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The Straight Story

(48,121 posts)
Tue Jul 16, 2013, 09:45 AM Jul 2013

You Have the Right to More Coherent Spanglish

You Have the Right to More Coherent Spanglish

(CN) - A shaky translation of Miranda rights to a suspected drug manufacturer requires reversal of his guilty plea, the 9th Circuit ruled Monday.

The federal appeals court in Pasadena released Jeronimo Botello-Rosale from his conditional plea to conspiracy to manufacture marijuana based on a detective's failure to properly translate the word "free."

Before entering the guilty plea to the federal charge in Portland, Ore., Botello-Rosale moved to suppress his post-arrest statements. He claimed that, during the arrest, a detective had told him in Spanish that he had the right to a lawyer "who is free," using the Spanish word libre to mean "free." But libre means "available or at liberty to do something" rather than "without cost."

U.S. District Judge Ann Brown denied the motion and Botello-Rosale pleaded guilty. The three-judge appellate panel reversed Monday.

"The phrasing of the warning - that a lawyer who is free could be appointed -suggests that the right to appointed counsel is contingent on the approval of a request or on the lawyer's availability, rather than the government's absolute obligation," the unsigned decision states.

http://www.courthousenews.com/2013/07/15/59376.htm

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You Have the Right to More Coherent Spanglish (Original Post) The Straight Story Jul 2013 OP
What's your point? COLGATE4 Jul 2013 #1
I don't have a point, I don't write the crap I post The Straight Story Jul 2013 #2

COLGATE4

(14,732 posts)
1. What's your point?
Tue Jul 16, 2013, 09:57 AM
Jul 2013

What I see is a P.D. that wasn't smart enough (or concerned enough) to print out the Miranda warning in Spanish on a note card officers can carry so there's no confusion about what was told the Defendant.

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