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Michigan v. Jackson, 475 U.S. 625 (1986), was a case decided by the United States Supreme Court regarding the Sixth Amendment's right to counsel in a police interrogation.In a decision written by Justice Stevens, the Court held that once an accused individual has claimed a right to counsel at a plea hearing or other court proceeding, a waiver of that right during later police questioning would ...
Even without the confession, the jury convicted him a second time, and he was again given life imprisonment. Edward Grant, the then-prosecutor, described it as the costliest case prosecuted in Jackson County. He was one of the two respondents on whose cases Michigan v. Jackson was based. It was later overruled by the Supreme Court, following ...
Confrontation between unemployed auto workers and Dearborn police and Ford security, 5 workers shot to death, more than 60 injured [2] 1943 Detroit race riot: Detroit: 1943-06: 34: Riots among black and white residents, 34 killed, 433 wounded [2] Troy axe murders: Troy: 1964-09-28: 7: Murder of 7 by father after release from mental hospital ...
Michael Jackson-Bolanos is charged with murder of Samantha Woll (Michigan DOC) Woll, 40, spent her last night on 20 October at a wedding, before returning to her home in the Lafayette Park ...
Montejo v. Louisiana, 556 U.S. 778 (2009), is a 5–4 decision by the United States Supreme Court that overruled the Court's decision in Michigan v. Jackson. [1] The case concerned the validity of a defendant's waiver of his right to counsel during a police interrogation. In reversing Jackson, the Court said such a waiver was valid. [2]
Michael Jackson was in more than $500 million of debt at the time of his death in June 2009, according to new court documents obtained by Us Weekly. The executors of Jackson’s will and estate ...
According to testimony from certified public accountant William R. Ackerman in Jackson’s 2013 wrongful-death trial, Jackson spent his money on charitable donations, gifts, art, furniture and ...
The following is a list of people executed by the U.S. state of Michigan; which abolished the death penalty in 1847. The one person executed after 1847 was executed by the United States strictly within federal jurisdiction. Thus, it was not performed within the legal boundaries of Michigan as a matter of law.