand jury requirement applies only to felony charges in the federal court system While many states do employ grand juries no defendant has a Fifth Amendment right to a grand jury for criminal charges in state court States are free to abolish grand juries and many though not all have replaced them with preliminary hearing Infamous crime Edit Whether a crime is infamous for purposes of the Grand Jury Clause is determined by the nature of the punishment that may be imposed not the punishment that is actually imposed 8 however crimes punishable by death must be tried upon indictments The historical origin of infamous crime comes from the infamia a punishment under Roman law by which a citizen was deprived of his citizenship 9 10 In United States v Moreland 258 U S 433 1922 the Supreme Court held that incarceration in a prison or penitentiary as opposed to a correction or reformation house attaches infamy to a crime In Mackin v United States 117 U S 348 1886 the Supreme Court judged that Infamous crimes are thus in the most explicit words defined to be those punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary while it later in Green v United States 356 U S 165 1957 stated that imprisonment in a penitentiary can be imposed only if a crime is subject to imprisonment exceeding one year Therefore an infamous crime is one that is punished by imprisonment for over one year Susan Brown a former defense attorney and Professor of Law at the University of Dayton School of Law concluded Since this is essentially the definition of a felony infamous crimes translate as felonies 11 Double jeopardy EditMain article Double Jeopardy Clause nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb 12 The Double Jeopardy Clause encompasses four distinct prohibitions subsequent prosecution after acquittal subsequent prosecution after conviction subsequent prosecution after certain mistrials and multiple punishment in the same indictment 13 Jeopardy applies when the jury is empaneled in a jury trial when the first witness is sworn in during a bench trial or when a plea is rendered 14 Prosecution after acquittal Edit The government is not permitted to appeal or try again after the entry of an acquittal whether a directed verdict before the case is submitted to the jury 15 a directed verdict after a deadlocked jury 16 an appellate reversal for sufficiency except by direct appeal to a higher appellate court 17 or an implied acquittal via conviction of a lesser included offense 18 In addition the government is barred by collateral estoppel from re litigating against the same defense a fact necessarily found by the jury in a prior acquittal 19 even if the jury hung on other counts 20 This principle does not prevent the government from appealing a pre trial motion to dismiss 21 or other non merits dismissal 22 or a directed verdict after a jury conviction 23 nor does it prevent the trial judge from entertaining a motion for reconsideration of a directed verdict if the jurisdiction has so provided by rule or statute 24 Nor does it prevent the government from retrying the defendant after an appellate reversal other than for sufficiency 25 including habeas 26 or thirteenth juror appellate reversals notwithstanding sufficiency 27 on the principle that jeopardy has not terminated There is also an exception for judicial bribery in a bench trial 28 Multiple punishment including prosecution after conviction Edit In Blockburger v United States 1932 the Supreme Court announced the following test the government may separately try to punish the defendant for two crimes if each crime contains an element that the other does not 29 Blockburger is the default rule unless the legislature intends to depart for example Continuing Criminal Enterprise CCE may be punished separately from its predicates 30 as can conspiracy 31 The Blockburger test originally developed in the multiple punishments context is also the test for prosecution after conviction 32 In Grady v Corbin 1990 the Court held that a double jeopardy violation could lie even where the Blockburger test was satisfied 33 but Grady was overruled in United States v Dixon 1993 34 Prosecution after mistrial Edit The rule for mistrials depends upon who sought the mistrial If the defendant moves for a mistrial there is no bar to retrial unless the prosecutor acted in bad faith i e goaded the defendant into moving for a mistrial because the government specifically wanted a mistrial 35 If the prosecutor moves for a mistrial there is no bar to retrial if the trial judge finds manifest necessity for granting the mistrial 36 The same standard governs mistrials granted sua sponte Prosecution in different states Edit In Heath v Alabama 1985 the Supreme Court held that the Fifth Amendment rule against double jeopardy does not prohibit two different states from separately prosecuting and convicting the same individual for the same illegal act Self incrimination Edit Plead the Fifth redirects here For the album by the band Taproot see Plead the Fifth album The Fifth Amendment protects individuals from being forced to incriminate themselves Incriminating oneself is defined as exposing oneself or another person to an accusation or charge of crime or as involving oneself or another person in a criminal prosecution or the danger thereof 37 The privilege against compelled self incrimination is defined as the constitutional right of a person to refuse to answer questions or otherwise give testimony against himself 38 To plead the Fifth is to refuse to answer any question because the implications of the question in the setting in which it is asked lead a claimant to possess a reasonable cause to apprehend danger from a direct answer believing that a responsive answer to the question or an explanation of why it cannot be answered might be dangerous because injurious disclosure could result 39 Historically the legal protection against compelled self incrimination was directly related to the question of torture for extracting information and confessions 40 41 The legal shift away from widespread use of torture and forced