So here is a hypothetical: cops show up with a picture of someone who looks like you committing a crime. (If they don’t have a warrant they have to show/tell you why they are at your home). You have a photo from the same day showing you were in Disney. If you stonewall the cops and don’t show them your picture, they will assume their photo is correct and arrest you.
At that point you will have to spend time in jail, hire a lawyer, and wait a while before a hearing or settlement conference to even begin presenting your evidence. That is expensive, can ruin your career, and reputation even if you are still able to prove your innocence eventually.
It’s a unique situation and you should never be chatty with the cops, but I’ve represented clients whose worst mistake was remaining totally silent and not answering anything. Their innocence was easily proven and they could have proven it themselves during the initial questioning, but their silence was used against them. Even though it never should be, it often is.
I never said that. But if you’re innocent and can prove it during the initial questioning. Say you have phone location data via an app, like I do, that logs where you were at certain times. You should absolutely show that to the police and prove right then that it’s highly unlikely you were where they said you were at a particular time.
And the cost is not less because someone is innocent. If an innocent person stays silent, gets arrested because they didn’t refute any of the evidence that LE has, then they will find themselves requiring a lawyer and a much longer process to exonerate themselves.
So if you can keep a level head, know your rights, and have the ability one way or another to seriously discredit whatever they have on you, then you should speak up and stop them right then and there. And at the same time prevent the need for any legal fees to even accrue.
If LE is coming just to question you, they don’t have much on you. If they did, they would just arrest you.
It’s really not rocket science. So many people think all of LE is just out to get you. Some are. But most of the time, if you just don’t say anything completely stupid you’ll be fine.
It’s not a bad idea, but it can cost thousands just to retain a lawyer.
If you can protect your rights, by knowing what they are, you can talk to them and likely get them off your back. If they have slam dunk evidence they wouldn’t be questioning you. If you’re guilty, then you should probably remain silent or at least know what type of answers you shouldn’t give. You could be guilty as hell and still answer a ton of questions if you know which questions necessitate incriminating answers and which ones don’t.
So here is a hypothetical: cops show up with a picture of someone who looks like you committing a crime. (If they don’t have a warrant they have to show/tell you why they are at your home). You have a photo from the same day showing you were in Disney. If you stonewall the cops and don’t show them your picture, they will assume their photo is correct and arrest you.
At that point you will have to spend time in jail, hire a lawyer, and wait a while before a hearing or settlement conference to even begin presenting your evidence. That is expensive, can ruin your career, and reputation even if you are still able to prove your innocence eventually.
It’s a unique situation and you should never be chatty with the cops, but I’ve represented clients whose worst mistake was remaining totally silent and not answering anything. Their innocence was easily proven and they could have proven it themselves during the initial questioning, but their silence was used against them. Even though it never should be, it often is.
Good to know, thanks man.
It’s unique and likely not frequent but if you are stable in the mind and know your rights you will be fine if you talk to LE.
I never said that. But if you’re innocent and can prove it during the initial questioning. Say you have phone location data via an app, like I do, that logs where you were at certain times. You should absolutely show that to the police and prove right then that it’s highly unlikely you were where they said you were at a particular time.
And the cost is not less because someone is innocent. If an innocent person stays silent, gets arrested because they didn’t refute any of the evidence that LE has, then they will find themselves requiring a lawyer and a much longer process to exonerate themselves.
So if you can keep a level head, know your rights, and have the ability one way or another to seriously discredit whatever they have on you, then you should speak up and stop them right then and there. And at the same time prevent the need for any legal fees to even accrue.
If LE is coming just to question you, they don’t have much on you. If they did, they would just arrest you.
I'm stable but need to learn more about the law.
Being normal/compliant has definitely helped me a few times.
It’s really not rocket science. So many people think all of LE is just out to get you. Some are. But most of the time, if you just don’t say anything completely stupid you’ll be fine.
Why shouldn't you retain a lawyer first? It really depends on the situation but getting a lawyer first is never a bad idea.
It’s not a bad idea, but it can cost thousands just to retain a lawyer.
If you can protect your rights, by knowing what they are, you can talk to them and likely get them off your back. If they have slam dunk evidence they wouldn’t be questioning you. If you’re guilty, then you should probably remain silent or at least know what type of answers you shouldn’t give. You could be guilty as hell and still answer a ton of questions if you know which questions necessitate incriminating answers and which ones don’t.
That's the problem, vast majority of people don't know the difference.
Yes that is true.