Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Does Recording Legal Calls From Jail Violate Sixth Amendment?


Clients in the jail often call their attorneys and investigators from jail house phones. Often that is the only way to communicate between jail visits. Can we challenge those recordings as violating the Sixth Amendment?

A California public defender reportedly is using a novel constitutional argument to support his contention in a state-court lawsuit that the local district attorney's office is unfairly listening into conversations on public jailhouse telephones to gain information about criminal cases.

Although such eavesdropping has withstood Fourth Amendment challenge, Contra Costa County Public Defender David Coleman is arguing that it violates the Sixth Amendment. The practice, he contends, does an end run around defendants' right to legal counsel by, in effect, contacting a defendant who is known to be represented by legal counsel, according to the Contra Costa Times.

Full article here

No comments: