I'm embarrassed my government is holding this guy.
Lawyers for Marcus Hutchins: His 'I made malware' jail phone call isn't proper evidence
Malware reverse-engineer Marcus Hutchins has tried to throw out phone transcripts and legal documents used against him by US prosecutors, who have accused him of computer crimes and fraud. Lawyers for Hutchins, a British citizen facing trial in America, has asked an east Wisconsin district court to dismiss the Brits' Waiver of …
COMMENTS
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Thursday 17th May 2018 04:30 GMT Anonymous Coward
Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
@anon: "He admitted to committing a crime after being read his rights. You should feel embarrassed for defending him."
“the agents did not record the part of the interview in which they purportedly advised of him of his Miranda rights, answered any questions he might have had, and had him sign a Miranda waiver form.” ref
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Thursday 17th May 2018 06:39 GMT Gotno iShit Wantno iShit
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
Thanks for the link Walter, interesting reading.
---->
It is good to see that US law makes the distinction between writing malware (legal) and deploying it (illegal). Without that most security researchers would be inside by now.
Based on the evidence disclosed so far there's nothing to suggest Hutchins was involved in packaging and deploying Kronos. It seems he wrote some of the code in it but then so probably did hundreds of others if you look at all the dependencies and libraries down to the core. So looking good for Hutchins. Except of course that he'll be a Brit in front of 12 Trumpistani jurors and as any follower of Hollywood movies knows the Brit is always evil.
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Sunday 14th October 2018 11:50 GMT JohnG
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
"Based on the evidence disclosed so far there's nothing to suggest Hutchins was involved in packaging and deploying Kronos."
If I understood it correctly, Hutchins was arrested on the word of someone who was caught with some of the money but got a plea deal i.e. the individual actually responsible for the theft/fraud will get less punishment than someone who at best, had mininal involvment.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 14:39 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
"That’s because in the US law enforcement has no right to record discussions with a person of interest before they sign a waiver."
LOL they record everyone, especially international calls, and double on all calls from jails where there is no privacy under normal circumstances. The notion of Legality with governments spying is pretty mute.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 14:46 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
They record people before they have been advised of their Miranda rights all the time - just look at all the dashcam video you see these days. The law doesn't say they can't record stuff they say after arrest and before they've been read their rights, only that it can't be used against them in court. There's certainly nothing stopping them from recording the part where they read his rights, and I have to agree with those who think it looks odd they don't appear to have done so.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 15:54 GMT a_yank_lurker
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
@DougS - Third party videos can be used as evidence such as dash cam videos without reading the Miranda rights. Miranda explicitly refers to interviewing the accused and nothing else. Most local Stasis over here record all interviews as a matter of policy to provide an accurate record of what was said. However, the ferals generally do not.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 16:47 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
Dash cam videos can be used because they are prior to arrest. If the guy is placed under arrest and not Mirandized, anything he says that the dashcam or bodycam hears can't be used against him.
It has nothing to do with "interviewing", you get Mirandized after arrest even if you will never be interviewed - like if you were caught breaking into a house. They aren't going to sit you down and try to get a confession, because they caught you red handed. But if they don't read you your rights and you say "I had a partner named DougS but he fled before you guys got here" they can't use your statement in court if they later arrested me.
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Wednesday 23rd May 2018 21:25 GMT Tom Paine
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
If you mean the UK police, they all video record all interviews. PACE was 1984 IIRC and it's been updated several times since then.
And the UK police are NOTHING like the Stasi. I have a family member who grew up in the DDR. Please go read up before saying silly things that make you sound like Dave Spart.
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Monday 21st May 2018 13:12 GMT Aodhhan
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
BTW...
They don't have to record the signing of Miranda.
Apparently he was coherent enough to remember someone's phone number, use a pay phone and conduct a collect call; yet too incoherent to understand Miranda... right--get real.
I'm sure if you were one of the individuals who lost their life savings because of malware he assisted in creating, you'd look at this a bit differently. Hopefully, you never have to find out.
