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Supreme Court Miranda Ruling: Suspects Must Explicitly Tell Police They Want To Remain Silent

JESSE J. HOLLAND   06/ 1/10 04:54 PM ET   AP

Supreme Court Miranda

WASHINGTON — Want to invoke your right to remain silent? You'll have to speak up.

In a narrowly split decision, the Supreme Court's conservative majority expanded its limits on the famous Miranda rights for criminal suspects on Tuesday – over the dissent of new Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who said the ruling turned Americans' rights of protection from police abuse "upside down."

Justice Anthony Kennedy, who wrote the majority opinion, said a suspect who goes ahead and talks to police after being informed he doesn't have to has waived his right to remain silent. Elena Kagan, who has been nominated by President Barack Obama to join the court, sided with the police as U.S. solicitor general when the case came before the court. She would replace Justice John Paul Stevens, one of the dissenters.

A right to remain silent and a right to a lawyer are at the top of the warnings that police recite to suspects during arrests and interrogations. But Tuesday's majority said that suspects must break their silence and tell police they are going to remain quiet to stop an interrogation, just as they must tell police that they want a lawyer.

This decision means that police can keep shooting questions at a suspect who refuses to talk as long as they want in hopes that the person will crack and give them some information, said Richard Friedman, a University of Michigan law professor.

"It's a little bit less restraint that the officers have to show," Friedman said.

The ruling comes in a case in which a suspect, Van Chester Thompkins, remained mostly silent for a three-hour police interrogation before implicating himself in a Jan. 10, 2000, murder in Southfield, Mich. He appealed his conviction, saying he had invoked his Miranda right to remain silent by remaining silent.

Kennedy, writing the decision for the court's conservatives, said that wasn't enough.

"Thompkins did not say that he wanted to remain silent or that he did not want to talk to police," Kennedy said. "Had he made either of these simple, unambiguous statements, he would have invoked his 'right to cut off questioning.' Here he did neither, so he did not invoke his right to remain silent."

He was joined in the 5-4 opinion by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito.

Prosecutors cheered the decision, saying it takes the guesswork out of when police have to stop questioning suspects. "Is it too much to ask for a criminal suspect to say he doesn't want to talk to police?" said Scott Burns, executive director of the National District Attorneys Association.

This is the third time this session that the Supreme Court has placed limits on Miranda rights, which come from a 1966 decision – it involved police questioning of Ernesto Miranda in a rape and kidnapping case in Phoenix – requiring officers to tell suspects they have the right to remain silent and to have a lawyer represent them, even if they can't afford one.

Earlier this term, the high court ruled that a suspect's request for a lawyer is good for only 14 days after the person is released from police custody – the first time the court has placed a time limit on a request for a lawyer – and that police do not have to explicitly tell suspects they have a right to a lawyer during an interrogation.

For Justice Sotomayor, deciding to make suspects speak to have the right to remain silent was a step too far. Sotomayor, the court's newest member, wrote a strongly worded dissent for the court's liberals, saying the majority's decision "turns Miranda upside down."

"Criminal suspects must now unambiguously invoke their right to remain silent – which counterintuitively requires them to speak," she said. "At the same time, suspects will be legally presumed to have waived their rights even if they have given no clear expression of their intent to do so. Those results, in my view, find no basis in Miranda or our subsequent cases and are inconsistent with the fair-trial principles on which those precedents are grounded."

She was joined in her dissent by Stevens, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer.

Supreme Court nominee Kagan had sided with the police in this case. As solicitor general, she told the Supreme Court that the Constitution "does not require that the police interpret ambiguous statements as invocations of Miranda rights."

"An unambiguous-invocation requirement for the right to remain silent and terminate questioning strikes the appropriate balance between protecting the suspect's rights and permitting valuable police investigation," Kagan said in court papers.

Thompkins was arrested for murder in 2001 and questioned by police for three hours. At the beginning, he was read his Miranda rights and said he understood.

The officers in the room said Thompkins said little during the interrogation, occasionally answering "yes," "no," "I don't know," nodding his head and making eye contact as his responses. But when one of the officers asked him if he prayed for forgiveness for "shooting that boy down," Thompkins said, "Yes."

He was convicted, but on appeal he wanted that statement thrown out because he said he had invoked his Miranda rights by being uncommunicative with the interrogating officers.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati agreed and threw out his confession and conviction. The high court reversed that decision.

