D) people that are under arrest must be read their rights by law enforcement
If you've ever watched a television crime drama, you've heard the "Miranda warning" -- or at least the beginning of it: "You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney ...." There's a couple more sentences to the warning, but TV shows often cut to the next scene before hearing the arresting officer finish their recitation of the full warning.
Miranda v. Arizona was a Supreme Court case decided in 1966. Ernesto Miranda was accused of kidnapping and raping a woman. He confessed to the crime when interrogated by police, but attorneys argued that he did not fully understand his 6th Amendment rights. After the decision in Miranda v. Arizona, it has become standard procedure in all arrests that the arresting officers must clearly state the accused person's rights -- their "Miranda rights," as they have become known.
It relates to the study of the processes that influence the production of the fossil record. This information comes from a dead organism and then it is collected by a paleontologist. It gives a detailed narrative of the systematic actions that influenced a skeletal and taxonomic composition of the remains.
The cultivation analysis posit that when someone constantly watches the television at a frequently high rate, such person tends to believe the scenes and informations gotten from watching the television to be real and valid. This informs the person's perception about the real world and subsequent behavioural pattern