empty vessel
Member
But is it true that if you don't Mirandize a suspect you can't use anything he says in court against anyone? The Constitution doesn't include a right to not incriminate someone else.
It would be hearsay and a violation of the confrontation clause if the out-of-court statement were used in a trial against somebody else, but the person who made the statement can be subpoenaed to testify directly against a defendant; however, the person who made the statement may invoke the Fifth Amendment at that trial if the testimony would incriminate himself.
Common sense. This picture lacks it. How people accepted this is is mind boggling, but at the same time we had a fireworks factory explode here in the Netherlands which was located in the middle of a residential area.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/20/opinion/in-the-texas-plant-explosion-history-repeats-itself.html