What rights does a suspect have to remain silent in the face of police questioning?

Canada (Federal), Canada

The following excerpt is from R. v. Turcotte, [2005] 2 SCR 519, 2005 SCC 50 (CanLII):

41 Under the traditional common law rules, absent statutory compulsion, everyone has the right to be silent in the face of police questioning. This right to refuse to provide information or answer inquiries finds cogent and defining expression in Rothman v. The Queen, 1981 CanLII 23 (SCC), [1981] 1 S.C.R. 640, per Lamer J.: In Canada the right of a suspect not to say anything to the police . . . is merely the exercise by him of the general right enjoyed in this country by anyone to do whatever one pleases, saying what one pleases or choosing not to say certain things, unless obliged to do otherwise by law. It is because no law says that a suspect, save in certain circumstances, must say anything to the police that we say that he has the right to remain silent, which is a positive way of explaining that there is on his part no legal obligation to do otherwise. [Footnotes omitted; p. 683.]

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