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Can a police officer lie?
Legal standing for a Police Officer to force you out of a private vehicleDoes the Right to Counsel require qualifications?Can I booby-trap my property against police?Can a law-enforcement officer share a crime report with the alleged perpetrator?How must undercover police officers identify themselves?What exactly are an officer's requirements in order to demand ID in the US (New York)?Would you be convicted of assault, etc. for defending the passenger in the United incident?Police reporting the crimes of policeDoes a citizen have to open the door to UK police if they do not give a reason?How does the mandate to report income from illegal activities in the US jibe with the Fifth Amendment?
In the unfortunate event, someone finds themselves being questioned by the police, and they ask for a lawyer, but in an unlikely event the police officer says "you don't need a lawyer you're not under arrest, just being questioned", then the person being questioned proceeds in self-incrimination.
Were their statements legally obtained?
united-states criminal-law police
add a comment |
In the unfortunate event, someone finds themselves being questioned by the police, and they ask for a lawyer, but in an unlikely event the police officer says "you don't need a lawyer you're not under arrest, just being questioned", then the person being questioned proceeds in self-incrimination.
Were their statements legally obtained?
united-states criminal-law police
add a comment |
In the unfortunate event, someone finds themselves being questioned by the police, and they ask for a lawyer, but in an unlikely event the police officer says "you don't need a lawyer you're not under arrest, just being questioned", then the person being questioned proceeds in self-incrimination.
Were their statements legally obtained?
united-states criminal-law police
In the unfortunate event, someone finds themselves being questioned by the police, and they ask for a lawyer, but in an unlikely event the police officer says "you don't need a lawyer you're not under arrest, just being questioned", then the person being questioned proceeds in self-incrimination.
Were their statements legally obtained?
united-states criminal-law police
united-states criminal-law police
edited 11 mins ago
StephanS
asked Mar 8 at 4:57
StephanSStephanS
47221
47221
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
A police officer can lie, and lying does not render a statement inadmissible. But there is a separate area of law regarding self-incrimination and the right to a lawyer. The basic principle is that a person can always assert their 5th Amendment rights, whether or not they are under arrest. When a person is under arrest and has asserted their right to an attorney, questioning must stop and anything that results from further questions is inadmissible.
There is no single factor that distinguishes ordering asking questions from custodial interrogation. For example if you have been dragged by officers to the police station and held in a locked room for hours in the middle of night, one would reasonably believe that you were taken into custody, and interrogation must stop once you request a lawyer.
In Oregon v. Mathiason, 429 U.S. 492, police contacted the defendant whom they suspected was involved in a burglary and they invite him to chat at the station. They lie and say they found his fingerprints at the scene (they did not). He then confesses, they read him his rights, and he confesses again. The confession is admissible, because this was not a custodial interrogation. The relevant question is whether "a reasonable person would have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave".
An important footnote is that lawyers are not allowed to lie. If a lawyer had done what the police did in Oregon v. Mathiason, he would probably be suspended or disbarred. A DA in Colorado was sanctioned for ethical violations for lying under far more compelling circumstances (a life or death hostage situation).
– ohwilleke
4 mins ago
add a comment |
The Prisoner's Dilemma which supposes that two criminal partners (Lets call them Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink) arrested for a criminal offense of possesion of some blue narcotic with the intent to sell (which carries a sentence of 1 year for first time offense). The DEA agent working the case (Detective Shredder) suspects one of the two men is manufacturing blue narcotic (carries 2 years for first time offense, and an additional year if manufactured with the intention of selling (3 years total) ), but the evidence can't point to a single suspect.
Det. Shredder has realized this strategy:
If both Whitman and Pink remain silent, they will both be sentanced to 1 year in jail.
If Whitman remains silent, but Pink rolls on Whitman, Whitman will serve 3 years and Pink will go free and vice versa.
If Whitman and Pink roll on each other, he'll charge them with both with manufacture, but will get the prosecution to seek two years.
So the stakes for Mr. Shredder are different for his two criminals. In all situations, Mr. Shredder wants to put bad people behind bars, and the longer the better. He wins no matter which way this goes down. For the two criminals, going to jail is undesirable and only one way will get them the most benefitial outcome: Confess and name the other as the real mastermind.
