Spano v. New York

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Spano_v._New_York an entity of type: Thing

Spano v. New York, 360 U.S. 315 (1959), represented the Supreme Court's movement away from the amorphous voluntariness standard for determining whether police violated due process standards when eliciting confessions and towards the modern rule in Miranda v. Arizona. In Spano, the Court focused less on factors such as meals provided to the accused and more on whether the accused had access to legal counsel. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Spano v. New York
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Spano v. New York
xsd:integer 14583032
xsd:integer 1026171328
<second> 172800.0
<second> 17280.0
xsd:integer 315
xsd:integer 360
xsd:gMonthDay --04-27
xsd:integer 1959
rdf:langString Spano v. New York,
xsd:gMonthDay --06-22
xsd:integer 1959
rdf:langString Spano v. New York
rdf:langString The Court held that the interrogation violated Spano's 14th Amendment due process rights because Spano's confession was not voluntary.
rdf:langString Spano v. New York
rdf:langString Warren
rdf:langString Spano v. New York, 360 U.S. 315 (1959), represented the Supreme Court's movement away from the amorphous voluntariness standard for determining whether police violated due process standards when eliciting confessions and towards the modern rule in Miranda v. Arizona. In Spano, the Court focused less on factors such as meals provided to the accused and more on whether the accused had access to legal counsel.
rdf:langString Douglas
rdf:langString Stewart
rdf:langString Douglas, Brennan
rdf:langString Black, Brennan
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5392

data from the linked data cloud