Home > Terms > English, UK (UE) > Salinas v. Texas
Salinas v. Texas
On June 17, 2013 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that if you remain silent before the police read your Miranda rights, that silence can and will be held against you. You must tell the authorities that you're invoking your Fifth Amendment right if you do not want the silence to be used as evidence in the court of law.
In the Salinas case, Genovevo Salinas was convicted of a 1992 murder. At the time of the investigation, Salinas voluntarily went into a police station for questioning. Because he was free to leave at any time, the police did not read him his Miranda rights. When asked if the shell casings found at the scene of the crime would match his shotgun, Salinas did not answer. At his trial, his silence was used as evidence of guilt.
- Part of Speech: proper noun
- Synonym(s):
- Blossary:
- Industry/Domain: Law
- Category: US law
- Company:
- Product:
- Acronym-Abbreviation:
Other Languages:
Member comments
Terms in the News
Featured Terms
fracking 2.0
Fracking 2.0 is a technology designed to extract natural gas from underwater deposits of methane hydrate, a frozen gas sometimes referred to as ...
Contributor
Featured blossaries
farooq92
0
Terms
47
Blossaries
3
Followers
Top 10 University in Beijing, China
Browers Terms By Category
- Hand tools(59)
- Garden tools(45)
- General tools(10)
- Construction tools(2)
- Paint brush(1)
Tools(117) Terms
- Pesticides(2181)
- Organic fertilizers(10)
- Potassium fertilizers(8)
- Herbicides(5)
- Fungicides(1)
- Insecticides(1)
Agricultural chemicals(2207) Terms
- Journalism(537)
- Newspaper(79)
- Investigative journalism(44)
News service(660) Terms
- General seafood(50)
- Shellfish(1)
Seafood(51) Terms
- Cables & wires(2)
- Fiber optic equipment(1)