* We have an apartment! It is actually in the complex I was turning my nose up at a month-ish ago, it is amazing how much more appealing it is after a tour and also weeks of apartment hunting. The new lease starts up on the 11th and our current lease ends on the 26th, which gives us a nice bumper and also means we have to start packing, like, now.
* Almost, almost done with a finished draft of my LGBTFest fic - the goal is to have it done and out to beta by Saturday. Which means I have to
find a beta, hmm. [eyes
nepenthe and
zanzando]
~*~
* More on the Gulf oil crisis -
no subject
Date: 2010-06-03 08:35 pm (UTC)From Friday until Sunday I'll be at my parents place, which means INTERNET ACCESS.
I MORE THAN READILY VOLUNTEER FOR BETA DUTY. In other words: GIMMEGIMMEGIMME.
no subject
Date: 2010-06-03 10:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-04 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-03 08:48 pm (UTC)Practically speaking, there will be no significant changes in how a suspect is interrogated in the wake of this ruling.
As it stands now, I am not aware of any agency that considers mere silence in response to questions as being an explicit invocation of the First Amendment. The suspect chose to not answer a single specific question, or ten specific question, or a hundred specific questions; that does not mean he is unwilling to answer the next one that is asked. A suspect may still continue to not answer specific questions during interrogation.
A suspect has always had the right of invoking the Fifth Amendment during the course of interrogation - even he has previously waved it, implicitly or explicitly. He may still do so at any time during the course of the interrogation.
Since 1966, a suspect must always be informed of his rights (the Miranda warning) prior to interrogation. He must still be informed of them prior to interrogation.
While I do believe that the Supreme Court has elected to make an example out of Burghuis v. Thompkins as a means to exercise dialog regarding some of the stipulations set in place by Miranda v. Arizona, I do not feel that the decision was incorrect to uphold the original ruling on the case in question. After reading some of the specifics with regard to Thompkins's interrogation, it appears to me that it proceeded without violating previous federal case law, the Fifth Amendment, or his rights as determined by Miranda v. Arizona case law. Some of the wording as a result of the Supreme Court ruling seems excessively verbose, but again I do not feel that it is going to actually change how interrogations and investigations are performed by law enforcement.
Incidentally, the Fifth Amendment has no clause in it that states a suspect has a right to remain silent - nor was there previous precedent in English common law prior to the Miranda v. Arizona ruling to support the specific wording of the Miranda warning. I support the Miranda warning, and I do so even knowing that there was no prior law that served to establish it.
no subject
Date: 2010-06-03 10:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-04 03:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-04 04:09 pm (UTC)