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Tuesday 22nd May 2018 07:25 GMT Jamie Jones
Re: Signed a Miranda waiver form after being read his rights
Apparently he was coherent enough to remember someone's phone number, use a pay phone and conduct a collect call; yet too incoherent to understand Miranda... right--get real.
Hey, I'm currently more coherent and cleverer than that!
I can currently remember someones phone number, and use a pay phone, and am clever enough to know that when you say "collect call" you mean "reverse charge", and even conduct said reverse-charge call.
There are even more things, ... I can probably remember 2 peoples phone number to be honest, and know how to work a mobile phone as well as a pay phone!
But, I digress, the reason for my reply: "Who's Miranda?"
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Thursday 17th May 2018 07:27 GMT Anonymous Coward
I'm convinced more and more that he is the creator of or minimum a contributor of Wannacry and panicked when it took down the NHS and carried on destroying everything Windows in its wake. He then pretended to be the hero that saved the day by "discovering" the kill switch..
Munchausen By Proxy of the tech variety.
Time will tell I guessif I'm right. However this new revelation just bolters my theory,a "researcher" (self proclaimed) that has written banking malware and sold it on... Hmmmm...
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Thursday 17th May 2018 08:13 GMT steviebuk
Is that just because he's a minor person on his own? If he was working for a big security company would you then believe he didn't do it?
On that note Mark Russinovich must be the creator or helped create the Sony rootkit that he found years ago on a CD he purchased when he was running 2 man only company. But we clearly know he wasn't.
Some people are just good at finding and fixing shit like this.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 18:26 GMT Anonymous Coward
No, Mark Russinovich worked for Microsoft, and had an agenda to brainwash as many internet idiots as possible with his overhyped sensational spew against Sony...
If you think he was acting out of his own beliefs, and not on the payroll of one of the biggest American companies, looking to launch their first games console against the Japanese giant, then frankly, you are a fool.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 11:22 GMT J__M__M
He then pretended to be the hero that saved the day by "discovering" the kill switch?
Stop being a jerk. First, he tried to remain anonymous until somebody outed him. Second, if you're going to set yourself to be the nerd hero, you don't code a kill switch that any jerk with a godaddy account and a hex editor can activate. He fully admits he stumbled into it.
But hey, if you need to dump on him to make you feel better about yourself, I guess that's what you're gonna do.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 12:54 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: I'm sure...
You're wrong. With the frantic desire of the current British government to give oral pleasure to the US President in the hope of avoiding tariffs post-Brexit, any US citizen in such circumstances would be deported very quickly.
If he was a member of their armed forces, he'd simply go home without any comment from the British government.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 10:59 GMT Anonymous Coward
Reading the call transcript...Is missing phrase - CV?
Had Marcus Hutchins applied to work or actually worked for GCHQ, whether as a contractor or on their payroll? Seems so.
In the transcript...
<Redacted Name> Did GCHQ know about this, is had you told them about this stuff?
HUTCHINS: Yeah
<Redacted Name> OK, and the NCSC as well?
HUTCHINS: No
<Redacted Name> OK, um
HUTCHINS: Because it came up in my vetting.
https://www.gchq-careers.co.uk/recruitment-process.html
"You'll go through a rigorous, but fair, vetting process that will look into your background, character, family history and personal circumstances. You must be over 18 to go through this process. Once this phase of your application begins, it normally takes around three months to complete – though this can vary depending on the complexities of each case."
Later in transcript...
HUTCHINS: No, it didn't come from GCHQ, I think because they had chat logs so they've got it from a different source, whereas GCHQ only had my <unintelligible>
Is missing phrase - CV?
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Thursday 17th May 2018 12:53 GMT Jamie Jones
Re: Reading the call transcript...Is missing phrase - CV?
That sounds like Security Clearance to me, which is a common process for these kinds of roles.
Yeah, I went through the same process.
(*) It shows the state of the UK where some Welsh twat like me was cleared.
