Citation network
Estelle Vs. Jurek
Cites for this judgment
- US Supreme Court
- Jan 01, 1981
Citation network · 7-day free trial
Brief every cited case in minutes
Open an 18-section AI Brief on any citation below, ask scoped follow-ups, and find related precedents with Semantic Search. Full trial - no card required.
- 18-section brief - facts, issues, ratio, relief
- Ask this case - answers cite the judgment
- Semantic search - find precedents by meaning
- Research drawer - sections, cites, related cases
No card required · credentials emailed · Log in if you already have an account
- Relied / Followed
-
U.S. 1014 (1981) U.S. Supreme Court Estelle v. JurekSearch
-
U.S. 1014 (1981) Estelle v. JurekSearch
-
that his oral and two written confessions were involuntary and should not have been admitted into evidence. Jurek v. StateSearch
-
penalty statute was constitutional and affirmed, finding that the statute satisfied the principles announced in Furman v. GeorgiaSearch
-
U. S. 238 (1972). Jurek v. TexasSearch
-
for a writ of certiorari, after granting a temporary stay of execution pending timely filing for that writ. Jurek v. EstelleSearch
-
time difference is not enough to constitute a sufficiently isolating break between two confessions. United States v. BayerSearch
-
state appellate court, and a federal district court have determined a confession to be voluntary. Relying on Beckwith v. UnitedSearch
-
Appeals also erred in ignoring the applicability of the harmless error doctrine to the facts of this case. In Milton v. WainwrightSearch
-
or on the extent to which federal habeas courts should defer to state court findings. Following the decision in Furman v. GeorgiaSearch
-
In a series of decisions handed down in 1976 this Court upheld the constitutionality of those statutes, Gregg v. GeorgiaSearch
-
Brief any citation in this list with AI Studio
-
U. S. 242 , including the statute at issue here. Jurek v. TexasSearch
-
U. S. 262 (1976). The opinion announcing the judgment in Gregg v. GeorgiaSearch
-
d) that state-court findings of fact are to be presumed correct. See Sumner v. MataSearch
-
U.S. Supreme Court Estelle v. JurekSearch
-
Jurek v. StateSearch
-
Furman v. GeorgiaSearch
-
Jurek v. TexasSearch
-
Jurek v. EstelleSearch
-
Beckwith v. UnitedSearch
-
In Milton v. WainwrightSearch
-
Gregg v. GeorgiaSearch
-
See Sumner v. MataSearch
AI Brief on cited cases - 7-day free trial