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| Yup, what some don't understand is that a person has the right to remain silent before an arrest. It's not after the arrest that anything they say suddenly can be used against them in a court of law. It's anything you say and at any time you speak to an officer that what a person says can be used against them in a court of law. But a person should make it known to an officer that he or she is invoking the Fifth Amendment and have a right to remain silent.
This video below was during a daytime stop by an Arkansas State Trooper. Totally different scenario in this instance. Notice how the Trooper continues to dig about the driver not rolling the window all the way down despite appearing to just let it go. Which he won't. And then attempts to get the driver to say something incriminating. This was not a nothingburger line of thought by the trooper to try and get the driver to self incriminate on camera.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-wztUET0Fw
Edited by Mr Green Jeans 9/10/2024 21:17
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