(**) It was ages ago - it expired over 15 years ago.
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Wednesday 16th May 2018 20:58 GMT Tim Rustican
If the purpose of putting a felon in a US prison is to rehabilitate them, then it's reasonable to argue that Marcus has already rehabilitated himself, before he travelled to the US and got arrested - he'd gone from being a 14 year old kid interested in malware to a responsible malware researcher interested in saving the NHS from meltdown. To me this is a lot like Alan Turing saving the UK from Hitler and then being prosecuted and persecuted for being an illegal homosexual in Wilmslow, UK in 1954.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 12:45 GMT Anonymous Coward
"Probation units are not there to help offenders but only to supervise them now."
The English probation service has been re-organised and cut many times in recent years.
However there are still volunteers who help probationers with various tasks like filling in forms, job applications, and claiming benefits. A friend often is on the sidelines for months when the organisation of her voluntary work has been passed to yet another outsource. Each time she has to wait for the necessary clearances before she can continue to help probationers.
She spoke of one habitual offender who had originally been imprisoned for a first-time accountancy fraud. He said that the first week in prison was hell - and if he had then been released he would have never broken the law again.
After that first week he became used to the system and was taught by other inmates how to become a real criminal when he was released.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 12:20 GMT rg287
Okay, in the UK - where we don't fire guns for fun
Err, yeah we do.
1% of the population own licensable firearms and shotguns, there are ~10million airguns in circulation and clay-pigeon shooting is an extremely popular corporate-hospitality, stag-do and general leisure activity.
Suggestions in his bail hearing that he committed a federal offence by going to a tourist shooting range in Las Vegas are so much bullshit. It's a cry of desperation from the prosecution because they don't have anything better (that they're willing to disclose yet anyway).
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Thursday 17th May 2018 13:39 GMT sisk
The idea is they could get a job when they leave and become a useful member of society - often at Timpsons Shoe Repairs.
That's another reason for our repeat offender rate. If you've done a stint in a US prison for a felony, good luck finding a job that doesn't involve the risk of going back. And even if you do the government might just screw you over. I know a guy who managed to get a - I think his parents put in a good word for him - job when he got out after going to prison for a couple years on a drug offense. 3 months later the state decided he need to go spend 6 months at a halfway house to "help him integrate back into society" - never mind that he had already done that with a little help from hi family. Most places would have fired him. Fortunately for him it was a small, local company that was willing to hold the job for him till the state decided to let him come back.
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Sunday 10th June 2018 19:59 GMT Alan Brown
"No US prison has rehabilitation as a core purpose."
The entire US legal system (and particularly the prisons) is geared around retribution and revenge, not around rebuilding, rehabilitation and reconciliation.
"An eye for an eye eventually puts everyone in the kingdom of the blind"
The USA has prison populations per capita higher than _any_ other country in the world for a couple of reasons - firstly that it's a quick and dirty way of disenfranchising the poor (which is illegal under international law, but the USA does it anyway) and secondly that it allows legalised slavery - which contrary to popular belief isn't completely illegal in the USA - slavery of the incarcerated is explcitly still on the books and still practiced.
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Wednesday 16th May 2018 21:17 GMT sisk
If the purpose of putting a felon in a US prison is to rehabilitate them
Let me stop you right there. It isn't. What, you think we get a 90% repeat offense rate by having rehabilitation anywhere on the list of priorities in our prison system? Nah man. US prisons are built and run around the idea of punishment, with a little though given to things like dignity but none at all given to the possibility of taking in a criminal and spitting out a rehabilitated, possibly productive, member of society. If anything our prisons do the exact opposite, taking in petty criminals and spitting out hardened ones.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 01:24 GMT AZump
...wrong.
Most prisons in the US are run by FOR PROFIT CORPORATIONS. It's not about punishment at all. It's about MONEY. Many inmates have come within days of release only to have some petty BS reason given which adds months onto their sentence.
I doubt Jesus Christ himself would only serve his initial time.
