The court docket papers filed on Tuesday, January 24, cited U.S. vs. Treanton, claiming it “bears on defendant-appellant Joshua Duggar’s rivalry that he was in custody through the search of his used-car lot.”
As OK! beforehand reported, the disgraced Counting On alum insisted brokers tried to “suppress statements” after an officer “bodily stopped him from contacting his legal professional and subsequently interrogated him outdoors the presence of his counsel.” He additionally acknowledged that they’d compelled him to remain in his automobile, regardless of officers’ later claims that Duggar “maintained unencumbered freedom of motion” all through the incident.