confession dates to the turmoil of the late 16th and early 17th century in England 42 The Supreme Court of the United States has held that a witness may have a reasonable fear of prosecution and yet be innocent of any wrongdoing The privilege serves to protect the innocent who otherwise might be ensnared by ambiguous circumstances 43 However Professor James Duane of the Regent University School of Law argues that the Supreme Court in a 5 4 decision in Salinas v Texas 44 significantly weakened the privilege saying your choice to use the Fifth Amendment privilege can be used against you at trial depending exactly how and where you do it 45 In the Salinas case justices Alito Roberts and Kennedy held that the Fifth Amendment s privilege against self incrimination does not extend to defendants who simply decide to remain mute during questioning Long standing judicial precedent has held that any witness who desires protection against self incrimination must explicitly claim that protection Justice Thomas siding with Alito Roberts and Kennedy in a separate opinion held that Salinas Fifth Amendment privilege would not have been applicable even if invoked because the prosecutor s testimony regarding his silence did not compel Salinas to give self incriminating testimony Justice Antonin Scalia joined Thomas opinion 46 Legal proceedings and congressional hearings Edit The Fifth Amendment privilege against compulsory self incrimination applies when an individual is called to testify in a legal proceeding 47 The Supreme Court ruled that the privilege applies whether the witness is in a federal court or under the incorporation doctrine of the Fourteenth Amendment in a state court 48 and whether the proceeding itself is criminal or civil 49 The right to remain silent was asserted at grand jury or congressional hearings in the 1950s when witnesses testifying before the House Committee on Un American Activities or the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee claimed the right in response to questions concerning their alleged membership in the Communist Party Under the Red Scare hysteria at the time of McCarthyism witnesses who refused to answer the questions were described by McCarthy as fifth amendment communists citation needed They lost jobs or positions in unions and other political organizations and suffered other repercussions after taking the Fifth Senator Joseph McCarthy R WI routinely asked witnesses Are you now or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party while he was chairman of the Senate Government Operations Committee Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations Admitting to a previous Communist Party membership was not sufficient Witnesses were also required to name names i e implicate others they knew to be Communists or who had been Communists in the past Academy Award winning director Elia Kazan testified before the House Committee on Un American Activities that he had belonged to the Communist Party briefly in his youth He also named names which incurred enmity of many in Hollywood Other entertainers such as Zero Mostel found themselves on a Hollywood blacklist after taking the Fifth and were unable to find work for a while in show business The amendment has also been used by defendants and witnesses in criminal cases involving the American Mafia citation needed Statements made to non governmental entities Edit The privilege against self incrimination does not protect an individual from being suspended from membership in a non governmental self regulatory organization SRO such as the New York Stock Exchange NYSE where the individual refuses to answer questions posed by the SRO An SRO itself is not a law enforcement entity or court of law and cannot send a person to jail SROs such as the NYSE and the National Association of Securities Dealers NASD are generally not considered to be state actors See United States v Solomon 50 D L Cromwell Invs Inc v NASD Regulation Inc 51 and Marchiano v NASD 52 SROs also lack subpoena powers They rely heavily on requiring testimony from individuals by wielding the threat of loss of membership or a bar from the industry permanent if decided by the NASD when the individual asserts the Fifth Amendment privilege against compelled self incrimination If a person chooses to provide statements in testimony to the SRO the SRO may provide information about those statements to law enforcement agencies who may then use the statements in a prosecution of the individual Custodial interrogation Edit The Fifth Amendment limits the use of evidence obtained illegally by law enforcement officers Originally at common law even a confession obtained by torture was admissible However by the eighteenth century common law in England provided that coerced confessions were inadmissible The common law rule was incorporated into American law by the courts The Supreme Court has repeatedly overruled convictions based on such confessions in cases such as Brown v Mississippi 297 U S 278 1936 Law enforcement responded by switching to more subtle techniques but the courts held that such techniques even if they do not involve physical torture may render a confession involuntary and inadmissible In Chambers v Florida 1940 the Court held a confession obtained after five days of prolonged questioning during which time the defendant was held incommunicado to be coerced In Ashcraft v Tennessee 1944 the suspect had been interrogated continuously for thirty six hours under electric lights In Haynes v Washington 53 the Court held that an unfair and inherently coercive context including a prolonged interrogation rendered a confession inadmissible Miranda v Arizona 1966 was a landmark case involving confessions Ernesto Miranda had signed a statement confessing to the crime but the Supreme Court held that the confession was inadmissible because the defendant had not been advised of his rights The Court held the prosecution may not use statements stemming from custodial interrogation of the defendant unless it demonstrates the use of procedural safeguards effective to secure