Seriously, petty reasons. You're due for release in 3 days? Guard pays inmate to punch you. 6 more months for fighting. Even though you went down and didnt instigate or fight back.
Inmate == Income
Period.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 10:03 GMT Vinyl-Junkie
Re: US Prisons
"If anything our prisons do the exact opposite, taking in petty criminals and spitting out hardened ones."
Or dead ones. I came across this article when playing around with the Random Article button on Wikipedia, and couldn't believe what I was reading. This reads like something from a Japanese PoW camp in WW2, not a supposedly civilised country in 2009.
Disgusting.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 19:04 GMT FuzzyWuzzys
Re: US Prisons
And the sickening death of Darren Rainey, a mentally ill person who was scolded for 2 hours in an 82C shower room, 90% burns and his skin literally fell of his body.
There is a minority of so called guards and careworkers in institutions who are basically worse than the guards at Nazi concentration camps. You could, at a pinch, say the Nazis had an ideal in mind and believed in their twisted idealogy, whereas a small minority of institutional workers are state sanctioned psychotic murders and sadists who enjoy inflicting pain on others for nothing more than pure pleasure it gives them.
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Wednesday 16th May 2018 21:14 GMT sisk
Erm....Ok....so you took a guy from another country who was drunk at the time. Then you let him waive his Miranda Rights while drunk and sleep deprived. On what grounds can you realistically say this person could possibly understand his rights?
There are times, more and more of them lately, when I'm disgusted by my own government.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 09:03 GMT E_Nigma
Ugh
@The AC that says that the guy didn't seem drunk, just dumb: And yet we know that this guy isn't dumb, therefore, apparently, he was somehow impaired.
True, it can be argued that intelligent people can do dumb things, but it's usually out of hubris, or in the matters far outside their field. To that point, I don't see hubris anywhere in his behaviour and whether you wave your rights or not in his situation is simple math: those rights are there to protect you, the people who want you to wave them are those who want to convict you.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 08:39 GMT LucreLout
Erm....Ok....so you took a guy from another country who was drunk at the time. Then you let him waive his Miranda Rights while drunk and sleep deprived.
Not to piss on anyones chips here, but the only evidence I've seen for that position is his lawyers assertion. Given that lawyers lie for a living, and to a man freely chose their 'profession', then I think we should give zero consideration to that statement unless and until some evidence emerges.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 17:57 GMT Robert Helpmann??
There are times, more and more of them lately, when I'm disgusted by my own government.
This only means that you have become more and more aware of what our country has practiced all along. Study a bit of history. It may no be the most cheerful of experiences, but it will certainly be eye-opening. You might want to start with Miranda v. Arizona and why the warning has to be given in the first place (funny how Arizona keeps popping up in this discussion). Work your way backward from there. Have fun.
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Wednesday 16th May 2018 21:33 GMT Anonymous Coward
from reading the transcript, the guy clearly did not understand the process of arrest and hid rights. So anything he said prior to receiving a proper Miranda is clearly not admissible. If it gets thrown out or not is another matter all together.
In the transcript, he admits to writing some code and passing on a binary so if its not thrown out he is in the brown sticky stuff.
But....
As he said, they clearly knew about this previously and did not bother about picking him up on previous trips to the USA so what's the motive now?
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Wednesday 16th May 2018 21:49 GMT Anonymous Coward
Miranda rights are not a secret code. "You have the right to remain silent" is about as clear as it gets. Reading the transcript, he is responding directly to each of the questions he is asked and doesn't appear to be confused at all.
This is all pretty clear unless you let your personal politics cloud your judgement.
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Sunday 1st July 2018 21:06 GMT JohnG
"Miranda rights are not a secret code. "You have the right to remain silent" is about as clear as it gets."
For a British person that is not true. In Britain, we used to have something equivalent to Miranda rights but it was changed... Now people have a right to silence but if they exercise that right, this can be used against them in court.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 00:10 GMT Mark 85
General embarrassment of the NSA due to the damage done by their malware which they failed to control.
