SCOTUS Says You Can't Sue the Cops for Violating Your Miranda Rights
A 6–3 ruling undermines attempts to hold police accountable for misconduct.

The Supreme Court ruled today, 6–3, that if a police officer fails to inform you of your right to remain silent and avoid self-incrimination when you're suspected of a crime, you can't sue under federal law as a violation of your civil rights.
To be clear, the Court isn't overturning Miranda v. Arizona, the 1966 Supreme Court ruling that determined that it's a violation of a suspect's Fifth Amendment rights for police to interrogate him or her about a crime without informing them they have the right to remain silent and the right to request an attorney. But what the Court ruled today is that if and when this right is violated, people can't turn to Section 1983 of the U.S. code and file a civil action lawsuit against the police officer or law enforcement agency and seek redress or damages.
Today's ruling, Vega v. Tekoh, involved an investigation of sexual assault at a Los Angeles medical center in 2014. Terence Tekoh worked at the medical center and was interrogated by L.A. County Deputy Carlos Vega. Vega did not tell Tekoh about his Miranda rights and extracted a written confession. This confession was admitted into evidence in court, and a judge determined that his Miranda rights weren't violated because he wasn't in custody when he confessed. Even so, the first case ended in a mistrial, and then Tekoh was ultimately found not guilty in a second trial. Tekoh then sued using Section 1983 against Vega and others seeking damages for the violation of his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. The case wound its way all the way up to the Supreme Court to hear in April. The American Civil Liberties Union and the Cato Institute together submitted an amicus brief to the Court supporting the position that Vega could be held liable.
But in a pure ideological split, the Court today determined that a violation of the Miranda rules does not provide a basis for a civil rights lawsuit under Section 1983. Justice Samuel Alito wrote the opinion of the Court, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett.
Essentially, Alito's opinion says that the purpose of Miranda is to serve as a safeguard against compelled self-incrimination by police or prosecutors. It was not intended to establish that it was inherently a Fifth Amendment violation if somebody voluntarily confesses or self-incriminates himself or herself prior to or absent of a Miranda warning. The Miranda warning is intended to be a "prophylactic," to safeguard against potential deliberate abuse. Alito writes:
Miranda did not hold that a violation of the rules it established necessarily constitute a Fifth Amendment violation, and it is difficult to see how it could have held otherwise. For one thing, it is easy to imagine many situations in which an un-Mirandized suspect in custody may make self-incriminating statements without any hint of compulsion. In addition, the warnings that the Court required included components, such as notification of the right to have retained or appointed counsel present during questioning, that do not concern self-incrimination per se but are instead plainly designed to safeguard that right. And the same is true of Miranda's detailed rules about the waiver of the right to remain silent and the right to an attorney.
Alito concludes that because a violation of Miranda is not automatically a violation of the Fifth Amendment, there is no justification to permit a civil rights lawsuit. The opinion reverses a judgment in Tekoh's favor and remands it back to the lower courts to revisit.
The dissent is written by Justice Elena Kagan and joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor. Kagan observes the obvious in her dissent, that this ruling will make it harder for defendants to pursue legal remedies when their rights are violated:
The majority observes that defendants may still seek "the suppression at trial of statements obtained" in violation of Miranda's procedures. … But sometimes, such a statement will not be suppressed. And sometimes, as a result, a defendant will be wrongly convicted and spend years in prison. He may succeed, on appeal or in habeas, in getting the conviction reversed. But then, what remedy does he have for all the harm he has suffered? The point of §1983 is to provide such redress—because a remedy "is a vital component of any scheme for vindicating cherished constitutional guarantees." … The majority here, as elsewhere, injures the right by denying the remedy.
Reason's Billy Binion noted earlier this week that the Supreme Court had declined to take on cases where federal officers had been granted civil liability against lawsuits when they violate the rights of citizens and even commit crimes in the line of duty. This case continues this trend—the Supreme Court recognizes that these constitutional rights exist, but by shielding officers from liability for violating these rights, the Court undermines the necessary tools to make sure police take them seriously.
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>>But in a pure ideological split
the six people you believe are an ideological team are not.
They just all agreed and voted the same. Purely coincidental.
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I'm fine with this ruling. What is the matter with this ruling???
I'll have to read more about this. Reading the introduction, it sounds like it's something like. The facts appear to be that an un-Mirandized defendant gave a confession, which was entered in as evidence during his trial.
After the trial, the defendant sued for civil damages because he confession was given without him being Mirandized.
The facts of the case seemed to indicate that the defendant gave his confession without being under what was deemed by the court to be duress.
