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The entire thrust of police interrogation . . . was to put the defendant in such an emotional state as to impair his capacity for rational judgment. . . [T]he choice on his part to speak to the police -- was not made knowingly

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In the given scenario the court could not notify himself of their rights and thereby violates their Fourth Amendment or Self-incrimination as well as the Sixth Amendment, and as well as the right to an attorney, therefore Miranda could never make him a criminal without knowing that he might decline too.

The entire thrust of police interrogation . . . was to put the defendant in such an-example-1
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