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Self-Incrimination — related Supreme Court cases

This page groups Supreme Court cases that involve the constitutional concept “Self-Incrimination”. Use it to explore related decisions and see how the same idea shows up across different cases.

“Self-Incrimination” is:

Protection against being compelled to testify or provide incriminating evidence against oneself.

Source: Fifth Amendment Where this concept definition/label comes from (for example, a constitutional provision or a reference framework).

Cases

These are cases where this concept was identified as relevant. Click a case to view its summary, holding, and supporting syllabus excerpts.

  • Vega v. Tekoh 23rd June 2022
    The case revolves around whether a violation of Miranda rights constitutes a violation of the Fifth Amendment right against compelled self-incrimination.

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