Hidden Threads: Real Private Investigators. Real Cases. Real Stories.
Hidden Threads uncovers the untold true crime stories behind private investigators' most chilling and high-stakes cases. Each episode exposes hidden connections, dark secrets, and shocking twists—from unsolved murders and missing persons to betrayals that span decades—while revealing the rare political threads that quietly shape the shadows of justice.
Available on ALL Streaming Platforms
Spotify • Apple • YouTube • Amazon
Hidden Threads: Real Private Investigators. Real Cases. Real Stories.
Best Of: Miranda Warnings & Terry Stops – Landmark Rulings That Changed Policing with Jus
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Dive back into one of our most requested "Best Of" episodes from the Hidden Threads archives. Host Macky Outlaw teams up with legal expert and investigator Jus to unpack two Supreme Court decisions that every PI, cop, and true crime fan needs to know: Miranda v. Arizona (1966) and Terry v. Ohio (1968).
We break down how Miranda requires police to inform suspects of their right to remain silent and to an attorney before custodial interrogation—why failing to do so can tank confessions and evidence in court—and the real-world myths vs. realities of when those warnings actually kick in.
Then we shift to Terry, the case that greenlit "stop and frisk" based on reasonable suspicion of criminal activity and potential danger, not full probable cause. We explore how these rulings balance officer safety and crime prevention against Fourth and Fifth Amendment protections, what they mean for street-level investigations today, and why understanding them is crucial for anyone dealing with evidence chain of custody, witness statements, or defending against improper stops.
If you've ever wondered why a suspect's confession gets tossed or how a pat-down can lead to an arrest, this episode delivers the straight facts from the cases that still define the line between constitutional rights and effective policing.