"In sum, a suspect who has received and understood the Miranda warnings, and has not invoked his Miranda rights, waives the right to remain silent by making an uncoerced statement to police," Kennedy said. "Thompkins did not invoke his right to remain silent and stop the questioning. Understanding his rights in full, he waived his right to remain silent by making a voluntary statement to the police. The police, moreover, were not required to obtain a waiver of Thompkins' right to remain silent before interrogating him."

Sotomayor called that reasoning "a substantial retreat from the protection against compelled self-incrimination that Miranda v. Arizona has long provided during custodial interrogation."

The case is Berghuis v. Thompkins, 08-1470.

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WASHINGTON — Want to invoke your right to remain silent? You'll have to speak up. In a narrowly split decision, the Supreme Court's conservative majority expanded its limits on the famous Miran...
WASHINGTON — Want to invoke your right to remain silent? You'll have to speak up. In a narrowly split decision, the Supreme Court's conservative majority expanded its limits on the famous Miran...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lendmeanear
02:51 AM on 06/12/2010
The burden should be on the police to demonstrate that someone waived their right to remain silent not on the person to invoke the right. The right is always with the person till they waive it and NOT something off to the side that they have to invoke. This reminds me of the trick that business uses when they make you have to opt out of something vs. opt-in. Everyone knows if you make people have to do something affirmative to opt-out of something, or in this case invoke a right, it decreases the chance they will do so. Again, the presumption should be that the person has retained the right until they indicate that they dont want it and not the other way around. That's more in keeping with our values on civil liberties if you ask me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lendmeanear
02:41 AM on 06/12/2010
Will they change the miranda warnings that police read to people to inform them that they must tell the police if they want to remain silent otherwise they waive said right? That would seem called for.
06:40 AM on 06/09/2010
There is good information about the general rights of law enforcement at the website Flexyourrights.org and video on Youtube from the same organization that would help give some perspective about people's rights when dealing with law enforcement.

The blog reports:

"Fortunately, however, the Berghuis decision leaves intact the best strategy for handling any police interrogation: keeping your mouth shut. Requiring suspects with limited legal knowledge to clearly assert their rights may seem a bit strict, but it's irrelevant if the suspect never says a word to begin with. The point of the 5th Amendment isn't to protect you after you've foolishly incriminated yourself, it's to remind you that you're not obligated to answer police questions in the first place." -Flexyourrights.org
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
09:57 PM on 06/07/2010
And if they do, that's proof they wanted to talk.
01:48 PM on 06/07/2010
Doesn't common sense dictate that the police should have to get a explicit waver from a suspect? A new line should be added to the miranda warning: "Do you wish to waive your rights at this time?" If the suspect says nothing he does not wave his rights.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lendmeanear
02:50 AM on 06/12/2010
I agree. The burden should be on the police to demonstrate that someone waived their right to remain silent not on the person to invoke the right. The right is always with the person till they waive it and NOT something off to the side that they have to invoke. This reminds me of the trick that business uses when they make you have to opt out of something vs. opt-in. Everyone knows if you make people have to do something affirmative to opt-out of something, or in this case invoke a right, it decreases the chance they will do so. Again, the presumption should be that the person has retained the right until they indicate that they dont want it and not the other way around. That's more in keeping with our values on civil liberties if you ask me.
10:43 AM on 06/05/2010
I feel safer knowing that my right to PROTECTION FROM CRIMINALS is strengthened.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
09:58 PM on 06/07/2010
Now if we could just get protection from the police.
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05:50 PM on 06/02/2010
For anyone who thinks decision is reasonable, or that the police (along with judges, prosecutors and defense attorneys) do not abuse the system, read "Courtroom 302":

http://www.bookreporter.com/reviews2/0679432523.asp
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
01:51 PM on 06/02/2010
Everyone here is focusing on the right to remain silent, but more odeous is the NEW concept that you now have only up to 14 days to request a lawyer.

That's INSANE.

And where did the Supremes come up with _that_ number?!

There's more here than meets the eyes...

I would like to know a lot more about this two weeks to ask for a lawyer thing. Sometimes court dates are farther in the future than that!
.
02:44 PM on 06/02/2010
It is an arbitrary number, but the purpose is to designate a time after which the suspect cannot delay court proceedings by saying that they have not yet been given a lawyer. Two weeks isn't really unreasonable; if your sitting around in jail for two weeks waiting for your trial to start, I doubt getting a lawyer will be something that just slips your mind.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
02:58 PM on 06/02/2010
That isn't a real problem. If you've spent time in any courtroom in America you've probably seen first hand that this isn't an actual problem... Judges simply don't let defendants cause delays - certainly, they'd get ONE pass at it before the judge would call them on it. ...Our justice system - if you want to call it that - can surely suffer such a single indignity in the interests of actual justice.

