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Articles Posted in Criminal Constitutional Law

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Single-Photograph Identification Procedures “Disfavored” in Massachusetts

Oftentimes, when police are searching for a suspect of a crime, they will employ an identification procedure.  Identification procedures vary, and can include a photographic array; a lineup (as you might see on TV); or a one-on-one show up identification procedure.  Single-photograph identification procedures, akin to a “one-on-one show-up”, involve…

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Massachusetts High Court Rules Seizure of Gun Improper in Multi-Family Search Warrant Case

In the execution of a search warrant by Boston Police of a multi-family home, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court upheld a superior court ruling that the seizure of a shotgun was improper. Clarifying the protections of the 4th Amendment to the United States Constitution, the SJC affirmed intrusion into the…

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Massachusetts Judge Properly Upholds Suppression of Gun Found After Unlawful Impoundment of Car by Boston Police

The Massachusetts Appeals Court last week upheld a District Court judge’s suppression order of a firearm found in a car after it was unlawfully impounded by police. The defendant in the case was charged in the case was charged in the district court with unlawfully carrying a firearm without a…

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United States Supreme Court Throws a Wrench in “Attenuation Doctrine” in Search & Seizure Case

The United States Supreme Court, in a decision concerning the lawfulness of a stop and search of a man, founds grounds to justify the arrest of the person despite ruling that the police officer violated the man’s constitutional rights by stopping him in the first place.  The decision, issued in…

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Supreme Court Reverses Murder Conviction for Prosecutor Withholding Exculpatory Evidence

The United States Supreme Court reversed the murder conviction of a Louisiana man and granted him a new trial, finding that the the prosecutor had withheld evidence that could have supported his defense at trial that could have cast doubt on the credibility of prosecution witnesses. This case, Weary v.…

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Brockton Armed Robbery Leads Massachusetts SJC to Expand Law on Suggestive Eyewitness Identifications

The issue of the reliability of eyewitness identifications has been a hot topic in Massachusetts courts the last few years.  Several cases from the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and Appeals Court have touched upon the danger of suggestiveness of eyewitness identifications, their reliability and consequently, their admissibility against defendants at…

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Massachusetts Appeals Court Broadens Scope of Lawful Stop on Vague Description of Suspect

In a recent decision, the Massachusetts Appeals Court appears to have broadened the scope of “reasonable suspicion to stop” a person in circumstances where he did not match the descriptions of the suspect as provided by eyewitnesses. In the case of Commonweatlh v. Johnson, police responded to several 911 calls of…

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MA SJC Leaves Open Judge’s Granting Immunity. One Day…

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court recently considered a defendant’s challenge that his second degree murder conviction should be overturned because his constitutional rights were violated when the trial judge refused to grant immunity to potential defense witnesses. In the case of Commonwealth v. Brewer, although the SJC affirmed the defendant’s…

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Error for Massachusetts Prosecutor To Comment on Defendant’s Constitutional Rights During Closing Argument

The Massachusetts Appeals Court recently ruled that it is reversible error and improper for a prosecutor to suggest the defendant had the opportunity to tailor his testimony and lie because he had heard the other witnesses during trial.  This issue was addressed in Commonwealth v. Alphonse, and because the error was…

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Transfer of Evidence From Client to Attorney May Be Unobtainable By Prosecutors If Done So For Legal Advice

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court considered whether evidence or documents that were provided to an attorney by the client are obtainable by prosecutors from the attorney via subpoena.  The question, the court ruled, depends on whether or not the the evidence was provided to the attorney for purposes of legal…

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