the privilege against self incrimination Custodial interrogation is initiated by law enforcement after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of movement before being questioned as to the specifics of the crime As for the procedural safeguards to be employed unless other fully effective means are devised to inform accused persons of their right of silence and to assure a continuous opportunity to exercise it the following measures are required Before any questioning the person must be warned that he has a right to remain silent that any statement he does make may be used as evidence against him and that he has a right to the presence of an attorney either retained or appointed The warning Chief Justice Earl Warren referred to is now called the Miranda warning and it is customarily delivered by the police to an individual before questioning Miranda has been clarified by several further Supreme Court rulings For the warning to be necessary the questioning must be conducted under custodial circumstances A person detained in jail or under arrest is of course deemed to be in police custody Alternatively a person who is under the reasonable belief that he may not freely leave from the restraint of law enforcement is also deemed to be in custody That determination of reasonableness is based on a totality of the objective circumstances A mere presence at a police station may not be sufficient but neither is such a presence required Traffic stops are not deemed custodial The Court has ruled that age can be an objective factor In Yarborough v Alvarado 2004 the Court held that a state court decision that failed to mention a 17 year old s age as part of the Miranda custody analysis was not objectively unreasonable 54 In her concurring opinion Justice O Connor wrote that a suspect s age may indeed be relevant to the custody inquiry 55 the Court did not find it relevant in the specific case of Alvarado The Court affirmed that age could be a relevant and objective factor in J D B v North Carolina where they ruled that so long as the child s age was known to the officer at the time of police questioning or would have been objectively apparent to a reasonable officer its inclusion in the custody analysis is consistent with the objective nature of that test 54 The questioning does not have to be explicit to trigger Miranda rights For example two police officers engaging in a conversation designed to elicit an incriminating statement from a suspect would constitute questioning A person may choose to waive his Miranda rights but the prosecution has the burden of showing that such a waiver was actually made A confession not preceded by a Miranda warning where one was necessary cannot be admitted as evidence against the confessing party in a judicial proceeding The Supreme Court however has held that if a defendant voluntarily testifies at the trial that he did not commit the crime his confession may be introduced to challenge his credibility to impeach the witness even if it had been obtained without the warning In Hiibel v Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada 2004 the Supreme Court ruled 5 4 that being required to identify oneself to police under states stop and identify statutes is not an unreasonable search or seizure and is not necessarily self incrimination Explicit invocation Edit In June 2010 the Supreme Court ruled in Berghuis v Thompkins that a criminal suspect must now invoke the right to remain silent unambiguously 56 Unless and until the suspect actually states that he is relying on that right police may continue to interact with or question him and any voluntary statement he makes can be used in court The mere act of remaining silent is on its own insufficient to imply the suspect has invoked those rights Furthermore a voluntary reply even after lengthy silence can be construed as implying a waiver The new rule will defer to police in cases where the suspect fails to assert the right to remain silent This standard was extended in Salinas v Texas in 2013 to cases where individuals not in custody who volunteer to answer officers questions and who are not told their Miranda rights The Court stated that there was no ritualistic formula necessary to assert this right but that a person could not do so by simply standing mute 57 58 Production of documents Edit Under the Act of Production Doctrine the act of an individual in producing documents or materials e g in response to a subpoena may have a testimonial aspect for purposes of the individual s right to assert the Fifth Amendment right against self incrimination to the extent that the individual s act of production provides information not already in the hands of law enforcement personnel about the 1 existence 2 custody or 3 authenticity of the documents or materials produced See United States v Hubbell In Boyd v United States 59 the U S Supreme Court stated that It is equivalent to a compulsory production of papers to make the nonproduction of them a confession of the allegations which it is pretended they will prove By corporations Edit Corporations may also be compelled to maintain and turn over records the Supreme Court has held that the Fifth Amendment protections against self incrimination extend only to natural persons 60 The Court has also held that a corporation s custodian of records can be forced to produce corporate documents even if the act of production would incriminate him personally 61 The only limitation on this rule is that the jury cannot be told that the custodian personally produced those documents in any subsequent prosecution of him but the jury is still allowed to draw adverse inferences from the content of the documents combined with the position of the custodian in the corporation Refusal to testify in a criminal case Edit In Griffin v California 1965 the Supreme Court ruled that a prosecutor may not ask the jury to draw an inference of guilt from a defendant s refusal to testify in his own defense The Court overturned as unconstitutional under the federal constitution a provision of the California state constitution that explicitly granted such power to prosecutors 62 Refusal to testify in a civil case Edit While defendants are entitled to assert the right against compelled self incrimination in a civil court case there are consequences to the assertion of the right in such an action The Supreme Court has held that the Fifth Amendment does not forbid adverse inferences against parties to civil actions when they refuse to testify in response to probative evidence offered against them Baxter v Palmigiano 63 A s Mr Justice Brandeis declared speaking for a unanimous court in the Tod case Silence is often evidence of the most persuasive character 64 Failure to contest an assertion is considered evidence of acquiescence if it would have been natural under the circumstances to object to the assertion in question 65 In Baxter the state was entitled to an adverse inference against Palmigiano because of the evidence against him and his assertion of the Fifth Amendment right Some civil cases are considered criminal cases for the purposes of the Fifth Amendment In Boyd v United States the U S Supreme Court stated that A proceeding to forfeit a person s goods for an offence against the laws though civil in form and whether in rem or in personam is a criminal case within the meaning of that part of the Fifth Amendment which declares that no person shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself 66 In United States v Lileikis the court ruled that Aleksandras Lileikis was not entitled to Fifth Amendment protections in a civil denaturalization case even though he faced criminal prosecution in Lithuania the country that he would be deported to if denaturalized 67 Federal income tax Edit In some cases individuals may be legally required to file reports that call for information that may be used against them in criminal cases In United States v Sullivan 68 the United States Supreme Court ruled that a taxpayer could not invoke the Fifth Amendment s protections as the basis for refusing to file a required federal income tax return The Court stated If the form of return provided called for answers that the defendant was protected from making he could have raised the objection in the return but could not on that account refuse to make any return at all We are not called on to decide what if anything he might have withheld 69 In Garner v United States 70 the defendant was convicted of crimes involving a conspiracy to fix sporting contests and to transmit illegal bets During the trial the prosecutor introduced as evidence the taxpayer s federal income tax returns for various years In one return the taxpayer had showed his occupation to be professional gambler In various returns the taxpayer had reported income from gambling or wagering The prosecution used this to help contradict the taxpayer s argument that his involvement was innocent The taxpayer tried unsuccessfully to keep the prosecutor from introducing the tax returns as evidence arguing that since the taxpayer was legally required to report the illegal income on the returns he was being compelled to be a witness against himself The Supreme Court agreed that he was legally required to report the illegal income on the returns but ruled that the right against self incrimination still did not apply The Court stated that if a witness under compulsion to testify makes disclosures instead of claiming the right the Government has not compelled him to incriminate himself 71 Sullivan and Garner are viewed as standing in tandem for the proposition that on a required federal income tax return a taxpayer would probably have to report the amount of the illegal income but might validly claim the right by labeling the item Fifth Amendment instead of illegal gambling income illegal drug sales etc 72 The United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit has stated Although the source of income might be privileged the amount must be reported 73 The U S Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has stated the amount of a taxpayer s income is not privileged even though the source of income may be and Fifth Amendment rights can be exercised in compliance with the tax laws by simply listing his alleged ill gotten gains in the space provided for miscellaneous income on his tax form 74 In another case the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit stated While the source of some of the defendant Johnson s income may have been privileged assuming that the jury believed his uncorroborated testimony that he had illegal dealings in gold in 1970 and 1971 the amount of his income was not privileged and he was required to pay taxes on it 75 In 1979 the U S Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit stated A careful reading of Sullivan and Garner therefore is that the self incrimination privilege can be employed to protect the taxpayer from revealing the information as to an illegal source of income but does not protect him from disclosing the amount of his income 76 Grants of immunity Edit If the government gives an individual immunity then that individual may be compelled to testify Immunity may be transactional immunity or use immunity in the former the witness is immune from prosecution for offenses related to the testimony in the latter the witness may be prosecuted but his testimony may not be used against him In Kastigar v United States 77 the Supreme Court held that the government need only grant use immunity to compel testimony The use immunity however must extend not only to the testimony made by the witness but also to all evidence derived therefrom This scenario most commonly arises in cases related to organized crime Record keeping Edit A statutorily required record keeping system may go too far such that it implicates a record keeper s right against self incrimination A three part test laid out by Albertson v Subversive Activities Control Board 78 is used to determine this 1 the law targets a highly selective group inherently suspect of criminal activities 2 the activities sought to be regulated are already permeated with criminal statutes