The court decided that the specifics of the case matter to determine whether a Fifth Amendment violation took place, and that being un-Mirandized is insufficient on its own to qualify as a Fifth Amendment decision.
To anyone with more knowledge, does this sound like a correct summary?
I'd have to read more to have an opinion on it.
Looks like Tekoh also brought his Fifth Amendment violation question to court and a Jury decided that he did not confess under coercion. Tekoh gave his confession while being interviewed by the police at his job. He was not in custody, but it does sound like he was interviewed at work for several hours before producing a written confession.
This case is asking the question of does any confession given without a Miranda warning and then entered into the court record inherently count as a Fifth Amendment violation and thus open up such cases to civil damages.
I think that's the summary of the specific question.
>>the defendant sued for civil damages because he confession was given without him being Mirandized.
the defendant sued for civil damages because his confession was used against him in a court of law.
also, if you like Buccee's you should try the Czech Stop in West, Texas. smaller, but better.
Yeah, sorry, yes. He confessed without a Miranda warning and it was admitted in court, and is suing for that as a violation of his 5th Amendment rights.
I went and read it quickly, and I think the dissent is not unreasonable on this one. Though Alito makes a strong case as well, there's something to this question of setting up high walls, and I sympathize with putting defendants in extremely superior positions than the prosecution.
I think the most important points in here are during the conclusions, since they actually mostly agree on the history of jurisprudence here.
From Kagan:
Today, the Court strips individuals of the ability to seek
a remedy for violations of the right recognized in Miranda.
The majority observes that defendants may still seek “the
suppression at trial of statements obtained” in violation of
Miranda’s procedures. Ante, at 14–15. But sometimes,
such a statement will not be suppressed. And sometimes,
as a result, a defendant will be wrongly convicted and spend
years in prison. He may succeed, on appeal or in habeas, in
getting the conviction reversed. But then, what remedy
does he have for all the harm he has suffered? The point of
§1983 is to provide such redress—because a remedy “is a
vital component of any scheme for vindicating cherished
constitutional guarantees.”
From Alito:
As we have noted, “[a] judicially crafted” prophylactic
rule should apply “only where its benefits outweigh its
costs,” Shatzer, 559 U. S., at 106, and here, while the benefits of permitting the assertion of Miranda claims under
§1983 would be slight, the costs would be substantial.
Miranda rests on a pragmatic judgment about what is
needed to stop the violation at trial of the Fifth Amendment
right against compelled self-incrimination. That prophylactic purpose is served by the suppression at trial of state-
ments obtained in violation of Miranda and by the application of that decision in other recognized contexts. Allowing
the victim of a Miranda violation to sue a police officer for
damages under §1983 would have little additional deterrent value, and permitting such claims would cause many
problems.
This is a tight case asking questions of costs vs. benefits. I'm sympathetic to the idea that the government should be forced to incur high costs for any criminal case it brings.
Final thought. I'm biased towards one side here. Whoever Gorsuch sides with I tend to agree with. So it was last week where Gorsuch was actually in the minority with Sotomayer.
I think in this case I also think the majority decided this reasonably based on these two comments.
From Kagan:
In past cases, the Court has given a broad construction to
§1983’s broad language.
From Alito:
...whatever else may be said about this argument,6 it cannot succeed unless Tekoh can persuade us
that this “law” should be expanded to include the right to
sue for damages under §1983.
In these types of cases, where it involves the judiciary interpreting federal law, I swing extremely towards narrow readings of legislature, and put the onerous on Congress to define things, rather then have the court interpret vagueries in ways that lead to outcomes folks want. Kagan citing that it has traditionally been interpreted broadly does not really win me over to whether it should be further extended here.
So, there's my first thoughts. Sympathetic to the dissent, but I think this is consistent with the positive movement the court is having towards narrow readings with the onerous on Congress to actually do their job.
works for me. I don't know why they didn't stop with "hey buddy your Miranda rights weren't violated if you sang like an uncaged canary"
>>a judge determined that his Miranda rights weren't violated because he wasn't in custody when he confessed.
Costs vs. benefits shouldn't be the court's job to decide. That's a political question for legislatures. The court's job is to say what the law is, not consider policy implications.
Also, I ended up doing my Ken impersonation so hard that I forgot to respond to the most important part of your post. I will check it out next time I go. I'm supposed to see friends in San Antonio this summer, and then drive up to Dallas to see my sister. That's right on the way.
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"Looks like Tekoh also brought his Fifth Amendment violation question to court and a Jury decided that he did not confess under coercion."
