Skip to content

North Carolina Criminal Law

A UNC School of Government Blog

Silhouette of North Carolina
  • Home
  • About this Blog
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe

Day: January 3, 2013

blank

Requiring the Defendant to Pose for the Jury

January 3, 2013 Jessica Smith

Suppose in a robbery case that the State asks the defendant–who does not plan to testify–to stand in the courtroom wearing a mask allegedly worn by the robber. The defense objects on grounds of self-incrimination. How should the court rule? Case law holds that requiring a defendant to stand or otherwise exhibit himself or herself … Read more

Categories Evidence, Uncategorized Tags self-incrimination 1 Comment

Categories

  • Case Summaries
  • Crimes and Elements
  • Evidence
  • Judicial Authority and Administration
  • Motor Vehicles
  • Procedure
  • Search and Seizure
  • Sentencing
  • Uncategorized

Authors

Alexander Cowell (3)
Alyson Grine (16)
Rebecca Fisher-Gabbard (2)
Brittany Bromell (72)
Michael Crowell (7)
Christopher Tyner (262)
Phil Dixon (180)
James Drennan (1)
Emily Coward (8)
Belal Elrahal (15)
Ethan Rex (3)
Bob Farb (46)
Joseph L. Hyde (37)
Hannah Turner (8)
Ian Mance (3)
Jacquelyn Greene (71)
Jonathan Holbrook (56)
Jamie Markham (546)
John Rubin (96)
Kirsten Leloudis (1)
Kristi Nickodem (3)
LaToya Powell (7)
Caitlin Little (1)
Maggie Bailey (3)
Chris McLaughlin (1)
Melanie Crenshaw (2)
Meredith Smith (4)
M. Jeanette Pitts (2)
Alex Phipps (85)
Sara DePasquale (9)
Shea Denning (622)
Jessica Smith (252)
SOG Staff (77)
Daniel Spiegel (26)
Timothy Heinle (5)
Tom Thornburg (6)
Jeffrey Welty (1182)
Whitney Fairbanks (1)

Knapp-Sanders Building
Campus Box 3330, UNC Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3330
T: (919) 966-5381 | F: (919) 962-0654

Accessibility

Admin Links

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

© 2023 Copyright, North Carolina Criminal Law at the School of Government with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

© 2025 North Carolina Criminal Law • Built with GeneratePress