Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"The reality is we will be reading Miranda rights to a corpse."
Does a suspect have to be read Miranda rights?
I would have liked that process of him being interrogated to go further than reading Miranda rights as quick as they did.
The policewoman was reading Miranda rights to the gunman, two other police officers holding the man by his handcuffed arms.
"Every criminal defendant is entitled to be read Miranda rights," the group wrote in a statement released Saturday.
Instead of being profiled as they should, they are read Miranda rights as if they were citizens.
The Obama administration announced this week that some detainees captured and held abroad have been read Miranda rights to preserve evidence for a potential prosecution.
Democrats see the criticism as expedience more than courage, noting that under Mr. Bush, terrorists were charged in civilian court, read Miranda rights and given lawyers.
Republicans have objected to the decision of law enforcement officials to read Miranda rights to the suspect in the thwarted Christmas attempt to blow up a Northwest airliner.
C. Michael Owens, an FBI special agent, testified that he read Miranda rights to Abdo twice -- before interviews with him on July 27 and 28.
U.S. commanders told FOX News soldiers are not reading Miranda rights to detainees, but those commanders could not speak to whether the FBI was doing so.
"We would be reading Miranda rights to the corpse of Osama bin Laden," Holder said, referring to a criminal suspect's right to remain silent and have an attorney present during questioning.
Four weeks ago, he snapped to House Republicans that Osama bin Laden would never appear in a U.S. courtroom and that authorities "will be reading Miranda rights to a corpse."
O'Donnell instead expressed disagreement with decisions from other courts, dealing with matters such as pornography, reading Miranda Rights to terrorists and California's overturning of Don't Ask, Don't Tell.
Our policy at the time was not to read Miranda rights,' FBI special agent Robert Fuller said in testimony at the U.S. military commission terrorism trial of Salim Hamdan.
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court said Tuesday investigators don't have to read Miranda rights to inmates during jailhouse interrogations about crimes unrelated to their current incarceration.
During a heated exchange with Republican lawmakers, Holder predicted that "we will be reading Miranda rights to the corpse of Osama bin Laden" rather than to the US public enemy number one in captivity.
Instead, she called Obama weak on national security, delighting the crowd with mocking references to terrorism suspects being read Miranda rights and sharp criticism of the president for limiting when the United States can use nuclear weapons.
At one point, he declared that, far from coddling terrorists, the administration would never capture the most wanted Al Qaeda leader alive -- but would instead "be reading Miranda rights to the corpse of Osama bin Laden."
The question of whether others may have played a role in the blasts could affect the decision by federal authorities not to read Miranda rights to Dzhokar Tsarnaev, who was in serious condition Saturday in a Boston hospital.
Afterward, administration officials briefed reporters about cooperation by Abdulmutallab, who was read Miranda rights after just 50 minutes of interrogation about his attempt to blow up a Northwest Airlines flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas.
Senators John McCain and Joe Lieberman introduced a bill last week that would block civilian trials for foreign terror suspects, prevent terror suspects from being read Miranda rights, and require that they be held in military detention.
Attorney General Eric Holder promised in March 2010 that Americans would be reading Miranda rights to bin Laden’s corpse and that the 54-year-old, Saudi-born heir to a construction fortune “will never appear in an American courtroom.”
FBI Director Robert Mueller's confirmation that his agency is reading Miranda rights to certain terrorists captured and detained overseas at the Bagram military base in Afghanistan and other places has sparked an outcry among some Republican lawmakers.
He created a stir when he told a House panel last month during a testy exchange with Republicans that instead of taking the al-Qaeda leader to court, the administration would be "reading Miranda rights to the corpse of Osama bin Laden."