- Joined
- May 5, 2022
The answer to that is a bit complicated. The current (relatively new) guidance is that you must unequivocally invoke your right and stay silent. I guess you could invoke, make a statement (waive), invoke again, but can not imagine that looking good to a jury despite the 5th amendment protections (@An0minous thoughts?).There's something I have been wondering about, concerning your right to remain silent and the jury not being allowed to take that into account:
What happens if I talk to the police about certain things and remain silent on others. Can the jury take the partial silence into account and assume that what I refused to say was bad for me? Or would that violate the 5th amendment.
Just remaining silent is not sufficient to invoke your 5th amendment rights as they wrote in Miranda, Berghuis v. Thompkins overrules that, see the following (bold mine):
Although Miranda imposes on the police a rule that is both formalistic and practical when it prevents them from interrogating suspects without first providing them with a Miranda warning, see Burbine, 475 U. S., at 427, it does not impose a formalistic waiver procedure that a suspect must follow to relinquish those rights.
[...]
In sum, a suspect who has received and understood the Miranda warnings, and has not invoked his Miranda rights, waives the right to remain silent by making an uncoerced statement to the police. Thompkins did not invoke his right to remain silent and stop the questioning. Understanding his rights in full, he waived his right to remain silent by making a voluntary statement to the police. The police, moreover, were not required to obtain a waiver of Thompkins’s right to remain silent before interrogating him.
I've got a horrifying idea that I need a scale for, but how much salt (in Nick's case coke) can you fill an level in a .22lr case?speculation about the shell casings.
The rifle under the bed may not be careless, is his door a deadbolt lock? Are there windows? take away the high on coke part and I feel not enough information to make a call.Also, just my own opinion here, but I don't trust somebody that leaves their firearms and rounds so carelessly laying around.
I knew someone who slept with a rifle in his arms.