This might be a big part of the "why?". All the snooping agencies are pissed at security research and of course, encryption. Every hole that gets patched is one less for them to use. But, I'll try to keep an open mind on this....
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Wednesday 16th May 2018 23:32 GMT Long John Brass
Depends on the code
writing some code and passing on a binary so if its not thrown out he is in the brown sticky stuff.
I'll bet that part of the code also included <stdlib.h> so the GNU guys are in the firing line now too? What about the researcher that writes a "non-lethal" proof of concept that some miscreant later weaponizes?
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Thursday 17th May 2018 07:13 GMT DaveTheForensicAnalyst
"In the transcript, he admits to writing some code and passing on a binary so if its not thrown out he is in the brown sticky stuff."
I don't know, I don't think I agree. Whilst the transcript does make him look somewhat naïve about selling code when he's in a sticky situation with his finances, it doesn't really prove the code he wrote. What I mean is, if he has written code that would habitually scrub data, be that passwords, or any old crud, and he then sold that to an unknown purchaser, what is he actually guilty of? What if the buyer was a sysadmin who had taken over an old system after loss of staff, and needed to route out old service account passwords etc. is that criminal? If he has sold code built to a specification, but the specification isn't "please write me some code so I can nick a load of dosh from some banks", then I can't really see what he has done wrong, apart from being a bit stupid and selling some sniffing code in a chat room.
Maybe that just shows my naivety around the US legal system though.
As for the rest, he's used Jabber, presumably over SSL, where was he during the interception? Was there a warrant in place to allow the interception? There could some of the sticky brown stuff left on the FBI if this transcript gets before a good lawyer.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 08:44 GMT Dodgy Geezer
What is he actually guilty of?
It used to be the case that you only committed a crime if you DID something dodgy.
That era has now long past. Nowadays you can be guilty if you think about doing something dodgy. or something that used to be quite legal last year but has suddenly become illegal without anyone telling you.
In the UK, they could probably get him on "Writing code while having a suspicion that it might be used for criminal purposes" or some such.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 08:51 GMT LucreLout
Re: What is he actually guilty of?
something that used to be quite legal last year but has suddenly become illegal without anyone telling you
This, in spades. The last labour government passed new laws at the rate of 7.5 per day for every day they were in power. Apologies for the guardian link, but it came up early on google:
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2007/jun/04/houseofcommons.uk
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Thursday 17th May 2018 13:04 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: What is he actually guilty of?
"The last labour government passed new laws at the rate of 7.5 per day for every day they were in power. "
IIRC that amounted to 3000 new criminal laws. Law drafting became slack under the pressure. Many details that defined what was or was not illegal were left to a minister's unscrutinised later additions as Secondary Legislation - or to Appeal Court decisions creating new case law. Many details were very subjective - lacking an objective definition.
That assumed that a defendant could afford to take their case that far. Decisions of "not guilty" in lower courts by juries apparently do not have any permanent effect of creating precedents for future cases.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 12:51 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: What is he actually guilty of?
"In the UK, they could probably get him on "Writing code while having a suspicion that it might be used for criminal purposes" or some such."
IIRC a favourite for arresting an apparently innocent person in a "fishing expedition" related to an alleged offence by someone else - is "Suspicion of conspiracy to....".
Hardly matters what the rest is - "conspiracy" in itself is a very serious offence in English law.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 08:45 GMT LucreLout
What I mean is, if he has written code that would habitually scrub data, be that passwords, or any old crud, and he then sold that to an unknown purchaser, what is he actually guilty of? What if the buyer was a sysadmin who had taken over an old system after loss of staff, and needed to route out old service account passwords etc. is that criminal? If he has sold code built to a specification, but the specification isn't "please write me some code so I can nick a load of dosh from some banks", then I can't really see what he has done wrong, apart from being a bit stupid and selling some sniffing code in a chat room.
