jeffrey, i have a question for you, as a lawyer, my understanding is that detained suspects don't have a right to have the miranda rights read to them. they have those rights and they can choose to exercise them. i know it's a little bit of parsing here, but are authorities allowed to terrorize suspects because of the public danger exception? >> he was intergalted. >> he was interrogated for 16 hours. >> we still haven't gone through his e-mails, his computer records. we don't know the truth of his statements. >> it's quite clear you can't do a wall-to-wall interrogation of someone who has not received their miranda warnings. that is just not guilty something -- >> you can't use that information cleaned in a criminal prosecution. >> that's all miranda does, anyway.