After the suspect in
the Boston Marathon Massacre was brought to a hospital he was questioned
without being advised of his rights or having an attorney present. Ostensibly the purpose of this was to get
information in case the public was in danger, actually the purpose was to allow
law enforcement officers the chance to get information that they otherwise
might not have been entitled to.
But in the first
court appearance, held at the hospital bedside of the suspect U. S.
Magistrate Marianne
Bowler did a simple, unremarkable and absolutely courageous and proper
thing.
A federal judge decided to advise Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev of
his Miranda rights, even though investigators apparently still wanted to
question him further under a public-safety exception.
The problem, so-called conservatives think that
rights do not apply to everyone.
The judge's move, made on Monday in the hospital
where Mr. Tsarnaev was recovering, has prompted some Republican lawmakers to
press the Justice Department as to why it didn't make a stronger bid to resist
the judge's plans.
Those lawmakers say Mr. Tsarnaev's interrogation
should have continued without him being advised of his right to remain silent,
because they say agents should have had more time to determine if there were
other undetected bombs or plotters. After being read his rights, the suspect
stopped talking to investigators, officials said.
Now one might think that everyone knows they have the
right to remain silent and the right to an attorney, but this suspect appears
to be so ignorant that it is possible he was unaware of his rights.
But those rights exists unconditionally, and if a
person is unaware they must be made aware.
Rights which can be revoked at the whim of politicians or law
enforcement officers are not rights at all.
Conservatives believe that freedom is something
granted to everyone, and that government’s job is not to give freedom, but to
protect it. That’s great, but it would
be even better if they actually believed what they have been saying.
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