Wow... the Naiveté is strong within you.
The case is irrelevant because the ruling IS explicitly general. I quoted the ruling already.
"But the justices said in a 5-4 decision that suspects must tell police they are going to remain silent to stop an interrogation, just as they must tell police that they want a lawyer."
Of course they can be interrogated?

(we are talking about the the right to NOT be interrogated here, in case you were drifting off from the subject)
Implicated? After being lead by your nose, goaded, taunted, and verbally abused?
This is is difficult to explain to someone with such a naive view of authority. You think they're going to hold your hands and nicely ask you to be honest, rather than play tricks and try to force confession out of you, whether or not you are under psychological duress, or even can clearly understand or hear the questions they're asking you?
The logical assumption is that you are exercising your right to be silent.
Not to be verbally waterboarded and psychologically assaulted while you're doing so so you can trip up and say or do something stupid.
But then again, why am I explaining all of this when this is clearly self-explanatory? :hmm: