Thompson v. Keohane
Thompson v. Keohane | |
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![]() U.S.C. § 2254(d) does not apply in custody rulings for Miranda. | |
Court membership | |
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Case opinions | |
Majority | Ginsburg, joined by Stevens, O'Connor, Scalia, Kennedy, Souter, Breyer |
Dissent | Thomas, joined by Rehnquist |
Laws applied | |
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d) |
Thompson v. Keohane, 516 U.S. 99 (1995), was a case in which the
Background
Investigation and arrest
In September 1986, the body of a dead woman was discovered by two hunters in Fairbanks, Alaska.[1] The woman had been stabbed 29 times.[2] To gain assistance identifying the body, the police issued a press release with a description of the woman. Carl Thompson called the police station and identified the body as Dixie Thompson, his former wife.[3] The police asked Thompson to come into the station under the pretense of identifying personal items found with the body, but it was the intention of the police to question Thompson about the murder.[4][5]
Thompson came to the police station and was questioned for two hours. Two plainclothes officers performed the interrogation in an interview room. Thompson was not read his Miranda rights and throughout the interrogation he was told that he was free to leave.[6] The police told Thompson that they knew he killed his former wife and eventually Thompson confessed to the murder.[7] Thompson was allowed to leave the police station, but then was arrested shortly thereafter.
Trial and conviction
Thompson was charged with first-degree murder and put on trial. During the trial, an attempt was made to suppress Thompson's confession because he was not read his Miranda rights.[8][9] The attempt was denied because the trial court ruled that Thompson was not in police custody and thus the police did not have to read Thompson his Miranda rights.[10] The court concluded that Thompson was not in custody because he came to the police station freely and was told he was free to leave at any time.[11] The prosecution was allowed to play Thompson's tape-recorded confession and the jury convicted Thompson of first-degree murder.[12]
Appeals
Thompson first attempted to appeal the ruling that he was not in police custody. The Alaska Court of Appeals upheld the ruling of the trial court and Alaska Supreme Court decided not to hear the case.[13]
Thompson then filed a petition for a
Opinion of the Court
Notes
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 103
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 103
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 103
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 103
- ^ Habeas Corpus: Mixed Opinions Regarding Deference To State Custodial Determinations p. 607
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 103
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 103
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 105
- ^ Habeas Corpus: Mixed Opinions Regarding Deference To State Custodial Determinations p. 610
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 105
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 105
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 105
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 105-106
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 106
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 106
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 107
- ^ Habeas Corpus: Mixed Opinions Regarding Deference To State Custodial Determinations p. 615
- ^ Federal Courts Must Resurrect the Reasonable Person p. 1236
- ^ Thompson v. Keohane p. 116
References
- Supreme Court of the United States (November 1995). "Thompson v. Keohane".
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(help) - Matthew DeLyle Carling (1997). "Habeas Corpus: Mixed Opinions Regarding Deference To State Custodial Determinations: Another Round Of 28 U.s.c. 2254(d) Classification In Thompson V. Keohane". Creighton L. Rev. (30).
- Terri L. Pastori (1997). "Federal Courts Must Resurrect the Reasonable Person and Reapply Objective Test for Custody Determination". Suffolk U. L. Rev. (30).
External links
- Text of Thompson v. Keohane, 516 U.S. 99 (1995) is available from: Google Scholar Justia Library of Congress Oyez (oral argument audio)