That question would not have been put to the jury in his criminal trial. If the court determined that the confession was coerced, the jury should never have heard it at all.
This civil suit is his only chance to get that question in front of a jury.
I'm taking this from the document:
Tekoh was arrested and charged in California state court
with unlawful sexual penetration. At Tekoh’s first trial, the
judge held that Miranda had not been violated because
Tekoh was not in custody when he provided the statement,
but the trial resulted in a mistrial. When Tekoh was retried, a second judge again denied his request to exclude the
confession. This trial resulted in acquittal, and Tekoh then
brought this action under 42 U. S. C. §1983 against Vega
and several other defendants seeking damages for alleged
violations of his constitutional rights, including his Fifth
Amendment right against compelled self-incrimination.
When this §1983 case was first tried, the jury returned a
verdict in favor of Vega, but the judge concluded that he had
given an improper jury instruction and thus granted a new
trial. Before the second trial, Tekoh asked the court to instruct the jury that it was required to find that Vega violated the Fifth Amendment right against compelled selfincrimination if it determined that he took a statement
from Tekoh in violation of Miranda and that the statement
was then improperly used against Tekoh at his criminal
trial. The District Court declined, reasoning that Miranda
established a prophylactic rule and that such a rule could
not alone provide a ground for §1983 liability. Instead, the
jury was asked to decide whether Tekoh’s Fifth Amendment
right had been violated. The court instructed the jury to
determine, based on “the totality of all the surrounding circumstances,” whether Tekoh’s statement had been “improperly coerced or compelled,” and the court explained
that “[a] confession is improperly coerced or compelled . . .
if a police officer uses physical or psychological force or
threats not permitted by law to undermine a person’s ability to exercise his or her free will.” App. to Pet. for Cert.
119a. The jury found in Vega’s favor, and Tekoh appealed.
"Tekoh’s first trial, the judge held that Miranda had not been violated"
The judge decided, not the jury as you originally claimed.
But sometimes, such a statement will not be suppressed. And sometimes, as a result, a defendant will be wrongly convicted and spend years in prison.
The cops and prosecutors get a feather in their cap. That's what matters. So what if innocent lives are ruined? The alternative would be government actors facing consequences for abuse of power, and the court simply will not allow that.
Oh no no, you don't get to complain. Assholes like you are the reason assholes are there.
Radley Balko tweet
This court is systematically dismantling the Bill of Rights (save one!) by watering down or outright abolishing all non-political remedies. The punchline is of course that if the political process were capable of preserving our rights, we wouldn't need a Bill of Rights.
This court is systematically dismantling the Bill of Rights (save one!)
Yeah, they are pretty adamant that no troops get quartered in our homes.
P.S. If you are posting this in agreement with Balko, you can fuck each other or get fucked separately, I don't have a preference.
Balko is right far more often than he's wrong. And his point, while hyperbolic, is not wrong.
The single most successful legal movement in our history:
http://thirdamendmentlawyers.weebly.com/
A 100% win rate.
I don't have a problem with this. The guy, who is an idiot, told the cops whatever he told them during a consensual conversation. NEVER, NEVER, NEVER talk to the police!
this. also, if you are granted a mistrial and *then* a win, run dude! and do not look back
What's the point of declaring something to be a right if the government van violate it with impunity?
The Miranda warning isn't itself a right. It's a statement *about* rights.
What's the point of making a statement about rights that the government can ignore with impunity?
You can't violate a statement. You can violate the rights that the statement is *about*, but not the statement itself.
I didn't say "violate a statement". I said "ignore". What else did you not read?
Is the government "ignoring with impunity"?
You have the right to remain silent. You cannot be compelled to incriminate yourself. That is your right.
How did the government ignore this guy's rights? Cops showed up, did not compel him, and he confessed. That isn't ignoring his rights. It at worst could be viewed as "failing to remind the person that they COULD exercise these rights."
Actually the post above was a statement about a statement about rights
What's the point of making a statement about rights that the government can ignore with impunity?
I don't want to be the "ackshyually" guy here, but that's not quite what happened here, or what can happen if your miranda rights aren't read to you.
This case is complicated.
Absent a civil lawsuit, if your miranda rights aren't read to you, and you're arrested and subsequently convicted, if it comes to light during (or after) trial, that your miranda rights were either denied or ignored, your conviction may be overturned. That is the consequence of not having your rights read to you.
That is a completely separate question from a civil lawsuit.
The problem with this case is, that the argument is he wasn't under arrest so there was no requirement to read the Miranda rights.
