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Criminal
Defense of Immigrants
Chapter
1: Criminal Defense of Noncitizens
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1.46 1. The Right to an Interpreter in
Criminal
Proceedings
The right
to a court interpreter for non- and limited-English speaking
parties and witnesses is implicit in the Fifth, Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
The broad Fifth Amendment right not to be deprived of life,
liberty or property without due process of law, the more
specific Sixth Amendment rights of a criminal defendant
to counsel, to a speedy trial, to be informed of the nature
and cause of the accusation, to confront and cross-examine
the witnesses, and the Fourteenth Amendment rights to due
process and equal protection of the laws are significantly
impaired, if not completely denied, when a party to judicial
proceedings cannot speak or understand English. The courts,
therefore, have explicitly recognized a limited-English-proficient
defendant's constitutional right to a competent interpreter
in criminal proceedings.
Not
only for the sake of effective cross-examination,
however, but as a matter of simple humanness, Negron
deserved more than to sit in total incomprehension
as the trial proceeded. Particularly inappropriate
in this nation where many languages are spoken is
a callousness to the crippling language handicap
of a newcomer to its shores, whose life and freedom
the state, by its criminal processes chooses to
put in jeopardy.FN263
In another case,
the court explained the right to an interpreter in criminal
proceedings as follows:
Clearly,
the right to confront witnesses would be meaningless
if the accused could not understand their testimony,
and the effectiveness of cross-examination would
be severely hampered [citations omitted]. If
the defendant takes the stand in his [or her] own
behalf, but has an imperfect command of English,
there exists the additional danger that he [or she]
will either misunderstand crucial questions or that
the jury will misconstrue crucial responses. The
right to an interpreter rests most fundamentally,
however, on the notion that no defendant should
face the Kafkaesque spectre of an incomprehensible
ritual, which may terminate in punishment.FN264
The right
to an interpreter in federal courts was extended to all
criminal proceedings through the passage of the Federal
Court Interpreters Act.FN265As
amended in 1988, this Act mandates the use of certified
or otherwise qualified interpreters in all criminal proceedings
for people who primarily speak a language other than English;
and it explicitly provides for whom that right is accorded,
and how that right should be recognized. Several states
have enacted similar statutes (13 at the end of 1996), and
even state constitutional amendments, mandating the appointment
of court interpreters for limited- and non-English speaking
defendants in criminal cases.FN266
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