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Live Event

Search & Seizure and Confessions from A to Z


Total Credits: 3.25 CLE, 3.25 Criminal Law Specialization

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Categories:
Criminal Litigation |  Public Lawyers
Faculty:
Christina M Cabanillas
Location:
State Bar of Arizona - Southern Regional Office - Tucson, AZ

Dates


Description

Join us in-person in Phoenix or via a group-viewing in our Tucson office.  Christina M. Cabanillas will present an upbeat, quick-moving discussion of the core principles and rules of law governing the admissibility of physical evidence under the Fourth Amendment, as well as the admissibility of a criminal defendant’s statements under the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments.  Ms. Cabanillas will discuss federal and Arizona law governing both topics, including from her two publications below, which will constitute the materials for the presentation.
Attendees will receive a copy of Ms. Cabanillas’ updated 2023 Search & Seizure book and a copy of her new 2023 Confessions book, which are companion publications (valued at $195 for both).  They are quick reference practice manuals geared to busy criminal law practitioners, and were prepared by the author pro bono for the State Bar of Arizona.
Topics in the books, and to be discussed at the presentation, include:


Search & Seizure

  •     General Rules & Preliminary Questions (Expectation of Privacy, Was There Search
         or Seizure, Necessity of State Action)
  •     Arrest & Search Warrants
  •     Consensual Encounters, Stops, Detentions & Arrests
  •     Border Stops & Searches
  •     Frisks
  •     Plain View
  •     Consent Searches
  •     Vehicle Searches with Probable Cause
  •     Exigent Circumstances & Emergency Aid
  •     Searches Incident to Arrest
  •     Inventory Searches
  •     Protective Sweeps
  •     Hotel & Motel Searches
  •     Administrative Searches
  •     Exclusionary Rule & Exceptions
  •     Appeal 
  •     Tips for Motions to Suppress Physical Evidence and Responses

Confessions

  •     Preliminary Considerations (Burdens of Proof, Testimonial Evidence, State Action, Etc.)
  •     Fifth Amendment and Miranda v. Arizona
  •     Exceptions to Miranda rule
  •     What Constitutes Custody and Interrogation under Miranda
  •     Admonishment and Waiver
  •     Invocation and Reinitiation 
  •     Special Situations (Juveniles, DUI cases, Employees, Federal Defendants)
  •     Voluntariness of Confessions (Due Process)
  •     Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel
  •     Federal Presentment Delay Issues (McNabb/Mallory)
  •     Subsequent Statements and Derivative Evidence
  •     Trial Issues (Including Impeachment Rules, Commenting on Silence, and Bruton Issues)
  •     Appeal 
  •     Tips for Motions to Suppress Statements and Responses

Presenter:
Christina Cabanillas, United States Attorney's Office, District of Arizona

Faculty

Christina M Cabanillas Related Seminars and Products

Assistant U.S. Attorney

United States Attorneys Office


Christina M. Cabanillas is an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the U.S Attorney’s Office in the District of Arizona, where she has served as Appellate Chief, Senior Litigation Counsel, Deputy Appellate Chief, International Coordinator, and a trial attorney in the Criminal Division. She has litigated criminal, civil, international, appellate, and other matters in state and federal trial and appellate courts, and is a former deputy county attorney. Ms. Cabanillas has taught a variety of legal topics locally and nationally, particularly criminal law and procedure and appellate practice. She served a detail as an Assistant Director for the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) Office of Legal Education, where she organized courses and conducted legal training for attorneys and staff. She has taught appellate advocacy and legal research and writing at the University of Arizona College of Law and Pima Community College. She was a contributing author to ARIZONA DUI TRIAL NOTEBOOK (2d ed. 2005), and IMMIGRATION LAW, OFFICE OF LEGAL EDUC., U.S. DEP’T OF JUSTICE (4th Ed. 2005). She has participated in many bar and other community and volunteer activities.
In 2019, Ms. Cabanillas received the Pima County Bar Association’s inaugural John M. Roll Award for longtime professionalism, excellence, and dedication as a state and federal prosecutor, legal instructor, and community volunteer. She received the 2015 George H. Lyons Mentor Award from Arizona’s Finest Lawyers for excellence in mentoring law students, and in 2013, she received the Attorney General’s Distinguished Service Award, the second-highest DOJ award for employee performance, for her work contributing to United States v. Loughner, 672 F.3d 731 (9th Cir. 2012). Other awards have included the Arizona State Bar’s Continuing Legal Education Award for her pro bono teaching and writing, the U.S. Attorney’s Distinguished Service Award, and two Department of Justice awards for excellence as a legal instructor and for her work contributing to United States v. Arvizu, 534 U.S. 266 (2002).
Ms. Cabanillas earned her J.D. from the University of Arizona and her B.A. from Arizona State University. She spent most of her childhood abroad because her mother worked for the U.S. Foreign Service, living in South America, Africa, Europe, and Mexico. She is proficient in Spanish and French.
Ms. Cabanillas wishes to thank her family, friends, and colleagues, past and present, for their support. She is also grateful to the Arizona State Bar, Arizona Prosecuting Attorneys Advisory Council, Arizona Supreme Court Judicial Education Division, Department of Justice, University of Arizona College of Law, and the many judges, law enforcement officers, prosecutors, attorneys, law students, and others who have encouraged her teaching and writing.


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Location

State Bar of Arizona - Southern Regional Office

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270 N Church Ave., Ste. 100, Tucson, AZ 85701 , United States
520-623-9944
azbar.org