So let's play with two scenarios:
Shredder talks to Pink first. After letting both men worry in separate holding cells, Shredder barges into Mr. Pink's room and declares Whitman ratted him out. Pink doesn't know about the prisoner's dilemma and calls bullshit. Shredder leaves for Whitman's cell.
Shredder starts with Whitman first. Whitman is aware of the dilema and immediately confesses and explains that Pink was the real mastermind. He had all the connections and preyed upon Whitman's low finances and chemistry knowledge to put him in this situation. Shredder leaves for Pink's cell.
In either scenario, Shredder wins because someone is going to jail for at least one year, possibly 3. What happens in the next cell determines the number of people going to jail. In scenario 1, whatever Whitman says, Pink is going to jail, because the only way out is to roll, which Pink didn't do. Depending on Whitman's reaction, Pink could be in for one year (Whitman doesn't talk) or 3 (Whitman sings). This doesn't matter to Shredder, who wants to put people in jail... the most time for the most people.
In scenario 2, Shredder also wins. Pink is still going to go to jail, no matter what he says. Whitman may or may not go to jail, but again, it doesn't matter if Shredder gets 2 criminals for two years or one criminal for 3.
Which just goes to show you the benefit to cops lying would be. The only possible real world way around this is for Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink better call a lawyer (Oh come on, no one Saul that coming?)
Better call Saul.
– mark b
Mar 8 at 16:44
4
As far as I can tell, this contains no answer to the question actually asked.
– JdeBP
Mar 8 at 18:54
1
This is not a bad explanation of the classic Prisoner's Dilemma from game theory, but it does not seem to answer or indeed really address the question asked.
– David Siegel
Mar 8 at 20:51
There's some theoretical basis here for why one might divulge or share information, which speaks to the statement about self-incrimination. But, this answer needs editing to address whether the just-being-questioned remark renders the self-incrimination unusable.
– Pat W.
Apr 1 at 12:32
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
A police officer can lie, and lying does not render a statement inadmissible. But there is a separate area of law regarding self-incrimination and the right to a lawyer. The basic principle is that a person can always assert their 5th Amendment rights, whether or not they are under arrest. When a person is under arrest and has asserted their right to an attorney, questioning must stop and anything that results from further questions is inadmissible.
There is no single factor that distinguishes ordering asking questions from custodial interrogation. For example if you have been dragged by officers to the police station and held in a locked room for hours in the middle of night, one would reasonably believe that you were taken into custody, and interrogation must stop once you request a lawyer.
In Oregon v. Mathiason, 429 U.S. 492, police contacted the defendant whom they suspected was involved in a burglary and they invite him to chat at the station. They lie and say they found his fingerprints at the scene (they did not). He then confesses, they read him his rights, and he confesses again. The confession is admissible, because this was not a custodial interrogation. The relevant question is whether "a reasonable person would have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave".
An important footnote is that lawyers are not allowed to lie. If a lawyer had done what the police did in Oregon v. Mathiason, he would probably be suspended or disbarred. A DA in Colorado was sanctioned for ethical violations for lying under far more compelling circumstances (a life or death hostage situation).
– ohwilleke
4 mins ago
add a comment |
A police officer can lie, and lying does not render a statement inadmissible. But there is a separate area of law regarding self-incrimination and the right to a lawyer. The basic principle is that a person can always assert their 5th Amendment rights, whether or not they are under arrest. When a person is under arrest and has asserted their right to an attorney, questioning must stop and anything that results from further questions is inadmissible.
There is no single factor that distinguishes ordering asking questions from custodial interrogation. For example if you have been dragged by officers to the police station and held in a locked room for hours in the middle of night, one would reasonably believe that you were taken into custody, and interrogation must stop once you request a lawyer.
In Oregon v. Mathiason, 429 U.S. 492, police contacted the defendant whom they suspected was involved in a burglary and they invite him to chat at the station. They lie and say they found his fingerprints at the scene (they did not). He then confesses, they read him his rights, and he confesses again. The confession is admissible, because this was not a custodial interrogation. The relevant question is whether "a reasonable person would have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave".
