Miranda rights are constitutional
protections requiring law enforcement to inform a suspect of their
right to remain silent and their right to an attorney before a
"custodial interrogation". Established by the U.S. Supreme Court in Miranda v. Arizona, these safeguards prevent coerced confessions and protect the Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination.
The Core Warning
While there is no strict national script, police typically recite a warning containing these five essential elements:
Right to remain silent: You have the right to refuse to answer questions.
Use of statements: Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law
.
Right to an attorney: You have the right to consult with a lawyer before speaking to the police and have them present during questioning.
Appointed counsel: If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you by the court.
Right to stop: You can decide at any time to exercise these rights and stop answering questions.
When Are They Required?
Miranda rights must be read only if both of these conditions are met:
In Custody: You are not free to leave (e.g., arrested, handcuffed, or in a police vehicle).
Being Interrogated: Police are asking questions designed to elicit incriminating responses.
Note:
Police do not need to "Mirandize" you during a routine traffic stop or
if they are simply asking general on-the-scene questions before an
arrest is made.
What Happens If Rights Are Violated?
If
officers fail to read you your rights during a custodial interrogation,
any statements or confessions you made are generally considered
inadmissible in court under the "exclusionary rule". However, an arrest
is still legally valid even if the arresting officers did not read you
your rights, as long as there was probable cause.
WASHINGTON — The effort by the U.S. and Iran to negotiate an end to the war
has been defined by dramatic fits and starts and punctuated by missile
strikes and naval blockades. Yet since a memorandum of understanding was
brokered last weekend, the confusion has only grown.
The White House said the agreement had been signed on Sunday by Vice President JD Vance
but then announced there would be another signing — this time with a
ceremony — on Friday. Also on Sunday, President Donald Trump said he
would “fully authorize” the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz in what he
described as a “complete” deal. But an hour later, the president said
the critical waterway would open once the deal was signed on Friday.
Trump
administration officials offered conflicting messages on Monday about
when the text of the memorandum would be released, with some saying
within the next 24 to 48 hours and others saying not until Friday.
At
one point, Trump said while in France for the Group of Seven summit
that he might just read the text of the MOU aloud during a news
conference. Instead, U.S. officials read the text on a call with
reporters during Trump’s news conference.
The
lack of clarity over the proposed peace deal is only the latest murky
point in the conflict since the U.S. and Israel launched attacks on Iran
in February. Trump has offered shifting reasons for going to war with
Iran and given different answers on what he hoped to get out of it. Both
Iran and the U.S. have continued to launch strikes, even as leaders say
a temporary ceasefire brokered in early April remains in place. Even the MOU differs from what Trump said he wanted out of a deal with Iran.
President Donald Trump signs a peace deal with Iran at Versailles on Wednesday.via Reuters
Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., wrote on X on Wednesday that President Ronald “Reagan is rolling over in his grave” and labeled the MOU “the worst foreign policy blunder in decades.”
Asked
if he’s confident Iran will give up its nuclear ambitions, Sen. John
Kennedy, R-La., said on Tuesday, “Unless you were homeschooled by a day
drinker, no one’s confident that Iran’s going to do anything.”
And Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who has been skeptical of the U.S. negotiating with Iran, posted on X that
he spoke with U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff and “it is my opinion that
signing the MOU will be beneficial to the United States, in as much as
the Strait of Hormuz will begin to open, and the hostilities with Iran
will stop.”
Vance said
Thursday that the 60-day clock for a long-term agreement had already
started. But it took hours for the U.S. to say the critical Strait of
Hormuz was open, a development that the MOU stipulates should have
happened immediately, though the U.S. blockade of ships coming from or
going to Iranian ports was lifted after the second MOU signing,
according to U.S. Central Command.
“The traffic of commercial vessels will immediately start,” the MOU states.
The
U.S. military does not have any reports of Iranian attacks against
commercial ships in the strait on Friday, according to a U.S. official.
U.S. forces would continue to operate in the area to support freedom of
navigation, the official said, adding: “We’re not going to let
commercial vessels get attacked.”
It
also remains unclear whether the U.S. has issued sanctions waivers to
allow Iran to sell its oil, which is also a provision in the MOU. “The
United States of America undertakes that immediately upon the signing of
this MOU, and until the termination of sanctions, U.S. Department of
Treasury will issue waivers for the export of Iranian crude oil,
petroleum products, and derivatives, and all associated services,
including banking transactions, insurances, transportation, etc.,” it
says.
The latest twist came on Thursday.
Officials
from Tehran and Washington were set to meet in Switzerland on Friday to
begin 60 days of negotiating a long-term deal designed to facilitate a
lasting conclusion to the war. But new Israeli strikes in Lebanon cast
doubt on the deal, and the White House abruptly announced that Vance
had postponed plans to travel to Switzerland for the talks.
Iran
asked for guarantees that hostilities in Lebanon would end, as outlined
in the MOU, and mediators were working to resolve the issue, a regional
diplomat told NBC News.
American
spy agencies believe Israel will likely continue to launch attacks on
Hezbollah forces in Lebanon, potentially jeopardizing the tentative
peace deal between the U.S. and Iran, according to a source with
knowledge of the intelligence assessments. And Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and officials in his government have criticized the
MOU.
Trump, meanwhile, has publicly sought to convey optimism about the MOU and the prospect of a long-term deal.
“We
have our deal done with Iran,” he said Tuesday during a meeting with
the emir of Qatar while in France. “It goes to a second stage, which I
think will be actually easier.”
Iran and the U.S. have both shown frustration with Israel for continuing to strike Lebanon despite the deal signed this week.
