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|Holding=Admitting narrative testimony about the interrogation that elicited an excluded confession can be considered equivalent to the excluded confession, requiring it to also be excluded. |
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|Holding=Admitting narrative testimony about the interrogation that elicited an excluded confession can be considered equivalent to the excluded confession, requiring it to also be excluded. |
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|Majority=Black |
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|JoinMajority=''unanimous'' |
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|Concurrence=Frankfurter (in judgment) |
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|NotParticipating=Jackson |
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'''''Ashcraft v. Tennessee''''', {{ussc|volume=327|page=274|year=1946|el=no}}, was a ] case in which the court held that admitting narrative testimony about the interrogation that elicited an excluded confession can be considered equivalent to the excluded confession, requiring it to also be excluded.<ref name="case">{{ussc|name=Ashcraft v. Tennessee|volume=327|page=274|year=1946}}.</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Bennett |first=John Ballard |date=1954 |title=Decade of Change Since the Ashcraft Case |journal=Tex. L. Rev. |volume=32 |pages=429}}</ref> |
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'''''Ashcraft v. Tennessee''''', {{ussc|volume=327|page=274|year=1946|el=no}}, was a ] case in which the court held that admitting narrative testimony about the interrogation that elicited an excluded ] can be considered equivalent to the excluded confession, requiring it to also be excluded.<ref name="case">{{ussc|name=Ashcraft v. Tennessee|volume=327|page=274|year=1946}}.</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Bennett |first=John Ballard |date=1954 |title=Decade of Change Since the Ashcraft Case |journal=Tex. L. Rev. |volume=32 |pages=429}}</ref> |
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== See also == |
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== See also == |