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How To (and How Not To) Invoke Your Rights to Silence and Counsel (with Examples!)

* This video is based on a previous upload. The previous version may have contained some inaccuracies. Consequently, the final sections of the video were re-recorded (as of 7:05).

Intro: (0:00)
Invocation can be difficult: (0:27)
Right to counsel: (3:15)
Right to silence: (5:06)
Invocation of rights: (7:05)
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- This video creator did not receive any payment from the authors of the books cited in the video. This video does not contain any paid promotion.
- Policing is different across nations. This video is based on books discussing policing in the USA.
- Music files retrieved from YouTube Audio Library.
- All images used in this video are free stock images or are available in the public domain and are labeled for free reuse with modifications.
- Animations are made with Sparkol.
- The content of this video is presented as general information only. The information contained in this video is not legal advice and should not be treated as such. Consult your lawyer should you need legal advice.
- The creator of this video takes no responsibility for how the information presented in this video is interpreted or used by others. The creator of this video is in no event liable for damages of any kind incurred or suffered as a result of the use or non-use of the information presented in this video or the use of defective or incomplete information as contained in this video.
- The views expressed in this video are my own and do not necessarily reflect the organizations with which I am affiliated.

Reviewing courts may find one's invocation attempt to be invalid if the language used is unclear, ambiguous, or equivocal. The examples cited in this video are based on peer-reviewed research literature.

Ainsworth, J. (2008). 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. International Journal Of Speech, Language & The Law, 15(1), 1-21. doi:10.1558/ijsll.v15i1.1

Cleary, H. D., & Warner, T. C. (2016). Police Training in Interviewing and Interrogation Methods: A Comparison of Techniques Used With Adult and Juvenile Suspects. Law & Human Behavior (American Psychological Association), 40(3), 270-284. doi:10.1037/lhb0000175

Frantzen, D. (2010). Interrogation strategies, evidence, and the need for Miranda: a study of police ideologies. Police Practice & Research, 11(3), 227-239. doi:10.1080/15614260902830005

Leo, R. A., & Liu, B. (2009). What do potential jurors know about police interrogation techniques and false confessions?. Behavioral Sciences & The Law, 27(3), 381-399.

#RanywayzRandom #PoliceInterrogation #ConstitutionalRights

Видео How To (and How Not To) Invoke Your Rights to Silence and Counsel (with Examples!) канала Ranywayz Random
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12 января 2019 г. 13:51:32
00:09:16
Яндекс.Метрика