26-08-2013, 02:49 AM
Jim DiEugenio Wrote:That was six years ago.
I am still waiting for the citation to case law.
Neither Bugliosi nor Alexander, who are both lawyers, produced it.
And if you see what Bugliosi left out about Alexander, sorry, but I don't trust him. In fact, I don't trust either one of them.
Especially when you consider who Alexander was working for.
ANd Bugliosi himself notes the discrepancy. Oswald asked for a respite from questioning. They didn't give it to him.
Where's the tough Texas law Alexander was talking about?
Further, when did they advise him of his right to remain silent? And when did they tell him they would furnish him a lawyer?
If they did not do any of this, and they did not, how was Texas law tougher than Miranda?
Miranda simply made the police tell you your Constitutional rights ghts, but it did not give you those rights. LHO knew his rights and even Capt. Fritz said he seemed to have interrogation training of some kind.
Bottom line--rights were given by the Constitution and the Bill of rights, not by Miranda.