Call to Mother from Interrogation Room Admitted as Evidence

In an article on Law.com on August 16th, the trial judge admitted the defendant’s end of a telephone call to his mother he made while in the interrogation room after his interrogators left, leaving the tape recorder running.

He claimed no recollection of the shooting, but he told his mother “He tried to grab the gun, and I pulled away and it went off.”

The article mentions nothing about any reasonable expectation of privacy in a telephone call from an interrogation room, but it is obvious there would be none.

I had the good fortune of having such a recording turned over by the state they made when they hoped to get some admission of a shooting death that the client was saying was accidental. The grief and crying during the telephone call was genuine, and it helped us get a not guilty verdict.

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