Iran says Strait of Hormuz is closed over ceasefire violations after continued Israeli strikes in Lebanon
Iran
and the U.S. have both shown frustration with Israel for continuing to
strike Lebanon despite the deal signed this week, which committed to end
fighting on all fronts.
Iran said Saturday that the Strait of Hormuz is closed, citing ceasefire violations after Israel continued deadly strikes in southern Lebanon overnight.
The
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy warned ships not to approach the
waterway, which Iran had committed to reopening under the interim peace deal signed this week. It said in a statement that vessels’ safety would be at risk if they did so.
Iran’s
top joint military command said the closure was the “first step” in
response to what were described as breaches of commitments by the U.S.
and Israel, according to Iran’s semiofficial Mehr news agency.
In a statement on X that
did not acknowledge the apparent closure, U.S. Central Command said
that 55 merchant ships transited the strait on Saturday, “moving large
amounts of cargo and more than 17 million barrels of oil to global
markets.”
U.S. forces “remain
present and vigilant to ensure all aspects of the agreement with Iran
are adhered to, obeyed, and in full force and effect,” the statement
said.
Iran and the U.S. have
both shown frustration with Israel for continuing to strike Lebanon
despite the deal signed this week, which specified that fighting must
end on all fronts, including Lebanon. Though Israel was not a direct
party to that deal, Iran has warned that it would consider Israeli
strikes a violation of the terms.
Early
Saturday, Israeli strikes killed at least 16 people, including two
children, according to Lebanese civil defense and media, one day after
the U.S. said Israel and Hezbollah had implemented a fresh ceasefire at President Donald Trump’s request.
Israel
hit a series of towns across Lebanon’s south early Saturday, Lebanese
news agency NNA reported. An airstrike on the town of Arabsalim
reportedly killed three people, the agency reported, and a drone strike
on the town of Deir al-Zahrani reportedly killed one person. At least
seven people remain trapped under the rubble, it said. Lebanon’s army
said a soldier was killed between Kfar Rumman and Nabatieh in southern
Lebanon.
A previous wave of strikes on Friday killed 83 people, Lebanon’s Ministry of Health said.
A
statement from the Israel Defense Forces said Hezbollah, an Iran-backed
militant group, had breached the ceasefire and “launched more than 50
projectiles toward IDF soldiers operating in southern Lebanon”
overnight, and that Israel had attacked what it described as Hezbollah
targets in response. “The IDF remains committed to the ceasefire
agreement,” the statement said.
Hezbollah
said it had “adhered to the ceasefire since Friday evening,” accusing
Israel of making false claims to justify its attacks in an effort to
“sabotage the agreement” between Iran and the U.S.
Smoke
rises from the town of Shweikin and the Ali al-Tahir hill area of
southern Lebanon following Israeli airstrikes on June 20.Ramiz Dallah / Anadolu via Getty Images
The continued military bombardment has threatened to derail the fragile U.S. peace talks with Iran.
Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner were
in Switzerland on Saturday “dealing with some of the technical elements
of this negotiation,” Vice President JD Vance told Fox News.
Speaking
before Iran’s Hormuz announcement, Vance said he expected to join them
“sometime the next couple of days,” adding that he spoke with Witkoff
and Kushner and that it is his understanding that “things are going
well.”
Pakistan’s Ministry
of Foreign Affairs announced “technical-level talks” will take place
Sunday, with U.S. and Iranian representatives joined by mediators from
Qatar and Pakistan.
Esmail
Baghaei, a spokesman for Iran’s Foreign Ministry, told Iranian media the
trip was a “mission to demand the fulfillment of the other side’s
obligations,” adding that “negotiations for a final agreement” will
begin when such obligations are implemented.
Iran’s
Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas
Araghchi will lead the Iranian delegation, he said, according to Iranian
state TV.
Officials from
Tehran and Washington were originally set to meet in Switzerland on
Friday to begin 60 days of negotiations on a “final” deal, but those
talks were postponed. The negotiations are meant to resolve some of the
thorniest issues in the deal that are yet to be agreed upon, including
Iran’s nuclear program.
Smoke rises from the site of a string of Israeli airstrikes that targeted the southern Lebanese city of Nabatieh on June 20.Abbas Fakih / AFP via Getty Images
U.S.
spy agencies believe that Israel will likely continue to launch attacks
against the militant group in Lebanon, potentially jeopardizing the
tentative peace deal, according to a source with knowledge of the
intelligence assessments.
Israel’s continued strikes on Lebanon have worsened a widening rift
between the Trump administration and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
and his far-right allies, who have criticized the Iran deal as not in
Israel’s interest and agitated for more strikes on Lebanon. Netanyahu is
also facing a crucial election in October and will likely need the
support of the Israeli far right to stay in power.
“Netanyahu
is in a challenging political spot,” Jonathan Panikoff, a former career
intelligence officer now at the Atlantic Council think tank, told NBC
News in an email. “When combined with the broad view that Iran has
emerged strategically stronger, Netanyahu finds himself trapped.”
Netanyahu’s
vow to occupy southern Lebanon and Israel’s decision to strike both
Iran and Lebanon while an initial deal was being hammered out repeatedly
delayed talks, fueling frustration among U.S. officials.
Vance hit out at Israeli officials on Thursday, saying that Israel does not appreciate American support.
01:08
U.S.-Iran talks postponed as Vance cancels Switzerland trip
00:0000:00
Despite
the rising tensions over Lebanon, there had been hope that ships
trapped in the Persian Gulf will be able to transit through the Strait
of Hormuz since the deal was signed. Industry experts have warned,
however, that it could take weeks for the shipping traffic to fully normalize, given that the threat of mines still needs to be cleared.
IDF
spokesperson Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin said Friday that Israeli forces
will continue to operate in southern Lebanon and “do whatever is
necessary to protect our civilians.”