as opposed to essentially being non criminal and largely regulatory and 3 the disclosure compelled creates a likelihood of prosecution and is used against the record keeper In this case the Supreme Court struck down an order by the Subversive Activities Control Board requiring members of the Communist Party to register with the government and upheld an assertion of the privilege against self incrimination on the grounds that statute under which the order had been issued was directed at a highly selective group inherently suspect of criminal activities In Leary v United States 79 the court struck down the Marijuana Tax Act because its record keeping statute required self incrimination In Haynes v United States 80 the Supreme Court ruled that because convicted felons are prohibited from owning firearms requiring felons to register any firearms they owned constituted a form of self incrimination and was therefore unconstitutional Combinations amp passwords Edit While no such case has yet arisen the Supreme Court has indicated that a respondent cannot be compelled to turn over the contents of his own mind e g the password to a bank account doing so would prove his control of it 81 82 83 Lower courts have given conflicting decisions on whether forced disclosure of computer passwords is a violation of the Fifth Amendment In In re Boucher 2009 the US District Court of Vermont ruled that the Fifth Amendment might protect a defendant from having to reveal an encryption password or even the existence of one if the production of that password could be deemed a self incriminating act under the Fifth Amendment In Boucher production of the unencrypted drive was deemed not to be a self incriminating act as the government already had sufficient evidence to tie the encrypted data to the defendant 84 In January 2012 a federal judge in Denver ruled that a bank fraud suspect was required to give an unencrypted copy of a laptop hard drive to prosecutors 85 86 However in February 2012 the Eleventh Circuit ruled otherwise finding that requiring a defendant to produce an encrypted drive s password would violate the Constitution becoming the first federal circuit court to rule on the issue 87 88 In April 2013 a District Court magistrate judge in Wisconsin refused to compel a suspect to provide the encryption password to his hard drive after FBI agents had unsuccessfully spent months trying to decrypt the data 89 90 The Oregon Supreme Court ruled that unlocking a phone with a passcode is testimonial under Article I section 12 of the state constitution thus compelling it would be unconstitutional Its ruling implied however that unlocking via biometrics may be allowed 91 Employer coercion Edit As a condition of employment workers may be required to answer their employer s narrowly defined questions regarding conduct on the job If an employee invokes the Garrity rule sometimes called the Garrity Warning or Garrity Rights before answering the questions then the answers cannot be used in criminal prosecution of the employee 92 This principle was developed in Garrity v New Jersey 385 U S 493 1967 The rule is most commonly applied to public employees such as police officers Due process EditMain article Due Process Clause The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution each contain a due process clause Due process deals with the administration of justice and thus the due process clause acts as a safeguard from arbitrary denial of life liberty or property by the government outside the sanction of law 93 94 95 The Supreme Court has interpreted the due process clauses to provide four protections procedural due process in civil and criminal proceedings substantive due process a prohibition against vague laws and as the vehicle for the incorporation of the Bill of Rights Takings Clause EditEminent domain Edit Main article Eminent domain in the United States The Takings Clause the last clause of the Fifth Amendment limits the power of eminent domain by requiring just compensation be paid if private property is taken for public use This provision of the Fifth Amendment originally applied only to the federal government but the U S Supreme Court ruled in the 1897 case Chicago B amp Q Railroad Co v Chicago that the Fourteenth Amendment incidentally extended the effects of that provision to the states The federal courts however have shown much deference to the determinations of Congress and even more so to the determinations of the state legislatures of what constitutes public use The property need not actually be used by the public rather it must be used or disposed of in such a manner as to benefit the public welfare or public interest One exception that restrains the federal government is that the property must be used in exercise of a government s enumerated powers The owner of the property that is taken by the government must be justly compensated When determining the amount that must be paid the government does not need to take into account any speculative schemes in which the owner claims the property was intended to be used Normally the fair market value of the property determines just compensation If the property is taken before the payment is made interest accrues though the courts have refrained from using the term interest Property under the Fifth Amendment includes contractual rights stemming from contracts between the United States a U S state or any of its subdivisions and the other contract partner s because contractual rights are property rights for purposes of the Fifth Amendment 96 The United States Supreme Court held in Lynch v United States 292 U S 571 1934 that valid contracts of the United States are property and the rights of private individuals arising out of them are protected by the Fifth Amendment The court said The Fifth Amendment commands that property be not taken without making just compensation Valid contracts are property whether the obligor be a private individual a municipality a state or the United States Rights against the United States arising out of a contract with it are protected by the Fifth