You can’t just say you are invoking the 5th and refuse to testify. If pressed, you actually have to get up there and invoke it — possibly to every question if needed.
The fear of perjury is an interesting twist, though. And the removal of immunity may affect things too.
(Although in your own trial you have the right to not testify, that doesn’t apply here).
> The fear of perjury is an interesting twist, though.
Its a nice try, but the right not to testify against yourself is not a right not to testify in a situation in which you might be tempted to choose (perjury not being a crime you can connit accidentally) to commit a crime.
What about the belief that you can't selectively invoke it? That if you break that silence then they can compel you to answer everything else from that point on? How's that work?
They might as well abolish this right anyway. As if every device we ever touch won't testify against us in the first place.
You can’t just say you are invoking the 5th and refuse to testify. If pressed, you actually have to get up there and invoke it — possibly to every question if needed.
The fear of perjury is an interesting twist, though. And the removal of immunity may affect things too.
(Although in your own trial you have the right to not testify, that doesn’t apply here).