Miranda v. Arizona was decided in 1966. Courts have been struggling ever since with the task of applying it correctly. In the 2009-10 term that ended June 30, the U.S. Supreme Court decided three cases involving Miranda issues. In all three cases, the Supreme Court reversed lower court decisions. These three most recent decisions marked at least the 46th, 47th, and 48th times the court has tried to iron out the misunderstandings that continue to plague police, lawyers, and judges 44 years after Miranda was decided. (The 46th and 47th cases, Florida v. Powell and Maryland v. Shatzer , were discussed in our April and May issues, respectively.)
Although the latest decision, Berghuis v. Thompkins, was hailed by police and prosecutors and denounced by defense attorneys across the nation as a "retreat" from established Miranda precedent, it really was no such thing. Berghuis simply reaffirmed a principle that has been the rule since the 1979 decision in North Carolina v. Butler-a decision that many either overlooked or simply didn't believe, until now.







