Columbo's methods
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sidgirl — 9 months ago(June 17, 2025 02:20 AM)
the murderers admit to the crime so these cases are never taken into the court of law the criminal is taken straight to jail.
I know this is old, but…you do know that's not how that works, right? Like, not remotely. A confession doesn't mean you just go directly to jail for whatever amount of time without any involvement with the Court. The 6th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees the accused the right to a fair and public trial with an impartial jury of one's peers, the right to confront witnesses and examine evidence, and the right to an attorney, whether one has confessed or not.
Every single one of these cases will have, at the very least, bail hearings and thus potentially bail being granted, discovery (wherein the defendant's attorney examines all of the evidence; the defendant's attorney will of course meet with the defendant a number of times, also), meetings between the prosecutor and the defendant's attorney wherein a plea bargain is made if desired (e.g. the defendant pleads guilty to Second Degree Murder or Manslaughter in exchange for a lighter sentence, or maybe they plead to First Degree and in exchange the other charges–obstruction, evidence tampering, blackmail, theft, whatever–are dropped, or even they plead just to avoid going to trial or avoid the death penalty), which is then taken to a court of law before a judge. The judge reads the charges and the plea bargain into the record, makes sure the defendant agrees to it, and then either approves it (thus officially adjudicating the defendant "Guilty") or–very rarely–does not approve it for some reason, in which case there likely will be a trial.
Or the defendant decides to recant his or her confession, and/or their attorney advises them that the evidence is extremely slim, so they decide to plead Not Guilty and go to trial.
Either way, a confession does not negate or render invalid the accused's Constitutional rights. -
MilesCo — 9 years ago(January 02, 2017 02:41 PM)
I think for the most part, yes.
I recall a particularly interesting situation in
Suitable For Framing
in which the good lieutenant put his hands on a couple of stolen glass-framed paintings that were in a bag being carried by the murderer, but did not remove them or see them. He was able to prove that the murderer ("Dale Kingston") had the paintings in his bag at the crucial time by showing that Columbo's fingerprints were on them. If Columbo had removed the paintings from Kingston's bag, that would have been considered a search or seizure (done without permission or a warrant), and any evidence pertaining thereto would have been inadmissible. But the mere existence of Columbo's fingerprints on the paintings would
not
be considered a search or seizure, and thus that fact
would
be admissible in court. I thought that was quite clever. (Along with Columbo's sagacious decision to put gloves on his hands later when confronting Kingston with that fact, in order to quash Kingston's predictable response that Columbo had just touched the paintings at that time.)
Contrast that, however, with
Candidate For Crime
, where, if I recall correctly, Lt. Columbo dug a bullet out of a wall in the bedroom of Nelson Hayward's hotel suite, hours before Hayward claimed that he had been shot at. That bedroom was a personal area, and was not accessible or at least, was not supposed to be accessible to anyone but Hayward himself and his invited guests. Thus, Hayward would have had a reasonable expectation of privacy, and Columbo's entering that room and removing a bullet from the wall (without permission or a search warrant) would have been unconstitutional and the resulting evidence would be inadmissible.
But that was a rare misstep, and I think most of Columbo's investigatory techniques would have been considered legally valid. -
sidgirl — 9 months ago(June 17, 2025 02:36 AM)
I was just thinking about the Suitable For Framing situation. Dale gave Columbo a key to his place, and thus permission to be there, but iirc by the time Columbo asked to see the painting in the bag, Dale had asked him to leave. So he'd rescinded permission to be in his apartment, which could mean Columbo's prints on the painting would be inadmissible/fruit of the poisonous tree, since Columbo was no longer legally in the apartment.
BUT, Dale let Columbo touch the painting…which would mean Columbo handled them lawfully. So
not
fruit of the poisonous tree. But Dale's lawyer could argue that since Dale had already asked him to leave, Columbo shouldn't even have been there to ask, and could even say Dale felt coerced.
I (NAL) would assume that's a question for the judge to decide, but it's interesting to think about (at least for me). There are a few issues like that which come up in some episodes; iirc in Lady in Waiting (might have been the one with the fake kidnapping and orchids), the suspect asked for a lawyer but Columbo continued to question her, or the bullet-in-the-bedroom issue you mentioned, or at least a couple of episodes where entrapment could be argued.
I'd say about 1/3 of the episodes I find myself thinking, "Any reasonably clever lawyer would be able to get that guy acquitted," but it's still always fun to watch Columbo figure it out!