Congressional Digest

Supreme Court Debates April 2003 No. 4 Vol. 6
Due Process and Trial Competence

Forced Sanity

State-Ordered Administration of Medication Before Trial

Due Process and Trial Competence

Supreme Court Addresses the Question of a Defendant's Sanity

The Court in recent years has held that practically all of the criminal procedural guarantees of the Bill of Rights — the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Eighth Amendments — are fundamental to State criminal justice systems and that the absence of one or the other particular guarantees denies a suspect or a defendant due process of law under the Fourteenth Amendment. Further, the Court has held that the Due Process Clause protects against practices and policies which violate precepts of fundamental fairness, even if they do not violate specific guarantees of the Bill of Rights. The standard query in such…

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