OTOH, people finding out too late that they can't get representation is a REAL risk to us all. Depending on how serious the crime is, and how busy the courts are, a defendant may be released and not show up for an arraignment until after two weeks have passed - I've seen this happen in the real world. Imagine then hearing, sorry, you can't get to the public defender because you missed it by one day!

This court is INSANE.
.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Bike Commuter
No More Hurting People
11:59 AM on 06/03/2010
I don't know if "lNSANE" is the word I would use, but I do agree. It gives police a bit too much power.

It looks to me like they can Mirandize a suspect but take it easy, making things seem like no big deal. They can release the person and make them think they are no longer a suspect. Then, two weeks later, they can come back and go after the suspect in earnest. The way I read it, the person can now no longer ask for a lawyer, or at the very least a poor person doesn't have the right to a court appointed lawyer.

That is a lot worse than saying the police can ask you questions.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Bike Commuter
No More Hurting People
12:26 PM on 06/03/2010
Ok, I read a little more about the 14 day thing.

Apparently, it doesn't deny you an attorney. It says that if you ask for an attorney and you are later released, then if the police attempt to question you 14 days or more later you have to ask for a lawyer again.

The test case was a guy that was questioned and then released when he asked for a lawyer. 2 1/2 YEARS later new evidence came to light and a different police officer questioned the man. The man waived his rights and made incriminating statements without a lawyer present.

After 2 1/2 years there is no way the police could be expected to remember the previous request for a lawyer or even that he had been questioned before. Apparently the court was unanimous on that point. The court set 14 days as the limit, which was not unanimous. I think that is too short and open to abuse by the police, who could just keep trying every couple of weeks.
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01:51 PM on 06/02/2010
What is the purpose of this law except to protect the police from being accused of denying a person their rights? After hauling someone to jail and holding them for 5 days, without access to an attorney, all the police will have to say is "He didn't tell us he was remaining silent."

The cliche is "Ignorance of the law is no excuse." It is not "Ignorance of one's rights is no excuse."

The police have a duty to protect the rights of all citizens, not just the ones who know their rights, can say them out loud to a cop who actually listens, and can afford an attorney to defend their rights.

When the highest court in the land makes rulings that give the police a pass while at the same time denying the rights of its citizens, you know you're living in a police state.
02:51 PM on 06/02/2010
"The police have a duty to protect the rights of all citizens, not just the ones who know their rights, can say them out loud to a cop who actually listens, and can afford an attorney to defend their rights."

Taking this piece by piece I think we're alright, considering: It is insured that everyone is informed of, and understands, their rights upon arrest. If you can't say "I want an attorney" or "I do not wish to speak" then there's a good chance you can't say anything incriminating either. If the cop doesn't actually listen that's pretty clear cut grounds for a mistrial. If you can't afford an attorney one will be provided for you, this is also in the Miranda rights. And don't give me any crap about public defenders not being good lawyers, if they passed the bar they know more than enough to deal with obvious stuff like Miranda rights.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
UnknownSolider
03:28 PM on 06/02/2010
you don't get it
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05:34 PM on 06/02/2010
It is most certainly NOT insured. Why else would Miranda be challenged? Because police and district attorneys do not want to be held accountable for observing a person's rights if they want that person put in jail. These days, the police have the attitude that guilty people don't have rights, and they don't wait until the outcome of a trial to determine someone's guilt.

Don't give me any cr*p about public defenders. I never said they weren't good laywers. There are excellent public defenders out there, many of whom have to battle the police and prosecutors just to get access to their clients.

You want to know what it's like to be a poor person stuck in the criminal justice system in this country? Get hold of a copy of Courtroom 302. Read it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Bike Commuter
No More Hurting People
12:16 PM on 06/03/2010
"After hauling someone to jail and holding them for 5 days, without access to an attorney, all the police will have to say is "He didn't tell us he was remaining silent." "

That argument does not follow. Remaining silent has nothing to do with an attorney or how many days they hold someone. Accused persons already have to ask directly for an attorney. Even saying you wish to remain silent does not get you access to an attorney. And, they don't just let you go because you say you wish to remain silent. The only effect this ruling has is on a questioning session.