Amendment United States v Central Pacific R Co 118 U S 235 238 United States v Northern Pacific Ry Co 256 U S 51 64 67 When the United States enters into contract relations its rights and duties therein are governed generally by the law applicable to contracts between private individuals 97 The federal courts have not restrained state and local governments from seizing privately owned land for private commercial development on behalf of private developers This was upheld on June 23 2005 when the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Kelo v City of New London This 5 4 decision remains controversial The majority opinion by Justice Stevens found that it was appropriate to defer to the city s decision that the development plan had a public purpose saying that the city has carefully formulated a development plan that it believes will provide appreciable benefits to the community including but not limited to new jobs and increased tax revenue Justice Kennedy s concurring opinion observed that in this particular case the development plan was not of primary benefit to the developer and that if that was the case the plan might have been impermissible In the dissent Justice Sandra Day O Connor argued that this decision would allow the rich to benefit at the expense of the poor asserting that Any property may now be taken for the benefit of another private party but the fallout from this decision will not be random The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process including large corporations and development firms She argued that the decision eliminates any distinction between private and public use of property and thereby effectively delete s the words for public use from the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment A number of states in response to Kelo have passed laws and or state constitutional amendments which make it more difficult for state governments to seize private land Takings that are not for public use are not directly covered by the doctrine 98 however such a taking might violate due process rights under the Fourteenth amendment or other applicable law The exercise of the police power of the state resulting in a taking of private property was long held to be an exception to the requirement of government paying just compensation However the growing trend under the various state constitution s taking clauses is to compensate innocent third parties whose property was destroyed or taken as a result of police action 99 Just compensation Edit The last two words of the amendment promise just compensation for takings by the government In United States v 50 Acres of Land 1984 the Supreme Court wrote that The Court has repeatedly held that just compensation normally is to be measured by the market value of the property at the time of the taking contemporaneously paid in money Olson v United States 292 U S 246 1934 Deviation from this measure of just compensation has been required only when market value has been too difficult to find or when its application would result in manifest injustice to owner or public United States v Commodities Trading Corp 339 U S 121 123 1950 Civil asset forfeiture Edit Main article Civil forfeiture in the United States Civil asset forfeiture 100 or occasionally civil seizure is a controversial legal process in which law enforcement officers take assets from persons suspected of involvement with crime or illegal activity without necessarily charging the owners with wrongdoing While civil procedure as opposed to criminal procedure generally involves a dispute between two private citizens civil forfeiture involves a dispute between law enforcement and property such as a pile of cash or a house or a boat such that the thing is suspected of being involved in a crime To get back the seized property owners must prove it was not involved in criminal activity Sometimes it can mean a threat to seize property as well as the act of seizure itself 101 In civil forfeiture assets are seized by police based on a suspicion of wrongdoing and without having to charge a person with specific wrongdoing with the case being between police and the thing itself sometimes referred to by the Latin term in rem meaning against the property the property itself is the defendant and no criminal charge against the owner is needed 100 If property is seized in a civil forfeiture it is up to the owner to prove that his cash is clean 102 and the court can weigh a defendant s use of their 5th amendment right to remain silent in their decision 103 In civil forfeiture the test in most cases 104 is whether police feel there is a preponderance of the evidence suggesting wrongdoing in criminal forfeiture the test is whether police feel the evidence is beyond a reasonable doubt which is a tougher test to meet 102 105 In contrast criminal forfeiture is a legal action brought as part of the criminal prosecution of a defendant described by the Latin term in personam meaning against the person and happens when government indicts or charges the property which is either used in connection with a crime or derived from a crime that is suspected of being committed by the defendant 100 the seized assets are temporarily held and become government property officially after an accused person has been convicted by a court of law if the person is found to be not guilty the seized property must be returned Normally both civil and criminal forfeitures require involvement by the judiciary however there is a variant of civil forfeiture called administrative forfeiture which is essentially a civil forfeiture which does not require involvement by the judiciary which derives its powers from the Tariff Act of 1930 and empowers police to seize banned imported merchandise as well as things used to import or transport or store a controlled substance money or other property which is less than 500 000 value 100 See also EditUnited States constitutional criminal procedureReferences Edit a b James Madison s Proposed Amendments to the Constitution Annals of Congress June 8 1789 Obrien David Fifth Amendment Fox