An important footnote is that lawyers are not allowed to lie. If a lawyer had done what the police did in Oregon v. Mathiason, he would probably be suspended or disbarred. A DA in Colorado was sanctioned for ethical violations for lying under far more compelling circumstances (a life or death hostage situation).
– ohwilleke
4 mins ago
add a comment |
A police officer can lie, and lying does not render a statement inadmissible. But there is a separate area of law regarding self-incrimination and the right to a lawyer. The basic principle is that a person can always assert their 5th Amendment rights, whether or not they are under arrest. When a person is under arrest and has asserted their right to an attorney, questioning must stop and anything that results from further questions is inadmissible.
There is no single factor that distinguishes ordering asking questions from custodial interrogation. For example if you have been dragged by officers to the police station and held in a locked room for hours in the middle of night, one would reasonably believe that you were taken into custody, and interrogation must stop once you request a lawyer.
In Oregon v. Mathiason, 429 U.S. 492, police contacted the defendant whom they suspected was involved in a burglary and they invite him to chat at the station. They lie and say they found his fingerprints at the scene (they did not). He then confesses, they read him his rights, and he confesses again. The confession is admissible, because this was not a custodial interrogation. The relevant question is whether "a reasonable person would have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave".
A police officer can lie, and lying does not render a statement inadmissible. But there is a separate area of law regarding self-incrimination and the right to a lawyer. The basic principle is that a person can always assert their 5th Amendment rights, whether or not they are under arrest. When a person is under arrest and has asserted their right to an attorney, questioning must stop and anything that results from further questions is inadmissible.
There is no single factor that distinguishes ordering asking questions from custodial interrogation. For example if you have been dragged by officers to the police station and held in a locked room for hours in the middle of night, one would reasonably believe that you were taken into custody, and interrogation must stop once you request a lawyer.
In Oregon v. Mathiason, 429 U.S. 492, police contacted the defendant whom they suspected was involved in a burglary and they invite him to chat at the station. They lie and say they found his fingerprints at the scene (they did not). He then confesses, they read him his rights, and he confesses again. The confession is admissible, because this was not a custodial interrogation. The relevant question is whether "a reasonable person would have felt he or she was not at liberty to terminate the interrogation and leave".
edited Mar 8 at 15:18
answered Mar 8 at 5:43
user6726user6726
61.8k455107
61.8k455107
An important footnote is that lawyers are not allowed to lie. If a lawyer had done what the police did in Oregon v. Mathiason, he would probably be suspended or disbarred. A DA in Colorado was sanctioned for ethical violations for lying under far more compelling circumstances (a life or death hostage situation).
– ohwilleke
4 mins ago
add a comment |
An important footnote is that lawyers are not allowed to lie. If a lawyer had done what the police did in Oregon v. Mathiason, he would probably be suspended or disbarred. A DA in Colorado was sanctioned for ethical violations for lying under far more compelling circumstances (a life or death hostage situation).
– ohwilleke
4 mins ago
An important footnote is that lawyers are not allowed to lie. If a lawyer had done what the police did in Oregon v. Mathiason, he would probably be suspended or disbarred. A DA in Colorado was sanctioned for ethical violations for lying under far more compelling circumstances (a life or death hostage situation).
– ohwilleke
4 mins ago
An important footnote is that lawyers are not allowed to lie. If a lawyer had done what the police did in Oregon v. Mathiason, he would probably be suspended or disbarred. A DA in Colorado was sanctioned for ethical violations for lying under far more compelling circumstances (a life or death hostage situation).
– ohwilleke
4 mins ago
add a comment |
The Prisoner's Dilemma which supposes that two criminal partners (Lets call them Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink) arrested for a criminal offense of possesion of some blue narcotic with the intent to sell (which carries a sentence of 1 year for first time offense). The DEA agent working the case (Detective Shredder) suspects one of the two men is manufacturing blue narcotic (carries 2 years for first time offense, and an additional year if manufactured with the intention of selling (3 years total) ), but the evidence can't point to a single suspect.
Det. Shredder has realized this strategy:
If both Whitman and Pink remain silent, they will both be sentanced to 1 year in jail.
If Whitman remains silent, but Pink rolls on Whitman, Whitman will serve 3 years and Pink will go free and vice versa.
