Mark Bennett | February 12, 2010
A Harris County felony prosecutor, in closing argument, says (PDF on Scribd):
You-all heard some evidence, which I would have loved to brought you more people, but I couldn’t. This case is, does Harris County find what he did okay? And I still don’t know what he did, because he won’t even say it.
We all say [...]
Category: Fifth Amendment, Prosecutors, argument, trial |
5 Comments »
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Mark Bennett | September 28, 2009
Police officer to me: “I do have some questions for your client, but I’m not goofy enough to think you’re going to let him answer them.”
Category: Fifth Amendment, police |
6 Comments »
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Mark Bennett | July 26, 2009
If I read The Volokh Conspiracy, I would’ve seen and (again) blogged about this back in February:
U.S. District Judge William K. Sessions III in Burlington handed down an opinion sort-of-reversing Magistrate Judge Jerome J. Niedermeier’s order quashing a grand jury subpoena for:
all documents, whether in electronic or paper form, reflecting any passwords used or [...]
Category: Fifth Amendment, search and seizure |
8 Comments »
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Mark Bennett | July 29, 2008
I’ve been saying it on the internet for 10 years in my Million-Dolar Legal Advice: don’t talk to the police.
Category: Fifth Amendment |
3 Comments »
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Mark Bennett | January 28, 2008
Scott Greenfield writes to “deconstruct” (whatever that means) the Boucher confusion on password and privilege.
Scott and Orin Kerr and Gideon all presumed that Mr. Boucher had input the password at the border when agents asked to see what was on the computer. But the Boucher opinion doesn’t actually say that Mr. Boucher input his password [...]
Category: Fifth Amendment |
5 Comments »
Tags: Fifth Amendment
Mark Bennett | January 26, 2008
Gideon brings us news of a federal case in Vermont in which the judge has refused to force the accused to reveal the password that he used to PGP-encrypt the kiddie porn on his computer, even though the accused had already used the password to show agents what was on the computer.
This is, of course, [...]
Category: Fifth Amendment, privacy, right to be left alone |
6 Comments »
Tags: Fifth Amendment
Mark Bennett | January 13, 2008
In response to this post about prosecutors advising witnesses who wish to take the Fifth, an anonymous Harris County prosecutor wrote:
Before you are too hard on the D.A.s for telling a witness that they can’t plead the 5th on the stand, you should realize how often that comes up for us. Too many [...]
Category: Fifth Amendment, Prosecutors |
10 Comments »
Tags: Fifth Amendment, Prosecutors
Mark Bennett | January 12, 2008
Twice recently I’ve had people — potential witnesses in criminal cases — tell me, “the prosecutor said I couldn’t take the Fifth because I’m not testifying to anything incriminating.” One of them, an alleged complaining witness, even told me, “the prosecutor said I didn’t need a lawyer because he’s my lawyer.”
Hogwash.
First, the prosecutor isn’t the [...]
Category: Fifth Amendment |
3 Comments »
Tags: Fifth Amendment
Mark Bennett | December 10, 2007
From McClung’s Texas Pattern Jury Charges:
You are instructed that our law provides that the failure of the defendant to testify shall not be taken as a circumstance against him, and during your deliberations you must not allude to, comment on, or discuss the failure of the defendant to testify in this cause, nor [...]
Category: Fifth Amendment, jury instruction |
9 Comments »
Tags: Fifth Amendment