uhhello Posted Friday at 07:58 PM Posted Friday at 07:58 PM (edited) Invol Manslaughter charges brought against SP Edited Friday at 08:41 PM by uhhello
Lord Ratner Posted Saturday at 04:34 PM Posted Saturday at 04:34 PM 17 hours ago, Mole said: Yep, figured there was more to the story.
Hacker Posted Saturday at 04:36 PM Posted Saturday at 04:36 PM "the unidentified arrested person is accused of making a false official statement, obstruction of justice and involuntary manslaughter" As with most things, it is not answering the questions truthfully that is usually the problem.
Lord Ratner Posted Saturday at 04:42 PM Posted Saturday at 04:42 PM 5 minutes ago, Hacker said: "the unidentified arrested person is accused of making a false official statement, obstruction of justice and involuntary manslaughter" As with most things, it is not answering the questions truthfully that is usually the problem. "Did you kill him?" "... yes." "Thank you for your honesty. I think that's about everything we had, you may go."
Hacker Posted Saturday at 04:45 PM Posted Saturday at 04:45 PM 1 minute ago, Lord Ratner said: "Did you kill him?" "... yes." "Thank you for your honesty. I think that's about everything we had, you may go." Turns out, when they say, "under Article 32 of the UCMJ, you have the right to remain silent.." it helps keep you from making a false official statement. 2
uhhello Posted Saturday at 04:49 PM Posted Saturday at 04:49 PM 2 minutes ago, Hacker said: Turns out, when they say, "under Article 32 of the UCMJ, you have the right to remain silent.." it helps keep you from making a false official statement. I can't remember, can info given under safety privilege be used in criminal proceedings?
Smokin Posted yesterday at 01:29 AM Posted yesterday at 01:29 AM 8 hours ago, uhhello said: I can't remember, can info given under safety privilege be used in criminal proceedings? Do cops have safety privilege? Even if they do, my understanding is no. At school we were told that at any point (as the person doing the interviewing) you suspect that a crime was committed, you immediately stop the interview. I don't think they addressed any information that was divulged prior to that point, but I'm betting the answer is no. 1
uhhello Posted yesterday at 02:57 AM Posted yesterday at 02:57 AM 1 hour ago, Smokin said: Do cops have safety privilege? Even if they do, my understanding is no. At school we were told that at any point (as the person doing the interviewing) you suspect that a crime was committed, you immediately stop the interview. I don't think they addressed any information that was divulged prior to that point, but I'm betting the answer is no. Safety is safety. Ground safety investigation was started I imagine. Could be wrong.
Swizzle Posted yesterday at 04:05 AM Posted yesterday at 04:05 AM 1 hour ago, uhhello said: Safety is safety. Ground safety investigation was started I imagine. Could be wrong. It'd be Class A, Ground Safety mishap and investigated. Safety privilege isn't offered for them. "Promises of confidentiality are authorized in investigations of DAF nuclear surety, space, aviation, guided missile, directed energy, and friendly fire mishaps. Promises of confidentiality are not authorized for explosives, small arms, chemical agents, afloat, ground, motor vehicle, off-duty military mishaps, incidents, and hazards, with some exceptions." https://www.safety.af.mil/Home/Mishap-Investigation-Process/ 1
ClearedHot Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago On 8/9/2025 at 11:45 AM, Hacker said: Turns out, when they say, "under Article 32 of the UCMJ, you have the right to remain silent.." it helps keep you from making a false official statement.
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