Hmmm..... if you take a look on some of the pay by gig sites such as oDesk, you'll find opportunity after opportunity to write some code that spiders a video provision site and downloads the contents. It should be self evident to anyone reading it that the purpose is not "backups for the sysadmin", rather it is to steal the content, possibly for redistribution for profit.
At some level we all have to consider the impact, and potential impacts, of our actions. We can't just skate on by unless someone has given us a clear wirtten statement that they intend to use our work to break the law. Society, such that it is, simply cannot work that way.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 09:17 GMT DaveTheForensicAnalyst
24 mins @ LucreLout
I agree with what you are saying, and yes some of these things are obvious, but the point is what is admissible to a court (in any country). What did he agree to do? If what he agreed to do is ropey, then he's buggered, but if what he agreed to do (or was duped into by false presentation) seemed reasonable, then they would have difficulty in proving guilt of a criminal offence (in a civilised legal system).
"We can't just skate on by unless someone has given us a clear wirtten statement that they intend to use our work to break the law. Society, such that it is, simply cannot work that way."
Alas, that really is how life has to work, the way that subsequent governments in the developed world countries have changed laws through a system of paranoia driven decissions, the citizen (or corporation) is now in a "Cover my arse" scenario, where yes, they really do have to have written indemnity for pretty much everything, sad? YES, but reality.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 20:30 GMT Sir Runcible Spoon
At some level we all have to consider the impact, and potential impacts, of our actions. We can't just skate on by unless someone has given us a clear wirtten statement that they intend to use our work to break the law. Society, such that it is, simply cannot work that way
Personally I'd like to see a little more accountability from our representatives paid by the public purse for the many, many, crimes committed in our name. I'd also like a Ferrari, and a boat, and a Ferrari boat (with a never ending supply of Ferrero Rocher).
I'd quite like the moon on a stick as well, but I'm not sure where I'd keep it, my spares cupboard is already looking like a tribble's workshop.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 04:53 GMT tom dial
It seems possible there would be some mileage in a claim of too drunk to understand what he was doing. It would, however take a bit of evidence to justify the claim. Otherwise, the standard Miranda Warning is short and explicit, and probably comprehensible on about a grade 6 or better level, and enough like the similar warning given in the UK for Mr. Hutchins to understand it unless he was really quite impaired.
“You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you. Do you understand the rights I have just read to you? With these rights in mind, do you wish to speak to me?”
http://www.mirandawarning.org/whatareyourmirandarights.html
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Thursday 17th May 2018 07:44 GMT Adam 52
It's not really the warning, the context is important. In the US the police/FBI need to prove that someone is probably guilty before arrest. In the UK it's just vague suspicion. That means that if you've been arrested in the US the police think you're guilty and are out to prove it. In the UK it means they're trying to find out what happened and the best way to do it is with you somewhere where you're not interfering with evidence. That, in turn and along with the different evidence rules, makes a difference to what you should say and how much you should exercise your right to silence.
Attorney is also a word that has gone out of common use in English English. A British person would use the word Solicitor (as a side note, the person you get in an English police station will be an attorney, in the English sense of the word, not necessarily a solicitor or attorney in the American sense).
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Thursday 17th May 2018 08:20 GMT Anonymous Coward
"In the UK it means they're trying to find out what happened and the best way to do it is with you somewhere where you're not interfering with evidence. "
While that is the ideal it appears far from what happens. The mindset of the police in England has apparently become institutionalised to favour the idea of someone's guilt - even if no evidence can be found in advance. An arrest "on vague suspicion" seriously damages an innocent person's current and future freedom of employment and travel.
IIRC such an arrest can possibly be used to facilitate a search in a case where there is no evidence to convince a magistrate to issue a search warrant. Is that still the case?
HM Gov HMCTS staff guidance - Annex A
"A search warrant is a serious interference with a person’s right to live an uninterrupted life.
If one is granted, it is imperative that it is granted for appropriate reasons, and that the documentation is correctly noted.