Hunters Old Women Hermits and the Burger Court Notre Dame Law Review Vol 54 p 30 1978 United States v Calandra 414 U S 338 1974 Duke v United States 301 U S 492 1937 Joshua E Kastenberg Cause and Effect The Origins and Impact of Justice William O Douglas Anti Military Ideology from World War II to O Callahan v Parker 26 Thomas Cooley L Rev 2009 Solorio v United States 483 U S 435 1987 Hurtado v California 110 U S 517 1884 Ex parte Wilson 114 U S 417 1885 United States v Cox 342 F 2d 167 187 fn 7 5th Cir 1965 Wisdom J specially concurring citing Greenidge 37 Greenidge Abel Hendy Jones 1894 Infamia Its Place in Roman Public and Private Law London Clarendon Press Retrieved 29 August 2014 Brown Susan Federal Grand Jury Infamous crimes part 1 University of Dayton School of Law Archived from the original on June 21 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2012 Harper Timothy October 2 2007 The Complete Idiot s Guide to the U S Constitution Penguin Group p 109 ISBN 978 1 59257 627 2 However the Fifth Amendment contains several other important provisions for protecting your rights It is the source of the double jeopardy doctrine which prevents authorities from trying a person twice for the same crime North Carolina v Pearce 395 U S 711 1969 Crist v Bretz 437 U S 28 1978 Fong Foo v United States 369 U S 141 1962 Sanabria v United States 437 U S 54 1978 United States v Martin Linen Supply Co 430 U S 564 1977 Burks v United States 437 U S 1 1978 Green v United States 355 U S 184 1957 Ashe v Swenson 397 U S 436 1970 Yeager v United States 557 U S 110 2009 Serfass v United States 420 U S 377 1973 United States v Scott 437 U S 82 1978 Wilson v United States 420 U S 332 1975 Smith v Massachusetts 543 U S 462 2005 Ball v United States 163 U S 662 1896 United States v Tateo 377 U S 463 1964 Tibbs v Florida 457 U S 31 1982 Aleman v Judges of the Circuit Court of Cook County 138 F 3d 302 7th Cir 1998 Blockburger v United States 284 U S 299 1932 See e g Brown v Ohio 432 U S 161 1977 Garrett v United States 471 U S 773 1985 Rutledge v United States 517 U S 292 1996 United States v Felix 503 U S 378 1992 Missouri v Hunter 459 U S 359 1983 Grady v Corbin 495 U S 508 1990 United States v Dixon 509 U S 688 1993 Oregon v Kennedy 456 U S 667 1982 Arizona v Washington 434 U S 497 1978 Black s Law Dictionary p 690 5th ed 1979 From Self Incrimination Privilege Against Barrons Law Dictionary p 434 2d ed 1984 Ohio v Reiner 532 U S 17 2001 citing Hoffman v U S 351 U S 479 1951 cf Counselman v Hitchcock 142 U S 547 1892 Amar Akhil Reed 1998 The Bill of Rights New Haven Yale University Press p 84 ISBN 0 300 08277 0 Amar Akhil Reed 2005 America s Constitution New York Random House p 329 ISBN 1 4000 6262 4 Greaves Richard L 1981 Legal Problems Society and religion in Elizabethan England Minneapolis Minnesota University of Minnesota Press pp 649 681 ISBN 0 8166 1030 4 OCLC 7278140 Retrieved 19 July 2009 This situation worsened in the 1580s and 1590s when the machinery of the High Commission was turned against Puritans in which a key weapon was the oath ex officio mero with its capacity for self incrimination Refusal to take this oath usually was regarded as proof of guilt Ohio v Reiner 532 U S 17 2001 570 U S 12 246 2013 A Law Professor Explains Why You Should Never Talk to Police Vice com 2016 A 5 4 Ruling One of Three Limits Silence s Protection The New York Times 18 June 2013 See e g Rule 608 b Federal Rules of Evidence as amended through Dec 1 2012 Michael J Z Mannheimer Ripeness of Self Incrimination Clause Disputes Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Vol 95 No 4 p 1261 footnote 1 Northwestern Univ School of Law 2005 citing Malloy v Hogan 378 U S 1 1964 McCarthy v Arndstein 266 U S 34 1924 509 F 2d 863 2d Cir 1975 132 F Supp 2d 248 251 53 S D N Y 2001 aff d 279 F 3d 155 162 2d Cir 2002 cert denied 537 U S 1028 2002 134 F Supp 2d 90 95 D D C 2001 373 U S 503 1963 a b J D B v North Carolina United States Supreme Court June 16 2011 accessed June 20th 2011 Yarborough v Alvarado United States Supreme Court June 1 2004 accessed June 20th 2011 Justice Kennedy 2010 06 01 Berghuis v Thompkins Law cornell edu Retrieved 2013 07 14 See Salinas v Texas no 12 246 U S Supreme Court June 17 2013 Mukasey Marc L Jonathan N Halpern Floren J Taylor Katherine M Sullivan Bracewell amp Giuliani LLP June 21 2013 Salinas v Texas Your Silence May Be Used Against You Re U S Supreme Court Litigation The National Law Review Retrieved 7 July 2013 116 U S 616 1886 U S v Kordel 397 U S 1 1970 Braswell v U S 487 U S 99 1988 380 U S 609 1965 425 U S 308 318 1976 Id at 319 quoting United States ex rel Bilokumsky v Tod 263 U S 149 153 154 1923 Id quoting United States v Hale 422 U S 171 176 1975 Boyd v United States 116 U S 616 1886 Justia U S Supreme Court Center Justia Law Rotsztain Diego A 1996 The Fifth Amendment Privilege Against Self incrimination and Fear of Foreign Prosecution Columbia Law Review 96 7 1940 1972 doi 10 2307 1123297 JSTOR 1123297 274 U S 259 1927 United States v Sullivan 274 U S 259 1927 424 U S 648 1976 Garner v United States 424 U S 648 1976 Miniter Frank 2011 Saving the Bill of Rights Exposing the Left s Campaign to Destroy American Exceptionalism Regnery Publishing p 204 ISBN 978 1 59698 150 8 United States v Pilcher 672 F 2d 875 11th Cir cert denied 459 U S 973 1982 United States v Wade 585 F 2d 573 5th Cir 1978 cert denied 440 U S 928 1979 italics in original United States v Johnson 577 F 2d 1304 5th Cir 1978 italics in original United States v Brown 600 F 2d 248 10th Cir 1979 406 U S 441 1972 382 U S 70 1965 395 U S 6 1969 390 U S 85 1968 Justice Blackmun 1988 06 22 John Doe v United States Law cornell edu Retrieved 2016 01 31 Justice Stevens 1988 06 22 John Doe v United States Law cornell edu Retrieved 2016 01 31 Justice Stevens 2000 06 05 United States v Hubbell Law cornell edu Retrieved 2016 01 31 In re Grand Jury Subpoena to Sebastien Boucher No 2 06 mj 91 2009 WL 424718 D Vt Feb 19 2009 See docket entry 247 ORDER GRANTING APPLICATION UNDER THE ALL WRITS ACT REQUIRING DEFENDANT FRICOSU TO ASSIST IN THE EXECUTION OF