• LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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    1 个月前

    My advice to my son has always been: if you’re arrested for any reason, whether you did the thing or not, you become a Pokémon named ‘lawyer’.

    • doubtingtammy@lemmy.ml
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      1 个月前

      This is better advice than staying silent (at least in the US). If you stay silent, then police can keep questioning you for as long as you’re silent and they want to. When you say you want a lawyer, then they’re required to stop questioning you.

      In other words, the act of remaining silent is not enough to invoke your right to silence. You need to break your silence in order to invoke your right to silence

    • manuallybreathing@lemmy.ml
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      1 个月前

      You need to specificly say “I want to speak with my lawyer”, cops in the usa have been able to deny someone saying something like ‘dont I get to speak to a lawyer’ isnt specific enough

      • Liz@midwest.social
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        1 个月前

        Dude got denied once for saying “I want a lawyer, dog.” The courts upheld the he might have been referring to a dog that is a lawyer.

  • communism@lemmy.ml
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    1 个月前

    …the right to remain silent is literal. Don’t do propaganda for cops and prosecutors. You can be completely silent; it is your right to, and you should exercise it (or reply “no comment”, but literal silence falls under the right to remain silent too).

    • MrEff
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      1 个月前

      Actually, there was a Supreme Court case about this. If you just sit there and say nothing after they give you your Miranda rights, they can make assumptions about things or simply continue for as long as they want. The case concluded with- you must declare that you understand your rights in some way and that you are invoking that right.