There are more and more cases in current times where search warrants are being challenged. The police and indeed Magistrates have been heavily criticised. For these reasons, the Criminal Procedure Rule Committee drafted new rules and forms which came into force on October 7th 2013.
Ultimately where there is carelessness on the part of the police or the Magistrates, damages could be awarded, or indeed evidence could be excluded at any future trial. "
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Thursday 17th May 2018 10:27 GMT Adam 52
"IIRC such an arrest can possibly be used to facilitate a search in a case where there is no evidence to convince a magistrate to issue a search warrant. Is that still the case?"
Yes, with caveats (limited locations and only what the Americans would call felonies). Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 s32.
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Monday 21st May 2018 07:37 GMT Adam 52
Sorry, was having a forgetful moment. The relevant section is s18, the bit that authorises a fishing trip is s18 (1) b:
"to some other indictable offence which is connected with or similar to that offence."
As I always say, if you don't like it moan at the people who wrote the rules, not the people who obey them.
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Sunday 1st July 2018 21:11 GMT JohnG
"Otherwise, the standard Miranda Warning is short and explicit, and probably comprehensible on about a grade 6 or better level, and enough like the similar warning given in the UK for Mr. Hutchins to understand it unless he was really quite impaired."
The UK's equivalent of the Miranda law was changed some years ago (thanks to Tony Blair) and there is a significant difference: in the UK, there is a right to silence but a court is allowed to assume something bad about anyone who exercises that right.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 09:27 GMT TrumpSlurp the Troll
Miranda?
"You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you. Do you understand the rights I have just read to you? With these rights in mind, do you wish to speak to me?”
What I don't see is anything that says " Oh, and by the way, 'speak to me' includes anything you say to absolutely anybody at any time including over the phone. Oh, we might bug you talking to your lawyer but we can't use this directly as evidence."
A literal minded computer geek without direct experience of USA law could well not have realised that giving a Miranda included the right to tap phone calls to use as evidence.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 16:56 GMT doublelayer
Re: Miranda?
Sorry, but you have it wrong. Miranda rights include only those statements. Basically, it indicates that the interview you're about to have will be evidence if law enforcement find it useful, and lets you know that you can decide not to talk or to have a lawyer present if you want. It includes nothing about collecting evidence. Agreeing to your Miranda rights doesn't, in itself, grant law enforcement any right to tap your communications or go through your posessions or documents. They can ask you for permission for those things, or they can get a warrant to do those things without your permission. Given that limitation, I think those statements, which are about as literal as they get, are extremely clear. Whatever else the FBI may have done needs to be evaluated for legality independent of the Miranda statement.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 16:27 GMT JJKing
Prosecutors aren't lawyers????
Given that lawyers lie for a living, and to a man freely chose their 'profession',
So are you trying to say that Prosecutors aren't lawyers and therefore don't lie? I think you need to go to Specsavers for a new pair of glasses. Your present ones don't seem to work on both sides.
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Thursday 17th May 2018 19:11 GMT FuzzyWuzzys
A huge thanks to the US government...
...for confirming yet again that my decision to avoid ever setting foot in the US again was a wise one. The US government is quite obviously not interested in fostering any sort of international relations and wishes to keep all visitors out, and worse permanently keep any they manage to capture at the borders. I'm sad about it as it's a lovely country with lovely people but as a non-US citizen I'm more than happy to oblige the US government and keep the heck away from the place from now on.
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Monday 21st May 2018 13:52 GMT Aodhhan
Wake up
Being drunk or under the influence of anything DOES NOT provide an excuse to commit a crime. If this was the case, DUI wouldn't be a crime.
Not all evidence acquired after arrest requires waiving Miranda.There are cases, where it's been proven Miranda wasn't provided after arrest, but evidence collected after the arrest was still allowed.
It depends. For instance, if it was from direct interrogation, it likely isn't going to be allowed, but if it was a recorded call or conversation to a friend... it's likely will be allowed. Not to mention, the friend will likely be called as a witness against the defendant.
Imagine the rock the defendant put his friend under.