Memphis Commercial Appeal: “Sheriff’s Office will no longer hold prisoners for 48-hour detention”

Memphis Commercial Appeal: Sheriff’s Office will no longer hold prisoners for 48-hour detention | Practice violates Tenn. constitution, court finds by Lawrence Buser, Daniel Connolly, Kevin McKenzie:

Local authorities have suspended the practice of detaining people in jail for up to 48 hours without charging them with a crime.

The move follows a scathing opinion by the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals at Jackson, which said the Memphis Police Department was routinely violating the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. That amendment says authorities can’t make arrests or search and seize property without probable cause. The opinion also said the policy violates Tennessee’s constitution.

The appeals court had ordered that convicted murderer Courtney Bishop must get a new trial because the detention that led to his confession of shooting a man in a robbery was illegal.

It was the third time since 2001 the court had issued a harshly worded opinion criticizing the 48-hour detentions.

The case is here.

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