So should we go back to the old days when hitmen kept a written record of their activities which they kept under their beds so it would be easy for the police to find?Bertinan said:You can clear out bank accounts, steal credit card information, hire a hitman, whatever you want now.
I fixed it for you.Realitycrash said:can someone PLEASE explain to me what the 5:th Ammendment is all about? Because after reading this, I imagined a scenario.
Imagine that there is a man that the feds [del]know of[/del] suspect, that have a trigger locked in a small box. If the trigger is not pressed within 24 hours, a bomb goes off somewhere, and a lot of people get killed. The feds [del]know[/del] suspect this, they have the man, he knows how to open the box, but he denies that there is a trigger in the box (though he confirms that there is something illegal in there, and that he can open the box, but he won't, because it would "incriminate himself"). The feds can not open the box without the bomb going off, nor can they find the bomb within 24 hours.
So, even though the man admits that he is hiding something illegal, and the feds have very strong evidence for thinking that this might be the trigger, they really can't force the man to open the box?
Most countries have something similar. It's the right to remain silent.
The court can compel your man to open the box, as he has already admitted that he can, but it cannot compel him to reveal any information which resides in his brain.
Suppose you are suspected of an assault that occurred on a particular street. You are innocent, but you were walking down that particular street at the time the assault took place. If you told the police this fact, that would "incriminate yourself", even though you are innocent. It would be a piece of evidence they could use against you in a trial. You would be foolish to reveal this information to the police, and it would be wrong for a government to have the power to compel someone to reveal such information. By "pleading the fifth" you might seem to admit that there is some information that incriminates you (makes you appear guilty), but that does not imply any actual guilt. The Fifth Amendment is intended to protect the innocent from being compelled to incriminate themselves (make themselves appear guilty).
To apply a similar logic to the encryption argument, if I have an encrypted document on my computer all about how I really, really hate a particular person, and then one day this person turns up floating in the river with a bullet in his head, I'm sure as hell not going to want the police to be able to read that document.
Or if I keep a traditional, pen and paper diary, and in the entry for April 19th, I have written "JC" (using initials is a form of encryption), and on April 19th John Connor turns up in a similar river/bullet-based predicament, I am not going to want to tell the police that "JC" stands for John Connor. Of course if "JC" actually stood for Jackie Chan I would be happy to tell the police that.
This isn't about privacy at all.Thyunda said:Privacy is overrated when it starts interfering with the justice system.
In the same way that we need to respect tigers.Thyunda said:People need to respect the police.
And if law enforcement is investigating me, it's going to have to do that job without my help.'Never trust a copper' is 70s talk. I like to think we've come past that. If the officer asks 'what's in the box', you open the box. The law enforcement has a job to do. An important job.
"Always trust a copper" is just as stupid as "never trust a copper".
The police are (mostly) honest people. The problem is they are honestly following a procedure that says: 1. Gather evidence. 2. Is there enough evidence to press charges? 3. If yes, press charges. There is no room for an officer to say, well, yesss... but I think we've got the wrong guy. If there's enough evidence, the charges get pressed, whether the police think he's guilty or not.
That procedure will and does lead to charges being pressed against innocent people every day.
If you disagree, then perhaps you'd like to explain to the class, in your own words, why, if at all, you think we need a criminal court system with juries of our peers.
The faults of the legal system are the only reason this thread exists. If the legal system was faultless, there would be nothing to discuss here.Thyunda said:Now let's not bring in the faults of the legal system here