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24 points

Does the “right to remain silent” still apply?

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27 points

That’s mostly for police. Once you’re in court and ordered to testify, the person talking about germany is mostly correct. You can’t be forced to self-incriminate nor testify against a spouse. Otherwise yes. Generally 99% of courts won’t bother even asking the defendant to testify because self-incrimination is practically guaranteed. Usually only if the defense calls on them, which is often a bad idea.

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16 points

“Please state your name”

“I can’t do that without incriminating myself”

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11 points

Mr. Stealsalot,
We meet again

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7 points
*

I just talked about Germany because I didn’t knew how it is in the US. Apparently it’s exactly the same. Intresting comment

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4 points

Only if there’s a risk at incriminating yourself, and if it’s not immediately apparent how you’d run that risk (e.g. you’re a witness that doesn’t have a direct relation to the crime at hand) you’d have to motivate how it could be incriminating.

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Memes

!memes@lemmy.ml

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