Our friends up in Washington use times like this to stretch the envelope on civil liberties
Apparently there is great concern about this kid not being read his rights, then being waterboarded, then attacked by a drone, then possibly forced to sit through a "Sex in the City" marathon...I'm confused what exactly you are getting at here.
We don't know what he was asked prior to (assuming he hasn't been read them yet) being Mirandized. We don't know what, if any, of that the government will attempt to submit to court.
If the government asked questions too broad in nature and the court allows the responses as evidence, then we've taken a step down that path. No?
This is not a case of an improper arrest or detainment. People are protected against self-incrimination by the Constitution and that is solely a courts issue. Authorities can ask anything of anyone before reading them their rights and they don't have to answer (what are we gonna do, waterboard them?), they can ask for a lawyer and it won't be denied, etc. Correct me if I'm wrong in any of this, your background here is probably stronger than mine.
Not reading Miranda rights =/= forcing the detainee to answer questions.
For all we know, at this time, they haven't asked him anything more than "Are there any other bombs and accomplices?" and/or they won't use any of his responses to make the case against him.
Yes you are right about that. But what if they perpetually refused to Mirandize him so they could get information. Isn't it a violation of his rights not to let him have access to an attorney. I presume at some point they have to charge him and give him a free lawyer.There still appears to be a lot of confusion about Miranda Rights on the internet. What a shock...
They are not some mythical right that you are actually granted in that there is NO requirement to read you Miranda Rights. None. If you are arrested and not read your Miranda Rights, that in itself is not a violation of your rights because no such requirement to actually read them to you exists. Where your rights are violated is if information you give while detained is then used against you in a court. You have the right to not have that information used against you in court if you have been read your Miranda Rights.
Now, there is a public safety exception that allows no Miranda Rights to be read and still have that information be used in court. And it seems that is what is being used in this case. That is entirely open to debate. The previous paragraph is not.
They have charged him. And he's been assigned a public defender.(Hopefully this guy -Yes you are right about that. But what if they perpetually refused to Mirandize him so they could get information. Isn't it a violation of his rights not to let him have access to an attorney. I presume at some point they have to charge him and give him a free lawyer.There still appears to be a lot of confusion about Miranda Rights on the internet. What a shock...
They are not some mythical right that you are actually granted in that there is NO requirement to read you Miranda Rights. None. If you are arrested and not read your Miranda Rights, that in itself is not a violation of your rights because no such requirement to actually read them to you exists. Where your rights are violated is if information you give while detained is then used against you in a court. You have the right to not have that information used against you in court if you have been read your Miranda Rights.
Now, there is a public safety exception that allows no Miranda Rights to be read and still have that information be used in court. And it seems that is what is being used in this case. That is entirely open to debate. The previous paragraph is not.
I don't think denying him a lawyer was ever part of the equation. Please correct me if I'm wrong. Perpetually refusing to Mirandize him simply means nothing he says can get used in court (unless it's allowed by the public safety exemption, which I don't think extends as far as perpetual, at least not yet).Yes you are right about that. But what if they perpetually refused to Mirandize him so they could get information. Isn't it a violation of his rights not to let him have access to an attorney. I presume at some point they have to charge him and give him a free lawyer.
Or, maybe part of another reason they didn't "mirandize" him immediately, was the fact that they weren't sure he was going to live? I mean, being shot in the neck doesn't do much for your life expectancy...I don't think denying him a lawyer was ever part of the equation. Please correct me if I'm wrong. Perpetually refusing to Mirandize him simply means nothing he says can get used in court (unless it's allowed by the public safety exemption, which I don't think extends as far as perpetual, at least not yet).Yes you are right about that. But what if they perpetually refused to Mirandize him so they could get information. Isn't it a violation of his rights not to let him have access to an attorney. I presume at some point they have to charge him and give him a free lawyer.
They didn't Mirandize him because they did not need to. One even said they knew how many hours the public emergency exception was good for. I'm just curious if they simply did not then would he be given a lawyer? There would be a habeous corpus writ if he was left in jail perpetually but that could be a few weeks.Or, maybe part of another reason they didn't "mirandize" him immediately, was the fact that they weren't sure he was going to live? I mean, being shot in the neck doesn't do much for your life expectancy...I don't think denying him a lawyer was ever part of the equation. Please correct me if I'm wrong. Perpetually refusing to Mirandize him simply means nothing he says can get used in court (unless it's allowed by the public safety exemption, which I don't think extends as far as perpetual, at least not yet).Yes you are right about that. But what if they perpetually refused to Mirandize him so they could get information. Isn't it a violation of his rights not to let him have access to an attorney. I presume at some point they have to charge him and give him a free lawyer.
http://gawker.com/tsarnaev-brothers-acted-alone-on-plan-driven-by-tamerl-477804884According to CNN and AP's federal sources, Dzhokhar told authorities that the brothers were motivated by a radical, jihadist interpretation of Islam, but that they trained and planned the attack themselves, spurred on by videos they found online Jake Tapper reports that Dzhokhar also indicated that Tamerlan was, as many had speculated, the "driving force" behind the attacks. Investigators are currently attempting to independently verify Dzhokhar's claims.