What this actually does is allow you to cut off questioning by saying you don't want to talk. If you don't do that then it allows the police to ask questions. That is all. Even if they ask you questions, you still have the right to not say anything and they still must explain that ahead of time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Scott Zwartz
01:41 PM on 06/02/2010
The right is the right to remain silent. It is not the right to be free from questioning. Thus, if one says, "I chose to remain silent," two things can occur.

(1) The police assert that by speaking the person gave up his right to remain silent and the questioning may continue

(2) The right to remain silent does not mean the police have to stop and they may question the suspect day and night until he cracks.

It will be interesting when this court deals with the right to have an attorney present. That is a separate right. If one asks for an attorney, that will be a waiver of his right to remain silent. If one remains silent, then one cannot invoke the right to an attorney.

The US Supreme Court has once again confirmed that the law treats rich and poor alike by forbidding both from sleeping under a bridge.

BTW why isn't Tony Hayward in prison for murder>? Oh, yeah, he has bought the US courts already.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
06:52 PM on 06/02/2010
The right to remain silent is not waived by speaking. You no more waive your right to remain silent by saying 'I want to have a lawyer to consult with" than you waive your right to remain silent by saying "I need to go to the bathroom",

What this has to do with is the right to have the police end interrogation. When you say 'I don't want to answer any questions until I have a lawyer' the police have to immediately stop asking questions until the lawyer is present.

If you have clearly exercized your right to remain silent the police do not have the right to continue barraging you with questions. But the ruling says you have to make that clear.

I sometimes find it hard to decide what is more amusing; the tea party folks who see every little thing as the conspiracy to turn America into a neocommunist hellhole or the ones here who see every little thing as the conspiracy to turn America into a police state.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Pablo Manriquez
Huffpo Latino Affairs blogger
12:37 PM on 06/02/2010
The only two things you should ever tell a cop:
1. "I do not consent to any searches."
2. "I have nothing to say."
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
UnknownSolider
01:03 PM on 06/02/2010
if it was only that simple
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Scott Zwartz
01:43 PM on 06/02/2010
Yes, how naive.

it does not matter what you say. It only matters what the police say you said.

On the other hand, why help the cops by giving permission?

You have to remember, however, that under Scalia asserting one's rights is an admission of guilt
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TimTheWizard
11:22 AM on 06/02/2010
For the people who still think this wasn't decided properly, here is what would happen if it went they other way.

ANY time any testimony was taken by the police, there will be a battle over what amount of silence dictates a stopping point and data retrieved beyond that is useless.

This would mean one of two resolutions -

1. Cops can't interrogate AT ALL.

or

2. Someone will have to set up a specific time of silence that signifies that any interview is ended and an entire bureaucracy will be born with cops holding timers.

And therefore, "anything you say can and will be used against you" is gone, meaningless.

That's the other option. The "liberal" option, with no basis in law, fact, reason, logic.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
UnknownSolider
12:29 PM on 06/02/2010
I guess you took a lot of time to think up that one..........

so lets look at something you may have not thougth about

1. Why should cops interrogate Anyone???

or

2. What if a person says they do not understand their rights, what should the cops do at that point?

You'll be thinking about those for a very long time, not sure if your brain has the capcity to look at a problem from more than one side.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TimTheWizard
12:49 PM on 06/02/2010
No, not really.

1. Because it's part of their job, to find the truth and find out who is at fault.

2. Have a competency hearing.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Uncle Bill
ex-lawyer and teacher
02:11 PM on 06/02/2010
This isn't binary code here. The Davis case held that ambiguous or equivocal statements regarding invocation of the right to counsel will permit police to ask clarifying questions about the possible invocation without violating the rule that questioning immediately cease upon a request for counsel. That same remedy could be applied to ambiguous and equivocal statements as well as extended silence with equal effectiveness in protecting the constitutional rights of people subjected to custodial interrogation to remain silent and establishing police practices that will pass constitutional muster with the courts.

