Yuma Sun

Retired Phoenix police officer in 1963 landmark Miranda rights case dies at 87

- BY ANITA SNOW

PHOENIX – Retired Phoenix Police Capt. Carroll Cooley, the arresting officer in the landmark case partially responsibl­e for the Supreme Court’s Miranda rights ruling that requires suspects be read their rights, has died, the department confirmed Friday. He was 87.

Phoenix police said in a brief statement that Cooley died on May 29 after an unspecifie­d illness. The location and exact cause of his death were not immediatel­y available, nor was informatio­n about services or survivors.

Cooley joined the Phoenix department in 1958 and retired two decades later.

On March 13, 1963, Cooley

arrested Ernesto Miranda in the kidnap and rape of an 18-year-old Phoenix woman. Miranda was eventually convicted based on his handwritte­n confession and sentenced to 20-30 years in prison.

Miranda appealed, and the case eventually went up to the U.S. Supreme Court, which issued a 1966 ruling overturnin­g the conviction, saying that suspects should be advised of their constituti­onal rights against self-incriminat­ion and to an attorney before questionin­g.

That decision, along with three other similar cases that were bundled together, led to the so-called “Miranda rights” or “Miranda warning,” which is familiar to anyone who has watched a police procedural drama on television.

“You have the right to remain silent,” it begins. “Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.

“You have the right to speak to an attorney. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you,” it continues.

After the Supreme Court overturned his conviction, Miranda remained in jail on another conviction and was convicted again of raping and kidnapping the 18-year-old. Prosecutor­s at the second trial didn’t use the confession and instead relied on testimony from a woman who was close to Miranda.

After he was paroled, Miranda was fatally stabbed in February 1976 in a dispute during a card game at a downtown Phoenix bar.

During his career with Phoenix police, Cooley worked in the city’s Maryvale precinct, the general investigat­ions bureau, and the police academy. He rose to become captain, a rank the department said is equivalent to commander today.

After retiring from the police department in December 1978, Cooley went on to work for the Arizona Motor Vehicle Division and the Arizona Department of Public Safety.

He also volunteere­d at the Phoenix Police Museum, where in 2013 he recounted his story before a 50th anniversar­y display about the Miranda arrest.

 ?? MATT YORK/AP ?? RETIRED PHOENIX POLICE CAPT. CARROLL COOLEY demonstrat­es March 13, 2013, at the Phoenix Police Museum in Phoenix, how Ernesto Miranda was fingerprin­ted on the same fingerprin­ting device used on Miranda. Cooley, the arresting officer in the landmark self-incriminat­ion case that led in part to the Supreme Court’s Miranda rights ruling requiring officers to read suspects their rights, died on Monday, May 29, after an unspecifie­d illness, the department confirmed Friday. He was 87.
MATT YORK/AP RETIRED PHOENIX POLICE CAPT. CARROLL COOLEY demonstrat­es March 13, 2013, at the Phoenix Police Museum in Phoenix, how Ernesto Miranda was fingerprin­ted on the same fingerprin­ting device used on Miranda. Cooley, the arresting officer in the landmark self-incriminat­ion case that led in part to the Supreme Court’s Miranda rights ruling requiring officers to read suspects their rights, died on Monday, May 29, after an unspecifie­d illness, the department confirmed Friday. He was 87.

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