If Whitman and Pink roll on each other, he'll charge them with both with manufacture, but will get the prosecution to seek two years.
So the stakes for Mr. Shredder are different for his two criminals. In all situations, Mr. Shredder wants to put bad people behind bars, and the longer the better. He wins no matter which way this goes down. For the two criminals, going to jail is undesirable and only one way will get them the most benefitial outcome: Confess and name the other as the real mastermind.
So let's play with two scenarios:
Shredder talks to Pink first. After letting both men worry in separate holding cells, Shredder barges into Mr. Pink's room and declares Whitman ratted him out. Pink doesn't know about the prisoner's dilemma and calls bullshit. Shredder leaves for Whitman's cell.
Shredder starts with Whitman first. Whitman is aware of the dilema and immediately confesses and explains that Pink was the real mastermind. He had all the connections and preyed upon Whitman's low finances and chemistry knowledge to put him in this situation. Shredder leaves for Pink's cell.
In either scenario, Shredder wins because someone is going to jail for at least one year, possibly 3. What happens in the next cell determines the number of people going to jail. In scenario 1, whatever Whitman says, Pink is going to jail, because the only way out is to roll, which Pink didn't do. Depending on Whitman's reaction, Pink could be in for one year (Whitman doesn't talk) or 3 (Whitman sings). This doesn't matter to Shredder, who wants to put people in jail... the most time for the most people.
In scenario 2, Shredder also wins. Pink is still going to go to jail, no matter what he says. Whitman may or may not go to jail, but again, it doesn't matter if Shredder gets 2 criminals for two years or one criminal for 3.
Which just goes to show you the benefit to cops lying would be. The only possible real world way around this is for Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink better call a lawyer (Oh come on, no one Saul that coming?)
Better call Saul.
– mark b
Mar 8 at 16:44
4
As far as I can tell, this contains no answer to the question actually asked.
– JdeBP
Mar 8 at 18:54
1
This is not a bad explanation of the classic Prisoner's Dilemma from game theory, but it does not seem to answer or indeed really address the question asked.
– David Siegel
Mar 8 at 20:51
There's some theoretical basis here for why one might divulge or share information, which speaks to the statement about self-incrimination. But, this answer needs editing to address whether the just-being-questioned remark renders the self-incrimination unusable.
– Pat W.
Apr 1 at 12:32
add a comment |
The Prisoner's Dilemma which supposes that two criminal partners (Lets call them Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink) arrested for a criminal offense of possesion of some blue narcotic with the intent to sell (which carries a sentence of 1 year for first time offense). The DEA agent working the case (Detective Shredder) suspects one of the two men is manufacturing blue narcotic (carries 2 years for first time offense, and an additional year if manufactured with the intention of selling (3 years total) ), but the evidence can't point to a single suspect.
Det. Shredder has realized this strategy:
If both Whitman and Pink remain silent, they will both be sentanced to 1 year in jail.
If Whitman remains silent, but Pink rolls on Whitman, Whitman will serve 3 years and Pink will go free and vice versa.
If Whitman and Pink roll on each other, he'll charge them with both with manufacture, but will get the prosecution to seek two years.
So the stakes for Mr. Shredder are different for his two criminals. In all situations, Mr. Shredder wants to put bad people behind bars, and the longer the better. He wins no matter which way this goes down. For the two criminals, going to jail is undesirable and only one way will get them the most benefitial outcome: Confess and name the other as the real mastermind.
So let's play with two scenarios:
Shredder talks to Pink first. After letting both men worry in separate holding cells, Shredder barges into Mr. Pink's room and declares Whitman ratted him out. Pink doesn't know about the prisoner's dilemma and calls bullshit. Shredder leaves for Whitman's cell.
Shredder starts with Whitman first. Whitman is aware of the dilema and immediately confesses and explains that Pink was the real mastermind. He had all the connections and preyed upon Whitman's low finances and chemistry knowledge to put him in this situation. Shredder leaves for Pink's cell.
In either scenario, Shredder wins because someone is going to jail for at least one year, possibly 3. What happens in the next cell determines the number of people going to jail. In scenario 1, whatever Whitman says, Pink is going to jail, because the only way out is to roll, which Pink didn't do. Depending on Whitman's reaction, Pink could be in for one year (Whitman doesn't talk) or 3 (Whitman sings). This doesn't matter to Shredder, who wants to put people in jail... the most time for the most people.
