Quote from pspr:
The assumption by nearly everyone is that you have something to hide when you plead the 5th in almost any situation.
Plus the fact that she wants immunity in order to testify points to obvious misconduct and possible illegality that the perp (ha ha) may have knowingly been involved in.
For a federal employee to plead the 5th before a government oversight committee is beyond reprehensible. I would be talking to her subordinates about her actions and offering them immunity before the committee.
Your right about the common perception. Wrong about everything else.
To further your education. I'll just pointy out to you that the Supreme Court has taken the position that a witness may have a reasonable fear of prosecution and yet be innocent of any wrongdoing. The 5th amendment right protects the innocent who might be "ensnared" by ambiguous circumstances.
This, in law, is as often as not the reason one might choose to invoke the 5th amendment in a congressional hearing, particularly one where the main purpose appears to be an opportunity for congressmen to rant and rail against an unpopular agency of government.
