"Offense Specific"
Because the constitutional right to counsel exists to provide a lawyer's assistance for an accused layman both at trial and during "critical stages" of pretrial procedures, this right only applies to cases where adversary judicial proceedings have begun. In the past, some courts tried to expand this protection to cover any "closely related" cases as well.
For example, suppose a robbery suspect has not yet been charged with robbery, but has been indicted for unlawful possession of the weapon used during the robbery. In the jurisdictions that followed the old "closely related" doctrine, the attachment of the Sixth Amendment to the weapons charge would have prevented officers from obtaining an admissible statement or lineup ID on either case without counsel. In Texas v. Cobb, however, the Supreme Court rejected the closely related doctrine and ruled that the constitutional right to counsel is "offense specific," meaning that it only applies to the specific charges for which the defendant has been indicted or arraigned.
Cobb burglarized a residence and killed the woman and infant he found inside. Because he buried their bodies in the woods, these victims had not been found when he was arrested, charged, and given counsel on the burglary charge. Without his attorney's presence, police questioned Cobb about the disappearance of the mother and child, and obtained incriminating statements. At Cobb's subsequent murder trial, he moved to suppress his statements on Massiah grounds. The state court, applying the theory that the charged burglary and the uncharged murder were so closely related that attachment on one meant attachment on the other, suppressed his statements.
Reversing the Texas court, the Supreme Court ruled that the closely related doctrine has no application to Sixth Amendment issues. The court held that Massiah does not prohibit prosecutorial use of statements on cases as to which no adversary judicial proceedings have begun.