Even so, the first case ended in a mistrial, and then Tekoh was ultimately found not guilty in a second trial.
Basically, the consequences of the apparently shady acquisition of the confession was that he was not ultimately convicted. That was the consequence.
And again, the right not to incriminate yourself isn't violated if you choose to volunteer information to a police officer. The specific right is that you cannot be compelled to incriminate yourself. It can be argued that once you are being held in custody, you are being "compelled", hence the miranda warning.
I think the real crime is that novody in this country understands this right.
To put it in context of another analogy, a cop can come up and talk to me on the street for any reason. The cop may come up to me because he likes my tee-shirt. But if, in the course of that conversation, I tell him that I'm waiting for my meth connect so I can sell him a few grams-- at that point I can probably be arrested and searched. The fact that the cop didn't read me my miranda rights before telling me he thought I had a totally boss tee-shirt did not represent the cop "doing something with impunity".
I do think an important addition is that, best as I can tell from the facts, it is possible to be in a situation where one isn't formally custody but a defendant could feel like they were in custody in such a way that a confession is in violation of one's Miranda rights.
It sounds like Tekoh did bring this claim in court, but the judge disagreed his rights were violated. He then brought a civil case saying his rights were violated. A jury disagreed and sided against Tekoh.
Only then did this question get brought that the lack of Miranda Rights being read must always imply that one's constitutional rights have been violated.
So, it seems like he did have a way to remediation, but a jury disagreed with his claim. Whether the jury decided that correctly or not is a huge difference from the SC question.
Well, to be honest, today's snowflakes are all about feelings.
It doesn't seem like the government ignored Miranda rights.
Cop: "Hey, how's it going today?"
Shmuck: "Good. Sorry about the blood; you see, I just killed my wife."
Cop: "Oh, well in that case you're under arrest for murder."
Shmuck: "HAY MUH MIRANDA RIGHTZ!"
Here's the thing. 5A requires that any incriminating statement be voluntary.
There was a time when courts routinely made a fact intensive fact specific inquiry to determine if a confession or other incriminating statement was made voluntarily.
Then there came a time when the courts let the cops get away with most anything.
Then the courts realized that letting cops get away with anything was bad, but the case by case fact intensive inquiry was hard work and the court didn't want to go back to doing it, so the court gave the cops some magic words to say and if the cops say the magic words, any statement you make is automatically voluntary.
And again because the courts don't want to do the hard work, if the cops forget to say the magic words, the court will exclude any statements made.
So Miranda isn't really about protecting your rights, and it's not for the cops, it's a shortcut for the court.
Another case where the S. Ct. overstepped its bounds and became a legislature by pulling the Miranda warnings out of their collective rear ends and making them 'mandatory' and further stated that the Congress would find it almost impossible to undo what they just legislated. None of that is justified under our Constitution. So of course the dissent is 100% correct but it's based on a complete lie so it's meaningless drivel. I will bet anyone Alito was seething and chomping at the bit to just wipe out Miranda and go back to letting Congress legislate on such matters. It's hysterical to read his tortured and twisted like a pretzel logic that makes no sense. It's like listening to Ted Bundy trying to claim he did all his deeds in self defense.
Yeah Miranda is an invention of the court not the constitution or Congress. This one of those arcane procedural issues and it looks like a baby step back from judicial activism. For the record I think Miranda is, on balance, a good thing. But it's not a part of the constitution. It was invented by unelected judges.
"But sometimes, such a statement will not be suppressed"
So if they lose on a motion to suppress they should get a redo on damages? That's inane.
Oh, your rights were violated? Walk it off, you pussy!
Considering you guys are the assholes voting other assholes in power that put these assholes up there, sure, go fuck yourself.
You get what you deserve.
Not surprised I guess that libertarians-against-the-fifth-and sixth-amendment show up to argue that the SC justices are just peachy on this issue.
The fifth amendment has nothing to do with filing a civil suit when you confess something to a cop when you're not under arrest. If it turns out that conversation amounted to entrapment, then that will put your criminal conviction in jeopardy. If it turns out the cop lied to him, making him think he was under arrest and detained, then again, the fifth amendment would apply. But if a cop gets a call, swings by the location, asks someone, "So, what happened here?" and someone in the room breaks down and starts yelling, "I did it! I did it! I raped her!", then later regrets that moment of weakness, that's not a violation of his fifth amendment.
