Plead the Fifth? - Page 2

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-Aarya- thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#12
373577 thumbnail
Posted: 13 years ago
#13
^^ If the person s deaf you could make him read his rights provided he is not blind and literate. My concern was does he deserve the right to be read his rights when he did not bother about the victim's right to safety.
The absurdity we get to observe so often in the whole law and order thingy cracks me up when not tearing my hair in frustration😒
seoulbeats thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#14
Maybe further investigation should take place to find some evidence against him? But I guess that's kind of pointless since he already confessed...

I think it's one of those questions which doesn't have a right answer.

Should his rights (pleading the fifth) overpower his crime (confession)?

For me that's a definite no. By which I don't mean to say that it was okay to violate his rights, just stating what I would have prioritized.
seoulbeats thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#15

Originally posted by: zorrro

^^ If the person s deaf you could make him read his rights provided he is not blind and literate. My concern was does he deserve the right to be read his rights when he did not bother about the victim's right to safety.

The absurdity we get to observe so often in the whole law and order thingy cracks me up when not tearing my hair in frustration😒


I assure you- balding is no solution to this😆

The passing of bills is mistaken for taking solid action.I tried reading some articles and it made my head hurt real bad.Well, next time I'll make sure I stay well out of a hundred mile radius of a legal document.
Edited by -Zeffa- - 13 years ago
-Aarya- thumbnail
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Posted: 13 years ago
#16

Originally posted by: -Zeffa-

Maybe further investigation should take place to find some evidence against him? But I guess that's kind of pointless since he already confessed...


I think it's one of those questions which doesn't have a right answer.

Should his rights (pleading the fifth) overpower his crime (confession)?

For me that's a definite no. By which I don't mean to say that it was okay to violate his rights, just stating what I would have prioritized.



Agree with you, but then if one right protects him and the other right puts him behind bar, then prioritization is really at par!

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