BEWARE: MIRANDA RIGHTS RESTRICTED — Another Constitutional Right flies out the Door

gavel 300x223 BEWARE: MIRANDA RIGHTS RESTRICTED    Another Constitutional Right flies out the Door

KNOW YOUR RIGHTS

BEWARE: MIRANDA RIGHTS RESTRICTED – Another Constitutional Right flies out the Door

By Marti Hiken

The words we hear in so many movies and television shows when someone is arrested, “Read him his Miranda rights,” no longer have meaning. These rights are dead because the courts have “interpreted” them out of existence. Throughout our country, if you don’t say the right words during police interrogations, your rights to remain silent and to a lawyer don’t kick in. This leads to unfettered police power when any arrestee tries to protect herself in a powerless situation when confronted by the police. And in a courtroom, all your statements are admissible against you.

This is about the only phrase left to ensure that you retain your rights:  “I want to remain silent. I want a lawyer.” Again, another way: “I don’t want to speak to you anymore without my lawyer being present.” It is important not to answer further questions after asserting these rights; instead, merely repeat the statement.

The reason for the Miranda warnings in the first place was that the torture and cruelty inflicted on prisoners in this country decades ago and especially in the South, brought a public outcry. It resulted in the Miranda v. Arizona, (384 U.S. 436) decision in 1966.

In that decision, the Court attempted to strike the appropriate balance between law enforcement interests in obtaining a confession and a suspect’s Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself.  “….[T]he decision mandated that the suspect be informed prior to any custodial interrogation that he has the right to remain silent and the right to an attorney and that no interrogation can occur until the suspect waives these rights. Moreover, the suspect can assert these rights any point during the interrogation and, if he does, questioning must immediately cease.”  (Strauss, Marcy, “The Sounds of Silence: Reconsidering the Invocation of the Right to Remain Silent Under Miranda,” “William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal,” March 2009. In her article Strauss lists the status of the courts’ interpretations of Miranda warnings state-by-state.)

Custodial police interrogations can go on for hours on end and the Miranda Court “recognized that they were so inherently coercive as to create a presumption that a resulting confession was involuntary unless the suspect was explicitly told prior to questioning that he need not answer questions and that he had the right to consult with an attorney for advice.” (Ainsworth, Janet, “’You have the right to remain silent…’ but only if you ask for it just so: the role of linguistic ideology in American police interrogation law.” The International Journal of Speech, Language and the Law, Vol. 15.1, 2008, p. 3)

The problem is that “ambiguous” statements aren’t enough, and in actuality, everything you say will be interpreted by the courts to be ambiguous other than the sentences:  “I want to remain silent. I want a lawyer.” Invoking the Miranda rights means clear, unequivocal and unambiguous declarations in the interrogation room. Of course, in jail there is a power disadvantage in that the tempo, timing, and level of brutality are set by the police.

So, no hedged or indirect language invokes the rights.

- No theoretical comments about the availability of counsel, such as

“Could I get a lawyer?” or “May I call a lawyer?”

- No language that softens the demand for a lawyer:

“It seems like I need a lawyer.”

- No logistic questions:

“Could you get me my wallet and bring my lawyer’s business card to me?”

- No imploring ambiguous language:

“I don’t want to talk about it.” or “I won’t talk anymore.”

- No being and remaining silent (you must be definite and utter words)

- No combining demands:

“Screw you, talk to my lawyer.” or “I don’t feel like I can talk with you without any attorney sitting right here to give me some legal advice.”

The situation becomes bleaker, however, in the case Davis v. United States (1994) U.S. 452:

-    “Give me a lawyer” or “I want a lawyer” are not deemed by the police or courts as kicking in your constitutional rights. (Note that wanting and requesting a lawyer is not the same thing as your right to remain silent by taking the Fifth.)-     Refusing to sign a form indicating a waiver of your rights when coupled with incriminating statements to the police does not invoke your rights. (The incriminating statements obtained by the police are proof that your rights were waived.) To state simply: Make an incriminating statement and your rights are waived.Underlying all of this is that judges now have no compunction regarding the role of unlimited and brutal interrogation, torture, and intimidation by the police. They also ignore the context that language plays when someone communicates in an abusive situation. Finally, the social context of the arrestee and his intentions become blurred by language. Losing our Miranda rights is simply another step in the wrong direction.

Marti Hiken is the executive director of Progressive Avenues. She can be reached at mlhiken@comcast.net

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  • markadamsjdmba

    Also, you should always invoke your right to remain silent. For more on that, see Law Professor James Duane explain why you should not talk to the police at
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4097602514885833865#

    Police often blame witnesses and sometimes even arrest victims. So, you should be very careful when dealing with them. Try to get all of the conversation recorded by carrying and using a recorder or video camera, or at the least, call someone on your cell phone and have them listen. The cops don’t like it, but it can keep you from being framed.

    If you don’t believe that cops arrest victims, then see a link to that in Why does the U.S. Government Torture People? at http://dailycensored.com/2009/06/24/why-does-the-u-s-government-torture-people/

    If you take a look, you’ll see the admissions by Congress and the DOJ about horrible abuses by law enforcement and you’ll learn why they get away with violating our rights, abusing their power, and committing horrible crimes. My article includes a link to the U.S. Supreme Court case which explains how one of our stolen rights makes the difference between justice and injustice, between freedom and slavery.

  • scyllacat

    Ah, I thought you were going to tell me something I didn’t already know.

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  • JD

    If ever there was a time to discuss political oppression, here it is. All hail big brother.

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