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Question
which shows how supreme court rulings have modified the fifth amendment?
○ officers may create different sets of rules to apply to groups of citizens as they please.
○ officers must inform people of their rights before questioning them in custody.
○ officers can pressure a person to confess to a crime.
○ officers can inform suspects of their rights at any point in the questioning process.
The Fifth Amendment protects against self-incrimination. The Supreme Court's Miranda v. Arizona ruling established that law enforcement must inform individuals in custody of their Fifth Amendment rights (right to remain silent, right to an attorney) before questioning them. The other options are incorrect: creating arbitrary rules violates equal protection, pressuring confessions violates self-incrimination rights, and informing rights "at any point" does not align with the Miranda requirement to do so before custodial questioning.
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B. Officers must inform people of their rights before questioning them in custody.