Or the advisory could be amended to advise suspects that they must expressly waive their right to remain silent before interrogation may occur. Another alternative would be to require that police advise suspects under interrogation who do not answer a question as follows "I have asked you a question which you have failed or refused to answer. Do you wish to revoke your previous waiver of your rights and remain silent now or will you answer the question?" There are many other options than the false dilemma you assert. But you knew that, and were just putting ridiculous words in your opponent's mouths to bolster your own.
03:11 PM on 06/02/2010
Best post on this discussion I've read in a while, fanned.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
UnknownSolider
03:11 PM on 06/02/2010
good breakdown of the issue, this court went very far in now letting police assume that person has waived his/her right to have an attorney present during interrogations if they either remain silent, or do not demonstratively declear that they want an attorney......
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KBinIA
I would rather be camping...
10:09 AM on 06/02/2010
After the Miranda warning has been given, police attempt to secure a waiver by asking if the person understands each of the rights that have been explained to them and then by asking, "Having these rights in mind, do you wish to talk with us now?" A simple "no" at that point would end the questioning, right? Rulings such as the one handed down in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission certainly seem to constitute conservative judicial activism, but I don't believe this ruling falls into that category. To be protected against self-incrimination while testifying in court you typically have to invoke that right, and this seems similar in that regard. Am I missing something here? Maybe I need another cup of coffee.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EricEFNY
10:29 AM on 06/02/2010
You are not missing a thing. Well stated...with one qualification..the police can continue to try to question...you still would not be required to respond. Nor can they torture you or coerce anything from you.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
UnknownSolider
12:32 PM on 06/02/2010
ummmm you are partly wrong

The police can coerce things from suspects and its all legal thanks to the Supreme Court.......

Yes my friend the Police can lie to suspects they are under no obligation to tell the truth to the public (Outside of a court of law)
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
UnknownSolider
11:08 AM on 06/02/2010
Yes, you are MISSING one HUGE something, since when is a police precint a court house?? There is a huge difference between a Prosecutor (Professional Lawyer) questioning someone (eliciting testimony) and the police who are not members of the bar and have no ethical code to follow whatsoever.

If a lawyer steps out of line to win a case he can be punished by the Bar, on the other hand if a cop steps out of line to win a case........ ummm not much happens to him

the police can lie to suspects to get them to incriminate themselves, a lawyer is not allowed to go into court and knowingly lie or intentionally misrepresent facts, they have a duty to seek the truth.

its better that we let the lawyers do the questioning and just leave the police to make the arrest
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KBinIA
I would rather be camping...
12:01 PM on 06/02/2010
I'll concede that police are not members of the bar (other than the ones they might choose to visit after work), but they have no ethical code to follow whatsoever? That's not what I recall from Ethics in Criminal Justice class. It may seem like that if your knowledge is based primarily on television shows you've watched.

If a cop steps out of line to win a case, depending on the circumstances, a number of things can happen. The officer and/or their department can be sued. Evidence can be suppressed. Confessions may not be allowed to be used in court. Not much?

Lawyers would probably not be thrilled with your suggestion that they should start conducting the interviews or investigations in addition to all their other duties. Next you'll be suggesting that lawyers should hang out at convenience stores and eat donuts. Geesh!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bushitbrain
08:30 AM on 06/02/2010
Any doubt remaining that El Supremo has violated the basis of American's rights has vanished, as has any doubt that cops rule our society. Now you are presumed guilty, & cops are free to ply info from otherwise innocent people in an extremely intimidating context. It is up to the individual now to stand up & say NOTHING, but: I want a lawyer & I want my phone call, PIG !
Disband the El Supremo.
08:04 AM on 06/02/2010
If you can not speak, "mute", it will be hard to say I want to remain silent and I want an attorney.
If you do not understand the language of the arresting officer is , it will be hard to understand you are being arrested and need to remain silent, and ask permission to do so, and request an attorney.
If you are mentally ill, it will be hard for you to know what is in your best interest, and you would probably not ask permission to remain silent and request an attorney.
If you are severely injured and are not completely lucid, due to severe pain, it will be hard to ask permission to remain silent and request an attorney.
If you are inebriated, or under the influence of drugs, you will not have you wits about you to remain silent, or ask permission to do so and request an attorney.
08:25 AM on 06/02/2010
If you cannot speak, write.
If you cannot understand the language then why are you here in the first place?
If you are mentally ill there are already protections on the books that are unaffected by this ruling.
Injured? see mentally ill.
If you are inebriated or under the influence then that's probably why you're there in the first place.
This are excuses. Nothing more.
10:29 AM on 06/02/2010
When being arrested make sure you have a pen an paper on you if you are mute.
When being arrested make sure you speak English if you are visiting from a foreign country or you are a student here.
Injured and mentally ill are not the same thing.
Being inebriated is not a crime unless you are in public causing a disturbance or driving a vehicle.

These were not excuses, just pointing out the facts.