Best Of: You Have the Right to Remain Silent – Miranda & Terry Stops Exposed with Jus
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Relive a fan-favorite "Best Of" from Hidden Threads. Macky Outlaw sits down with Jus to dissect the Supreme Court bombshells that redefined police power and suspect rights: Miranda v. Arizona and Terry v. Ohio.
We go deep on Miranda's origins—how Ernesto Miranda's coerced confession led to the iconic warnings protecting against self-incrimination during custodial questioning—and why violations can exclude statements from trial, even if the suspect is guilty. Then we tackle Terry v. Ohio, the 1968 ruling that allowed officers to stop and frisk based on reasonable suspicion alone, sparking ongoing debates about racial profiling, officer safety, and Fourth Amendment limits.
From real PI case examples to courtroom impacts, we cover how these decisions play out in investigations, what investigators need to watch for in evidence collection, and why getting the details wrong can unravel an entire case. Essential listening for anyone fascinated by the tension between justice, rights, and the street-level realities of law enforcement.
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