The police, investigating a robbery, wind up at the defendant's residence. They know he's on parole. They arrest him for a parole violation. They do NOT advise him of Miranda; he says, "Well, I want a lawyer. Right now."
They bring him to the police station, advise him of Miranda, and he waives and confesses. The Court of Appeal holds that the defendant didn't effectively invoke his Miranda right to counsel because he wasn't about to be interrogated and you can't invoke Miranda anticipatorily.
Well, that's one of way of manipulating the truth.At legal battles you can't diffirentiate the truth from lies..that sometimes the lies is the truth.