Self-Incrimination — related Supreme Court cases
This page groups Supreme Court cases that involve the constitutional concept “Self-Incrimination”. Use it to explore related decisions and see how the same idea shows up across different cases.
“Self-Incrimination” is:
Protection against being compelled to testify or provide incriminating evidence against oneself.
Source: Fifth Amendment Where this concept definition/label comes from (for example, a constitutional provision or a reference framework).
Cases
These are cases where this concept was identified as relevant. Click a case to view its summary, holding, and supporting syllabus excerpts.
-
Vega v. Tekoh
23rd June 2022
The case revolves around whether a violation of Miranda rights constitutes a violation of the Fifth Amendment right against compelled self-incrimination.
-
Greer v. United States
14th June 2021
The case involves the defendants' knowledge of their status as felons, which relates to their admissions during plea colloquies and the implications of such admissions on their convictions.