The question here is about a civil suit, and I have no strong opinion about it. I lean towards the idea that based on the circumstances of this case, he really should be able to sue, perhaps on different grounds. But it's not a question of a fifth amendment violation, in my opinion.
libertarians-against-the-fifth-and sixth-amendment
The libertarian position is that you have rights regarding self-incrimination, to remain silent. What grounds are there to sue when you fail to do so prior to the point in the process where the police normally remind you of the right as was mandated under Miranda, i.e., at the time of arrest? Is your position that a cop asking any incriminating questions before giving the warning creates a civil rights violation? Because making cops start every conversation with, "you know you don't have to talk to me, right?" is ridiculous.
Jesus. At what level do you hold individuals responsible to take the simplest actions to secure their rights?
So it is perfectly reasonable then for guns to be controlled as long as people aren't informed that there is a 2A. Indeed all rights really need to be ignored in the Constitution because rights are always self evident.
So it is perfectly reasonable then for guns to be controlled as long as people aren't informed that there is a 2A
First, you miserable shitweasel, the right is that you cannot be compelled to be a witness. It says nothing about the obligations of other parties to not ask incriminating questions. Until they compel an answer, the 5th amendment has not been violated. So, exactly where is the adverse action against which to bring suit? I assume he was informed of Miranda as required when he was actually arrested.
Second, you ridiculous asshat, sarcasm aside, a right is indeed not dependent on anyone's knowledge of it. But you moved the goalposts so far with your hyperbolic response that your comment is for all practicable purposes a non sequitur. It is in no way an appropriate response to my questions.
The miranda warning is a declaration of the rights you have while in the custody of the police. If you are not in the custody of the police, it's ridiculous to assume you have those rights.
If you are not in the custody of the police, it's ridiculous to assume you have those rights.
If you are guilty, it's ridiculous not to just walk away.
Best advice; say nothing except "I want a lawyer".
That's because Miranda warnings aren't a RIGHT. The RIGHT is the right to remain silent, the right to have a lawyer, etc. Miranda warnings are a procedural rule (and not a bad one) about the admissibility of evidence.
I think it all comes down to identity. If the suspect is a non-Asian minority, then he/she/it should be allowed to sue. If the suspect is white or Asian, but non-binary, then I think he/she/it should be allowed to sue provided that the Cop is non-intersectional. Otherwise, I think it all comes down to a restorative justice perspective.
How's my progressive palaver word soup?
There's still a strong sense of meaning to it. Progressivism really needs to have no sense of meaning. Sorry, you just may be too sane to be a progressive.
Honestly, he's an idiot, and I actually don't have a problem with the ruling given he willingly offered up, for lack of a better word, evidence to the police without actually being under arrest.
Talk about mission creep.
US citizens are supposed to know about US laws and the US Constitution. Then, because there were too many idiots, and in a vast expansion of federal powers, SCOTUS required police to inform subjects explicitly and if police didn't conform, ordered courts to throw out incriminating information obtained without a Miranda warning. That's already going pretty far, but OK.
But now the Cato institute seriously wants damages when it isn't given? Ridiculous.
In this day and age, when you can watch any police show and hear your Miranda rights in almost every single episode, is anyone really not aware of them? I'm pretty sure the majority of the public can recite them by memory.
Also, do the cops have to read your Miranda every time they approach you? Get pulled over for a broken tail light, Miranda. Cop asks you for directions, Miranda. You say hello to cop he has to Mirandaize before he returns the salutation. Cop buys lemonade from my Daughter's lemonade stand, Mirandaize her before he places his order. Fuck, Scott, this seems like a huge fucking reach. The suspect wasn't in custody, volunteered his confession. His lawyers argued the confession twice and lost, then he decides to sue, because he talked to the cops, while not in custody and volunteered a confession, to a charge he was cleared of. And you think he should be paid for that? Go back to writing about don't say gay, fuck. At least then you sorta understand what you're writing about.
Let's keep the pressure on cops anyway, just in case. We're libertarians. We're not supposed to suck cop dick.
You ain't anything but a shitty proggie authoritarian Tony. Don't try to claim to be a libertarian.
Tony, you're not a libertarian. Not even remotely.
And we know what you like to do with cop dick, even if you're not supposed to.
You wanted your right-wing judges. Now lie in your bed
Exactly. Maybe the fascists here will start crying a different tune when the anger and power is pointed squarely in their direction.
This case really isn't about Miranda warnings. I see it as being an expansion of the Qualified Immunity doctrine.
The real moral of the story here is: never talk to police.
"To Protect And To Serve" is really dishonest in that the courts have pointed out they have no actual obligation to do either. So change the cars to read:
City of Bumfuck Police
"Shut Up And Get A Lawyer"