When a defendant goes free because evidence was obtained illegally or a confession was coerced, the public reaction is often outrage. “He got off on a technicality” has become shorthand for justice denied. But the rules being dismissed as technicalities are usually the same rules that protect ordinary citizens from wrongful conviction, illegal searches, and police overreach.
The discomfort is understandable. Procedural protections sometimes free guilty people. The harder truth is that without them, innocent people would be convicted in much greater numbers โ and the public would have no recourse against a state that bent the rules.
What “technicalities” actually are
Most so-called technicalities are constitutional protections. The exclusionary rule, which keeps illegally obtained evidence out of court, comes directly from the Fourth Amendment. Miranda warnings come from the Fifth. Right to counsel comes from the Sixth. These aren’t clever lawyer tricks invented to confuse juries; they’re the structural rules that distinguish a criminal trial from a show trial.
When courts enforce these rules strictly, they’re not being soft on crime. They’re holding the government to the standards it agreed to follow. Police and prosecutors know the rules going in. If they cut corners, the cost falls on the case, not on the defendant’s rights. That tradeoff is deliberate, and it’s the only way to keep enforcement honest in the long run.
The asymmetry the public misses
A wrongfully released guilty person is visible and infuriating. A wrongfully convicted innocent person is largely invisible โ buried in plea deals, lost appeals, and prison sentences that no one outside the family follows. The Innocence Project has documented hundreds of exonerations, many in cases where procedural shortcuts produced unreliable evidence in the first place.
The asymmetry matters because public discourse tends to weight what it sees. We see the murder suspect walking free; we don’t see the dozens of cases where strict enforcement of evidence rules prevented a bad conviction at the front end. Procedural rigor works quietly when it works at all, and that makes it easy to undervalue.
Why even guilty people benefit from strict rules
If procedural protections only kicked in for the innocent, they’d be useless โ there’s no reliable way to identify innocence before the trial. The rules have to apply universally to function. That means guilty people sometimes benefit, and that’s the price of a system that doesn’t presume guilt before evidence is examined.
The alternative is a system in which the state decides which suspects deserve full constitutional protection. That arrangement has been tried in many places throughout history. It does not produce fewer wrongful convictions. It produces more, distributed unevenly across the people the state finds inconvenient.
Bottom line
Calling constitutional protections “technicalities” obscures what they are: the rules that make the difference between justice and force. They occasionally produce uncomfortable outcomes, but the system that enforces them produces fewer wrongful convictions, more honest policing, and stronger public trust over time. The procedural rigor critics resent is the mechanism that makes the verdicts they accept worth accepting.
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