Explore 6 coercive interrogation tactics court cases in North Carolina. AI-powered summaries, key holdings, and legal analysis.
Coercive Interrogation Tactics Opinions in North Carolina (6)
Statements after attorney request inadmissible
North Carolina Supreme Court · 2025-12-12 · Mixed · Impact: 65/100
State v. Calderon, decided by North Carolina Supreme Court on December 12, 2025, resulted in a mixed outcome. The North Carolina Court of Appeals addressed whether a defendant's statements made during...
NC Supreme Court: Intoxication doesn't automatically invalidate confession
North Carolina Supreme Court · 2025-12-12 · Defendant Win · Impact: 40/100
State v. Kelliher, decided by North Carolina Supreme Court on December 12, 2025, resulted in a defendant win outcome. The North Carolina Supreme Court considered whether a defendant's confession, made...
NC Supreme Court: Confession involuntary due to coercive interrogation
North Carolina Supreme Court · 2025-12-12 · Defendant Win · Impact: 75/100
State v. Reel, decided by North Carolina Supreme Court on December 12, 2025, resulted in a defendant win outcome. The North Carolina Supreme Court considered whether a defendant's confession was volun...
NC Supreme Court: Confession Involuntary Due to Coercive Interrogation
North Carolina Supreme Court · 2025-10-17 · Defendant Win · Impact: 75/100
State v. Rogers, decided by North Carolina Supreme Court on October 17, 2025, resulted in a defendant win outcome. The North Carolina Supreme Court considered whether a defendant's confession was volu...
NC Supreme Court: Confession Voluntary, Admissible
North Carolina Supreme Court · 2025-10-17 · Plaintiff Win · Impact: 30/100
State v. Wilson, decided by North Carolina Supreme Court on October 17, 2025, resulted in a plaintiff win outcome. The North Carolina Supreme Court considered whether a defendant's confession was volu...
NC Supreme Court: Coerced Confession Invalid
North Carolina Supreme Court · 2025-03-21 · Reversed · Impact: 75/100
State v. Gregory, decided by North Carolina Supreme Court on March 21, 2025, resulted in a reversed outcome. The North Carolina Supreme Court considered whether a defendant's confession was voluntary ...