other works by alan dershowitz FindingJefferson: A Lost Letter, A Remarkable Discovery, andthe FirstAmendment inan Age of Terrorism Blasphemy: How the Religious Right Is Hijacking the Declaration of Independence Preemption:A KnifeThat Cuts Both Ways What Israel Means to Me Rights from Wrongs: A Secular Theoryof the Origins of Rights America onTrial The Case for Peace The Case for Israel America Declares Independence Why Terrorism Works Shouting Fire Lettersto a Young Lawyer Supreme Injustice Genesis of Justice Just Revenge Sexual McCarthyism The Vanishing American Jew Reasonable Doubts The Abuse Excuse The Advocate’s Devil Contrary to Popular Opinion Chutzpah Taking Liberties Reversal of Fortune Best Defense CriminalLaw: TheoryandProcess Psychoanalysis, Psychiatry and Law This page intentionally left blank is there a right to remain silent ? i n a l i e n a b l e r i g h t s s e r i e s . . . series editor Geoffrey R. Stone LeeC.Bollinger MichaelW.McConnell President Judge ColumbiaUniversity U.S.CourtofAppealsfor theTenthCircuit AlanM.Dershowitz FelixFrankfurterProfessor MarthaC.Nussbaum ofLaw ErnstFreundDistinguishedService HarvardLawSchool Professor,Philosophy,Law,Divinity, SouthAsianStudies RichardA.Epstein TheUniversityofChicago JamesParkerHall DistinguishedServiceProfessor RichardA.Posner UniversityofChicagoLawSchool Judge U.S.CourtofAppealsfor PamelaS.Karlan theSeventhCircuit KennethandHarleMontgomery ProfessorofPublicInterestLaw JackN.Rakove StanfordLawSchool WilliamRobertsonCoeProfessor ofHistoryandAmericanStudies AlexanderKeyssar StanfordUniversity MatthewW.Stirling,Jr., ProfessorofHistoryand GeoffreyR.Stone SocialPolicy HarryKlavenJr.Distinguished JFKSchoolofGovernment, ServiceProfessor HarvardUniversity UniversityofChicagoLawSchool MichaelJ.Klarman KathleenM.Sullivan JamesMonroeDistinguished StanleyMorrisonProfessor ProfessorofLawandHistory ofLawandFormerDean UniversityofVirginia StanfordLawSchool LarryD.Kramer LaurenceH.Tribe RichardE.LangProfessor CarlM.LoebUniversity ofLawandDean ProfessorofLaw StanfordLawSchool HarvardLawSchool LawrenceLessig MarkV.Tushnet C.WendellandEdithM.Carlsmith WilliamNelsonCromwell ProfessorofLaw ProfessorofLaw StanfordLawSchool HarvardLawSchool GeoffreyStoneandOxfordUniversityPressgratefullyacknowledgetheinterest andsupportofthefollowingorganizationsintheInalienableRightsseries:The AmericanLibraryAssociation;TheChicagoHumanitiesFestival;TheAmericanBar Association;TheNationalConstitutionCenter;TheNationalArchivesandRecords Administration;TheMcCormickTribuneFreedomMuseum. Is There a Right to Remain Silent? . . . coercive interrogation and the fifth amendment after 9/11 Alan M. Dershowitz 1 2008 1 OxfordUniversityPress,Inc.,publishesworksthatfurther OxfordUniversity’sobjectiveofexcellence inresearch,scholarship,andeducation. Oxford NewYork Auckland CapeTown DaresSalaam HongKong Karachi KualaLumpur Madrid Melbourne MexicoCity Nairobi NewDelhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto Withofficesin Argentina Austria Brazil Chile CzechRepublic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore SouthKorea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Copyright#2008byAlan M.Dershowitz PublishedbyOxfordUniversityPress,Inc. 198MadisonAvenue,NewYork,NewYork10016 www.oup.com OxfordisaregisteredtrademarkofOxfordUniversityPress Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced, storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans, electronic,mechanical,photocopying,recording,orotherwise, withoutthepriorpermissionofOxfordUniversityPress. LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Dershowitz,AlanM. Istherearighttoremainsilent?:coerciveinterrogationandtheFifth Amendmentafter9/11/AlanM.Dershowitz. p. cm.—(Inalienablerightsseries) ISBN978-0-19-530779-5 1. Self-incrimination—UnitedStates. 2. UnitedStates.Constitution. 5thAmendment. 3. UnitedStates.SupremeCourt. 4. Righttocounsel— UnitedStates. 5. Policequestioning—UnitedStates. 6. Civilrights— UnitedStates. I. Title. KF9668.D472008 345.73'056—dc22 2007043079 1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2 PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica onacid-freepaper ThisbookisdedicatedtomygreatteachersatBrooklyn college who first stimulated myinterest inconstitu- tional law. Among them were professors John Hope Franklin, Elsa de Haas,John Hospers,Eric G.James, Samuel Konefsky, MartinLandau, Charles Parkhurst, BenjaminRivlin, Madeline Russell Robinton, Georgia H. Wilson, andBelle Zeller. Half a century later, Istill thinkaboutwhattheytaughtme.Thatistrulythemark of great teachers. This page intentionally left blank Acknowledgments . . . My student assistants do not have a right to remain silent. They are obliged to speak their minds and they do, with much appre- ciation. Among those who spoke their minds as well as helped with the research for this book were the following: Alexander Blenkinsopp, Aaron Voloj Dessauer, Charles Johnson, Chaim Kagedan, Nicholas Krasney, Curtis Leitner, Peter Mulcahy, and Jessica Tisch.
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