![]() |
|||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||
|
“...once you are on an officer's radar, you should assume they will believe the worst about you. Police are trained interrogators, and their training encourages them to obtain confessions at any opportunity....”
mail phone fax e-mail
|
What this means for you, is that once you are on an officer's radar, you should assume they will believe the worst about you. Police are trained interrogators, and their training encourages them to obtain confessions at any opportunity. Indeed, one very widespread police interrogation course tells police that even "a provable lie is as good as a confession." Many cases that would otherwise be defensible to a jury are plea bargained because the defendant either confessed, or made statements which could be interpreted as incriminating. Police make the decision whether there is probable cause to arrest: but they are not the final arbiter of what charges a defendant will face. Once a suspect has been arrested, they will generally be booked (processed through the jail system), and then face arraignment. In the time between the arrest and the arraignment, another group will evaluate the police officer's reports and witness statements to determine charges: the district attorneys. An experienced attorney can advise you whether, why and how to speak with the police. |
![]() |
|||||||