Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Talked for 16 Hours Before He Was Read His Rights
April
27th, 2013
According
to the AP, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev answered questions for 16 hours before
he was read the Miranda warning that he could remain silent and could
ask for a lawyer. Once Tsarnaev was told that, he stopped talking.
(So much for the idea that everyone has heard Miranda warnings so
many times on TV that they have become an empty ritual.) The AP also
reports that the investigators questioning him were “surprised when
a magistrate judge and a representative from the U.S. Attorney’s
office entered the hospital room.” The investigators “had planned
to keep questioning him.”
Wow.
That’s bad no matter your point of view. If you think Tsarnaev
doesn’t deserve the normal protections American law affords
criminal suspects, then you’d want the FBI to keep at him as long
as they chose. Or if, like me, you’re worried about how far the
Obama administration’s Justice Department has stretched the limited
“public safety” exception the Supreme Court has allowed for
questioning suspects about ongoing danger without Miranda warnings,
16 hours sounds expansive.
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