State v. Rodriguez
Annotate this CaseThe State charged Anthony Rodriguez with second-degree sexual abuse, willful injury, and domestic abuse assault. Ultimately, the district court dismissed the case due to a speedy trial rights violation. The court of appeals reversed. At issue on appeal was whether the State was entitled to an independent psychiatric evaluation of Rodriguez, a request the district court had denied. The Supreme Court affirmed the court of appeals and reversed the district court, holding (1) when a defendant puts at issue his mental capacity to knowingly, intelligently, or voluntarily waive his Miranda rights, the State is entitled to obtain an independent psychiatric evaluation of the defendant; (2) in order to protect the defendant's constitutional right against self-incrimination in these cases, the safeguards found in State v. Craney regarding the expert's testimony following the evaluation are applicable; and (3) the expert should not disclose to the State the same matters about which Craney prohibits an expert from testifying. Remanded.
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