the same as when you are being questioned by the police.
Unless you are being charged with something then most of the time they have to let you go by request.
This championed states rights and questioned the legality of applying some federal laws in the states.
Miranda Rights
David J. Garrow has written: 'Atlanta Georgia, 1960-1961' 'The FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr' -- subject(s): United States, United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation, USA, Etats-Unis, FBI, Etats-Unis. Federal Bureau of Investigation 'St. Augustine, Florida, 1963-1964' 'Birmingham, Alabama, 1956-1963' 'Bearing the Cross - Part I' 'Bearing the cross' -- subject(s): African Americans, Baptists, Biography, Civil rights, Civil rights movements, Civil rights workers, Clergy, History, Race relations, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Afro-Americans 'Protest at Selma' -- subject(s): African Americans, Suffrage, Selma-Montgomery Rights March, 1965, Voter registration 'Martin Luther King, Jr'
What did the Freedman's bureau give negroes the rights to do?
do federal prison visitation rights supersede states rights
David Cole has written: 'No equal justice' -- subject(s): Administration of Criminal justice, Discrimination in criminal justice administration, Race discrimination 'Securing liberty' -- subject(s): Human rights, Civil rights, Government policy, Terrorism, National security 'Terrorism and the constitution' -- subject(s): United States, National security, Civil rights, Law and legislation, United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation, Terrorism, Prevention, Grondrechten, Bestrijding, Terrorisme
If you are not free to go and are being questioned, you should be advised of your rights.
From who, your accuser(s)? The Government, for prosecuting you? No. But if you feel that your "rights" were violated during either the investigation or the prosecution you could try filing a civil lawsuit for malicious prosecution, or a federal charge of violating your constitutionally protected rights.
People were all basically the same.
People were all basically the same.
The Civil Rights Act of 1866
segregation