Canada will not adopt the American rule-book on Miranda Rights.
Written By:
Reid
Nov 23, 2010
In a new column for our Members only page Gino Arcaro has written an article on several significant Canadian Supreme Court decisions. Gino's article is entitled, Oct. 8, 2010 - Landmark Decision Day, and begins as follows:
No free trade of constitutional rights. Canada will not adopt the American rule-book on Miranda Rights.
On Oct. 8, 2010, the Supreme Court of Canada released a trilogy of case law decisions regarding interrogations related to major crime investigations. All three cases involved major crimes - two homicides and a series of attacks on women. The decisions confirmed that:
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No free trade of constitutional rights. Canada will not adopt the American rule-book on Miranda Rights.
On Oct. 8, 2010, the Supreme Court of Canada released a trilogy of case law decisions regarding interrogations related to major crime investigations. All three cases involved major crimes - two homicides and a series of attacks on women. The decisions confirmed that:
- An adult offender does not have the right to have a lawyer present during interrogation.
- The police may ignore the suspect's decision to remain silent while trying to change the suspect's mind about that decision. Invoking the right to silence is not absolute or final.
- Adult offenders don't have the right to a second opinion - a re-consultation - after they speak to a lawyer, if the nature of the investigation remains unchanged, e.g., the victim dies, thereby changing the severity of the offence.