In scenario 2, Shredder also wins. Pink is still going to go to jail, no matter what he says. Whitman may or may not go to jail, but again, it doesn't matter if Shredder gets 2 criminals for two years or one criminal for 3.
Which just goes to show you the benefit to cops lying would be. The only possible real world way around this is for Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink better call a lawyer (Oh come on, no one Saul that coming?)
Better call Saul.
– mark b
Mar 8 at 16:44
4
As far as I can tell, this contains no answer to the question actually asked.
– JdeBP
Mar 8 at 18:54
1
This is not a bad explanation of the classic Prisoner's Dilemma from game theory, but it does not seem to answer or indeed really address the question asked.
– David Siegel
Mar 8 at 20:51
There's some theoretical basis here for why one might divulge or share information, which speaks to the statement about self-incrimination. But, this answer needs editing to address whether the just-being-questioned remark renders the self-incrimination unusable.
– Pat W.
Apr 1 at 12:32
add a comment |
The Prisoner's Dilemma which supposes that two criminal partners (Lets call them Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink) arrested for a criminal offense of possesion of some blue narcotic with the intent to sell (which carries a sentence of 1 year for first time offense). The DEA agent working the case (Detective Shredder) suspects one of the two men is manufacturing blue narcotic (carries 2 years for first time offense, and an additional year if manufactured with the intention of selling (3 years total) ), but the evidence can't point to a single suspect.
Det. Shredder has realized this strategy:
If both Whitman and Pink remain silent, they will both be sentanced to 1 year in jail.
If Whitman remains silent, but Pink rolls on Whitman, Whitman will serve 3 years and Pink will go free and vice versa.
If Whitman and Pink roll on each other, he'll charge them with both with manufacture, but will get the prosecution to seek two years.
So the stakes for Mr. Shredder are different for his two criminals. In all situations, Mr. Shredder wants to put bad people behind bars, and the longer the better. He wins no matter which way this goes down. For the two criminals, going to jail is undesirable and only one way will get them the most benefitial outcome: Confess and name the other as the real mastermind.
So let's play with two scenarios:
Shredder talks to Pink first. After letting both men worry in separate holding cells, Shredder barges into Mr. Pink's room and declares Whitman ratted him out. Pink doesn't know about the prisoner's dilemma and calls bullshit. Shredder leaves for Whitman's cell.
Shredder starts with Whitman first. Whitman is aware of the dilema and immediately confesses and explains that Pink was the real mastermind. He had all the connections and preyed upon Whitman's low finances and chemistry knowledge to put him in this situation. Shredder leaves for Pink's cell.
In either scenario, Shredder wins because someone is going to jail for at least one year, possibly 3. What happens in the next cell determines the number of people going to jail. In scenario 1, whatever Whitman says, Pink is going to jail, because the only way out is to roll, which Pink didn't do. Depending on Whitman's reaction, Pink could be in for one year (Whitman doesn't talk) or 3 (Whitman sings). This doesn't matter to Shredder, who wants to put people in jail... the most time for the most people.
In scenario 2, Shredder also wins. Pink is still going to go to jail, no matter what he says. Whitman may or may not go to jail, but again, it doesn't matter if Shredder gets 2 criminals for two years or one criminal for 3.
Which just goes to show you the benefit to cops lying would be. The only possible real world way around this is for Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink better call a lawyer (Oh come on, no one Saul that coming?)
The Prisoner's Dilemma which supposes that two criminal partners (Lets call them Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink) arrested for a criminal offense of possesion of some blue narcotic with the intent to sell (which carries a sentence of 1 year for first time offense). The DEA agent working the case (Detective Shredder) suspects one of the two men is manufacturing blue narcotic (carries 2 years for first time offense, and an additional year if manufactured with the intention of selling (3 years total) ), but the evidence can't point to a single suspect.
Det. Shredder has realized this strategy:
If both Whitman and Pink remain silent, they will both be sentanced to 1 year in jail.
If Whitman remains silent, but Pink rolls on Whitman, Whitman will serve 3 years and Pink will go free and vice versa.
