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Recent Supreme Court Cases

In recent years, a number of high profile cases related to Sixth Amendment rights have come before the Supreme Court. As the Court comes to define a more refined set of rights to representation, a number of pending Appeals-level cases are likely to further challenge existing precedents with respect to procedural rights. Two of the most prominent recent cases have led to an expansion of defendant rights in the eyes of the Court:

Riggins V. Nevada
This 1992 Supreme Court Case affirmed that no person can be forced to take medication as a precondition for remaining “competent” over the course of a trial. The case emerged when David Riggins was forced to ingest anti-psychotic medication by the State of Nevada, which he ruled had nullified his insanity defense, and, thus, denied him due process. After the State Supreme Court re-affirmed the lower court’s decision and conviction, the case went to the Supreme Court.

In a decision led by Chief Justice Rehnquist, the Court ruled that the State had violation Riggins’ Sixth and 14th Amendment rights to due process on a 7-2 basis (Justices Scalia and Thomas dissented from the ruling.) As a result of the ruling, States must evaluate the medical basis for prescribing medications, and must evaluate the potential treatments in light of the defendants health (not using the trial as the determining factor over medical rationale.)

United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez
A recent 2006 ruling held that a defendant who is denied legal representation is is entitled to freedom according to the Sixth Amendment. The court ruled 5-4 in defense of Missouri resident Cuauhtemoc Gonalzez-Lopez, who lost an Appeals Court case after the judge removed his preferred counsel for a “lack of professional conduct”.

The majority ruling, writing by Justice Scalia, argued that the court denied counsel as a “structural error, requiring reversal”. Four Justices dissented from the ruling, including Justice Alito, joined by Justices Roberts, Kennedy and Thomas, who argued that the 6th Amendment provides the right to “effective” counsel, not necessarily preferred counsel and that the lower court ruling should not be automatically overturned.

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