PREVIOUSLY ISSUED SEARCH WARRANTS United States v Fricosu case no 10 cr 00509 REB 02 Jan 23 2012 U S District Court for the District of Colorado at 1 Jeffrey Brown Cybercrime Review January 27 2012 Fifth Amendment held not violated by forced disclosure of unencrypted drive Archived from the original on October 28 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 In Re Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum Dated March 25 2011 671 F 3d 1335 11th Cir 2012 the cited reporter is incorrect and leads to Minesen Co v McHugh 671 F 3d 1332 1335 Fed Cir 2012 Jeffrey Brown Cybercrime Review February 25 2012 11th Cir finds Fifth Amendment violation with compelled production of unencrypted files Archived from the original on October 28 2012 Retrieved July 7 2012 Kravets David 23 April 2013 Here s a Good Reason to Encrypt Your Data Wired Conde Nast Retrieved 24 April 2013 U S v Jeffrey Feldman THE DECRYPTION OF A SEIZED DATA STORAGE SYSTEM E D Wis 19 April 2013 State Court Docket Watch State of Oregon v Pittman fedsoc org Retrieved 2022 03 10 International Association of Fire Chiefs 2011 Chief Officer Principles and Practice Jones amp Bartlett Publishers ISBN 978 0 7637 7929 0 Madison P A 2 August 2010 Historical Analysis of the first of the 14th Amendment s First Section The Federalist Blog Retrieved 19 January 2013 The Bill of Rights A Brief History ACLU Archived from the original on August 30 2016 Retrieved April 21 2015 Honda Motor Co v Oberg 512 U S 415 1994 at 434 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 24 1994 Archived from the original on January 14 2021 Retrieved August 26 2020 There is however a vast difference between arbitrary grants of freedom and arbitrary deprivations of liberty or property The Due Process Clause has nothing to say about the former but its whole purpose is to prevent the latter Timothy Stoltzfus Jost Professor of Law at the Washington and Lee University School of Law January 2 2014 The Operation of the Affordable Care Act s Risk Corridor Program p 5 and 6 with reference to the United States Supreme case Lynch v United States 292 U S 571 579 1934 PDF House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the United States Congress Archived from the original PDF on February 16 2020 Lynch v United States 292 U S 571 1934 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1934 Retrieved 31 March 2020 See Berman v Parker Wegner v Milwaukee Mutual City of Minneapolis 479 N W 2d 38 Minn 1991 and Steele v City of Houston 603 S W 2d 786 1980 a b c d US Department of Justice January 2013 Types of federal forfeiture United States Department of Justice Archived from the original on March 8 2015 Retrieved October 14 2014 Source A Guide to Equitable Sharing of Federally Forfeited Property for State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies U S Department of Justice March 1994 Brenda J Buote January 31 2013 Tewksbury motel owner glad to close book on seizure threat Boston Globe Retrieved October 11 2014 Motel Caswell free from the threat of seizure by US Attorney Carmen Ortiz a b John Burnett June 16 2008 Seized Drug Assets Pad Police Budgets NPR Retrieved October 11 2014 Every year about 12 billion in drug profits returns to Mexico from the world s largest narcotics market the United States Craig Gaumer Assistant United States Attorney Southern District of Iowa November 2007 A Prosecutor s Secret Weapon Federal Civil Forfeiture Law PDF United States Department of Justice Retrieved October 24 2014 November 2007 Volume 55 Number 6 One of the main advantages of civil forfeiture is that it has less stringent standards for obtaining a seizure warrant see pages 60 71 Note the legal tests used to justify civil forfeiture vary according to state law but in most cases the tests are looser than in criminal trials where the beyond a reasonable doubt test is predominant John R Emshwiller Gary Fields August 22 2011 Federal Asset Seizures Rise Netting Innocent With Guilty Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 11 2014 New York businessman James Lieto Federal agents seized 392 000 of his cash anyway Further reading EditAmar Akhil Reed Lettow Renee B 1995 Fifth Amendment First Principles The Self Incrimination Clause Michigan Law Review The Michigan Law Review Association 93 5 857 928 doi 10 2307 1289986 JSTOR 1289986 Bugh Gary 2023 Incorporation of the Bill of Rights An Accounting of the Supreme Court s Extension of Federal Civil Liberties to the States New York Peter Lang Davies Thomas Y 2003 Farther and Farther From the Original Fifth Amendment PDF Tennessee Law Review 70 987 1045 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 06 12 Retrieved 2010 04 06 Fifth Amendment with Annotations Fifth Amendment Rights of a Resident Alien After Balsys Lloyd Sean K In Tulsa Journal of Comparative amp International Law Vol 6 Issue 2 Spring 1999 pp 163 194 An analysis of American Fifth Amendment jurisprudence and its relevance to the South African right to silence Theophilopoulos C In South African Law Journal Mar 2006 Vol 123 Issue 3 pp 516 538 Juta Law Publishing 2006 Fifth Amendment Rights of Detainees The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 70 4 482 489 Williams amp Wilkins Company 1979 FBAR Reporting and the Required Records Doctrine Continued Erosion of Fifth Amendment Rights COMISKY IAN M LEE MATTHEW D Journal of Taxation amp Regulation of Financial Institutions Mar Apr 2012 Vol 25 Issue 4 pp 17 22 Fifth Amendment Rights of a Client regarding Documents Held by His Attorney United States v White In Duke Law Journal 1973 5 1080 1097 Duke University School of Law 1973 Matthew J Weber Warning Weak Password The Courts Indecipherable Approach to Encryption and the Fifth Amendment U Ill J L Tech amp Pol y 2016 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution Cornell Law Information 1954 essay on reasons to plead the 5th Don t Talk to the Police Video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution amp oldid 1154386890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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