If Whitman and Pink roll on each other, he'll charge them with both with manufacture, but will get the prosecution to seek two years.
So the stakes for Mr. Shredder are different for his two criminals. In all situations, Mr. Shredder wants to put bad people behind bars, and the longer the better. He wins no matter which way this goes down. For the two criminals, going to jail is undesirable and only one way will get them the most benefitial outcome: Confess and name the other as the real mastermind.
So let's play with two scenarios:
Shredder talks to Pink first. After letting both men worry in separate holding cells, Shredder barges into Mr. Pink's room and declares Whitman ratted him out. Pink doesn't know about the prisoner's dilemma and calls bullshit. Shredder leaves for Whitman's cell.
Shredder starts with Whitman first. Whitman is aware of the dilema and immediately confesses and explains that Pink was the real mastermind. He had all the connections and preyed upon Whitman's low finances and chemistry knowledge to put him in this situation. Shredder leaves for Pink's cell.
In either scenario, Shredder wins because someone is going to jail for at least one year, possibly 3. What happens in the next cell determines the number of people going to jail. In scenario 1, whatever Whitman says, Pink is going to jail, because the only way out is to roll, which Pink didn't do. Depending on Whitman's reaction, Pink could be in for one year (Whitman doesn't talk) or 3 (Whitman sings). This doesn't matter to Shredder, who wants to put people in jail... the most time for the most people.
In scenario 2, Shredder also wins. Pink is still going to go to jail, no matter what he says. Whitman may or may not go to jail, but again, it doesn't matter if Shredder gets 2 criminals for two years or one criminal for 3.
Which just goes to show you the benefit to cops lying would be. The only possible real world way around this is for Mr. Whitman and Mr. Pink better call a lawyer (Oh come on, no one Saul that coming?)
answered Mar 8 at 14:50
hszmvhszmv
3,603213
3,603213
Better call Saul.
– mark b
Mar 8 at 16:44
4
As far as I can tell, this contains no answer to the question actually asked.
– JdeBP
Mar 8 at 18:54
1
This is not a bad explanation of the classic Prisoner's Dilemma from game theory, but it does not seem to answer or indeed really address the question asked.
– David Siegel
Mar 8 at 20:51
There's some theoretical basis here for why one might divulge or share information, which speaks to the statement about self-incrimination. But, this answer needs editing to address whether the just-being-questioned remark renders the self-incrimination unusable.
– Pat W.
Apr 1 at 12:32
add a comment |
Better call Saul.
– mark b
Mar 8 at 16:44
4
As far as I can tell, this contains no answer to the question actually asked.
– JdeBP
Mar 8 at 18:54
1
This is not a bad explanation of the classic Prisoner's Dilemma from game theory, but it does not seem to answer or indeed really address the question asked.
– David Siegel
Mar 8 at 20:51
There's some theoretical basis here for why one might divulge or share information, which speaks to the statement about self-incrimination. But, this answer needs editing to address whether the just-being-questioned remark renders the self-incrimination unusable.
– Pat W.
Apr 1 at 12:32
Better call Saul.
– mark b
Mar 8 at 16:44
Better call Saul.
– mark b
Mar 8 at 16:44
4
4
As far as I can tell, this contains no answer to the question actually asked.
– JdeBP
Mar 8 at 18:54
As far as I can tell, this contains no answer to the question actually asked.
– JdeBP
Mar 8 at 18:54
1
1
This is not a bad explanation of the classic Prisoner's Dilemma from game theory, but it does not seem to answer or indeed really address the question asked.
– David Siegel
Mar 8 at 20:51
This is not a bad explanation of the classic Prisoner's Dilemma from game theory, but it does not seem to answer or indeed really address the question asked.
– David Siegel
Mar 8 at 20:51
There's some theoretical basis here for why one might divulge or share information, which speaks to the statement about self-incrimination. But, this answer needs editing to address whether the just-being-questioned remark renders the self-incrimination unusable.
– Pat W.
Apr 1 at 12:32
There's some theoretical basis here for why one might divulge or share information, which speaks to the statement about self-incrimination. But, this answer needs editing to address whether the just-being-questioned remark renders the self-incrimination unusable.
– Pat W.
Apr 1 at 12:32
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