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but also, judge cassell, you were talking about the court having politicians on it. i think one could say that the court now perhaps has too many judges on it and not enough perhaps people from outside the appellate court and supreme court clerk circuit. i don't really like the way it's gone in recent years. any rate, thank you. paul: he mentioned fred inbow which is really interesting. inbow had written the police interrogation manual with different techniques and tactics and so forth. so i think one of the reasons professor inbow was disappointed in the miranda decision is he discovered all of his techniques and tactics were quoted as the reason for the supreme court needing to step in and regulate police interrogation. of course, the big irony of the supreme court miranda decision is that it doesn't restrict psychological techniques inbow used. so he reworked his textbook the next year and it became a best seller because after all, what better book to look at than the one cited by chief justice warren? host: dale, springfield, virginia, you're on. caller: i just w
but also, judge cassell, you were talking about the court having politicians on it. i think one could say that the court now perhaps has too many judges on it and not enough perhaps people from outside the appellate court and supreme court clerk circuit. i don't really like the way it's gone in recent years. any rate, thank you. paul: he mentioned fred inbow which is really interesting. inbow had written the police interrogation manual with different techniques and tactics and so forth. so i...
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his boxes title after refusing induction into armed forces reciting religious reasons and cassel spoke out in his defense. but the corey stored his box license, allowing him to return to the ring after a three and a half year absence. >> it was wrong what they did, and they admit it had, but by then all the harm was good. this kid was so good at that time. electrifying. >> ali's comeback included some of his best remembered bouts. he defeated george foreman and gained the heavy heavyweight fighter. and three times fraser. in 1978 he won a rematch against leon spynx. his retirement was marked by the advance of parkinson's disease. america's most beloved athlete became a champion for victims of the disease and an advocate for parkinson's research. his devoted wife, lonnie, became his voice when he could no longer speak for himself. but no matter now disabling the disease became, he never lost his quick mind or the twinkle in his eye. to many he remains, in his own words, still the greatest of all times! >> abc news, new york. >> muhammad ali was one of the most recognized people in the w
his boxes title after refusing induction into armed forces reciting religious reasons and cassel spoke out in his defense. but the corey stored his box license, allowing him to return to the ring after a three and a half year absence. >> it was wrong what they did, and they admit it had, but by then all the harm was good. this kid was so good at that time. electrifying. >> ali's comeback included some of his best remembered bouts. he defeated george foreman and gained the heavy...
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his boxing title, citing religious reasons, cassel spoke out in his defense. a court restored his boxes license, allowing him to return to the ring after a three and a half year absence. >> it was wrong what they did, and they admitted it, but by then all the harm was good. this kid was so good at that time. electrifying. >> ali's comeback included some of his best remembered bouts. in 1974 he defeated george foreman and regained the heavyweight title. and three times frazier. in 1978 he won a rematch against leon spynx. about becoming put first boxer ever to earn the heavyweight championship three times. ♪ happy birthday to you >> his retirement was marked by the advance of parkinson's disease. america's most beloved athlete became a champion for victims of the disease and an advocate for parkinson's research. his devoted wife, lonnie, became his voice when he could no longer speak for himself. but no matter now disabling the disease became, he never lost his quick mind or the twinkle in his eye. to many he remains, in his own words, still the greatest of all
his boxing title, citing religious reasons, cassel spoke out in his defense. a court restored his boxes license, allowing him to return to the ring after a three and a half year absence. >> it was wrong what they did, and they admitted it, but by then all the harm was good. this kid was so good at that time. electrifying. >> ali's comeback included some of his best remembered bouts. in 1974 he defeated george foreman and regained the heavyweight title. and three times frazier. in...
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Jun 12, 2016
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you can see paul cassell and kate stiff with a beautiful common statement about what miranda means.onstitutioncenter.org and i've got to do the plug now because it's so cool. you can read the fifth amendment on this side, you can read the fifth amendment in all of its beauty and you see this statement where professors cassell and stiff talk about what everyone agrees the text was, the history was. i think it's so inspiring that you were able to come up with a common statement and separate statements about your disagreements. that's a great place for viewers to understand the decision. host: the chief justice chose to write the opinion himself. it was 60-plus pages. and he read it aloud in the courtroom in its entirety. how often does that happen? paul: not very often and certainly not with 60-page opinions. you can imagine it took several hours to do that but i think everyone knew when the decision came down, it was a landmark decision that would have reverberations to echo for years and years. host: and in fact the miranda rules were written into the decision so the text was really
you can see paul cassell and kate stiff with a beautiful common statement about what miranda means.onstitutioncenter.org and i've got to do the plug now because it's so cool. you can read the fifth amendment on this side, you can read the fifth amendment in all of its beauty and you see this statement where professors cassell and stiff talk about what everyone agrees the text was, the history was. i think it's so inspiring that you were able to come up with a common statement and separate...
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professor casale -- cassell might agree. it is appropriate and good to affect -- to focus on the facts on the ground. susan: but if there are different rules -- paul: one of the things that maranda did that has been its biggest harm to america is it petrified the law of police interrogation. the rules today are the same as they were in 1966. just as we have made advances in medicine and auto safety, we could make advances in the way we regulate police interrogation, advances that allow police to get more confessions and provide protections for suspects. miranda, because it says it is a constitutional right, made those changes difficult. susan: we will wrap this up by listening to earl warren's grandson, jeffrey earl warren, who shares with us some family history. his grandfather's view of what the miranda decision and other policing decisions did for society. let's watch. >> i would like the court to be remembered as the court of the people. no one can say how the opinions of any particular court or era will stand the test o
professor casale -- cassell might agree. it is appropriate and good to affect -- to focus on the facts on the ground. susan: but if there are different rules -- paul: one of the things that maranda did that has been its biggest harm to america is it petrified the law of police interrogation. the rules today are the same as they were in 1966. just as we have made advances in medicine and auto safety, we could make advances in the way we regulate police interrogation, advances that allow police...