Kuhlmann v. Wilson, 477 U.S. 436 (1986)
Kuhlmann v. Wilson is a seminal case in constitutional law, focusing on the scope of defendants' Sixth Amendment rights.
Does the placement of an informant in a defendant's cell, who merely listens without actively eliciting statements, violate the defendant's Sixth Amendment right to counsel?
The Sixth Amendment right to counsel is not violated when an informant positioned to passively listen to a defendant does not engage in active interrogation or elicit statements from the defendant.
The Supreme Court held that the informant's actions did not violate Wilson's Sixth Amendment rights because the informant did not deliberately elicit information from Wilson. The statements were made voluntarily by Wilson without any prompting from the informant, thus making them admissible.
Kuhlmann v. Wilson is significant for its clarification on the role of informants and the boundaries of the Sixth Amendment. It delineates the permissible scope of using informants to gather evidence without infringing on a defendant's right to counsel. The decision underscores the importance of the nature of interaction between defendants and informants, specifically distinguishing passive receptivity from active interrogation. This case equips law students with a nuanced understanding of constitutional protections in criminal proceedings, shaping their comprehension of evidence admissibility and defendants' rights.