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Criminal Procedure — right to remain silent

By: WISCONSIN LAW JOURNAL STAFF//June 17, 2013//

Criminal Procedure — right to remain silent

By: WISCONSIN LAW JOURNAL STAFF//June 17, 2013//

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U.S. Supreme Court

Criminal

Criminal Procedure — right to remain silent

It did not violate the Fifth Amendment for prosecutors to tell the jury that the defendant did not answer a question during voluntary, noncustodial interrogation.

Petitioner cannot benefit from that principle because it is undisputed that his interview with police was voluntary. As petitioner himself acknowledges, he agreed to accompany the officers to the station and “was free to leave at any time during the interview.” Brief for Petitioner 2–3 (internal quotation marks omitted). That places petitioner’s situation outside the scope of Miranda and other cases in which we have held that various forms of governmental coercion prevented defendants from voluntarily invoking the privilege. The dissent elides this point when it cites our precedents in this area for the proposition that “[c]ircumstances, rather than explicit invocation, trigger the protection of the Fifth Amendment.” Post, at 7–8 (opinion of Breyer, J.). The critical question is whether, under the “circumstances” of this case, petitioner was deprived of the ability to voluntarily invoke the Fifth Amendment. He was not. We have before us no allegation that petitioner’s failure to assert the privilege was involuntary, and it would have been a simple matter for him to say that he was not answering the officer’s question on Fifth Amendment grounds. Because he failed to do so, the prosecution’s use of his noncustodial silence did not violate the Fifth Amendment.

12-246 Salinas v. Texas

Alito, J.; Thomas, J., concurring; Breyer, J., dissenting.

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