the Fifth Amendment.
The Sixth Amendment protects the right not to confront your witnesses against you.
The Fifth Amnedent provides the right to not incriminate oneself. What that means is if you are on trial, or a witness testifying at a trial, you are not required to answer any question that would provide evidence that you commited another crime.
the accused person
The 5th Amendment of the Constitution protects you from self-incrimination, by guaranteeing you the right to never have to testify against yourself.
There is NO amendment that says you CANNOT testify against yourself. There is an amendment that says that you cannot be FORCED to testify against yourself. A BIG difference! The 5th Amendment to the US Constitution protects you against self incrimination unless you WILLINGLY waive that right.
right against exploitation
Habeas corpus
Habeas corpus
No. The two are separate ideas. The 5th protects a person from testifying against themselves in court. Freedom of speech is a basic right and is not only speech but written materials and now Internet. There are boundaries to freedom of speech. An example is you can't yell fire in a theater when there is no fire or threaten people.
The Third Amendment of the United States Constitution protects against the quartering of soldiers in civilian homes.
There is no amendment in the US Constitution which protects you against ACCUSATIONS. However, you are granted the right against 'self incrimination' by the 5th Amendment.
The fifth amendment protects many rights, but the most commonly known is the right of not incriminating yourself.