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Case Comments
Vol. 66, Issue 4, 2014February 01, 2015 EDT

You Have the Right to Remain Silent, But Anything You Don’t Say May Be Used Against You: The Admissibility of Silence as Evidence After Salinas v. Texas

Andrew M. Hapner,
Photo by Luke Tanis on Unsplash
Fla. L. Rev.
Andrew M. Hapner, You Have the Right to Remain Silent, But Anything You Don’t Say May Be Used Against You: The Admissibility of Silence as Evidence After Salinas v. Texas, 66 Fla. L. Rev. 1763 (2015).
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