How to Talk to the Police if Your Suspected of a Crime
by Susan Chana Lask
If you're suspected of a crime, the police can come to your house or work or
find you on the street to talk to you. Usually it will be a detective in plain
clothes in an unmarked car who will want to talk to you. You might find a card
from the detective under your door, or a message on your phone from him asking
you to call.
You always have the right to remain silent, as anything you say to a police
detective will be used against you in court. You also have the right to be
represented by an attorney when talking with the police.
Just because a detective comes around looking for you doesn't mean you have to
speak to him or see him at the police precinct. If the detective is at your
door, you don't have to open it for him unless he has a warrant. If a detective
is knocking at your door, you don't have to answer. You can wait until he leaves
if you want and then of course call your attorney.
Usually, a detective will hound you to come into the precinct headquarters to
"talk". But once you set foot into the precinct, the detective will have you at
his mercy, where he can use different routines - such as "good cop/bad cop" - or
violate your rights just enough to be "legal" to get you to talk. Maybe he'll
take your backpack from you or other property you came in with like your cell
phone, then direct you to wait for him, leaving you alone in a room for what
could feel like a lifetime. He may even ask you to write your version of the
story down and then use that against you later.
The police are experts trained in gaining your trust and confidence. They know
what to say and what tone to use with you. They will lie and misinform you to
get information they want. They can tell you they have witnesses when they do
not or say they will lower the charges when they will not. The police most
likely will not read you your rights because they want to create an informal,
relaxed appearance so you will spill the beans voluntarily.
Good Cop, Bad Cop
If you're not talking then detectives may use the "good cop/bad cop" routine.
The first cop sits alone with you in a small room and talks about the "crime".
If he's not getting the information he wants to hear to nail you, then you may
find yourself standing at the fingerprint machine with another more sensitive
cop. Once you're at the fingerprint machine you can be sure you're being charged
despite the fact that no one explained anything to you, read you your rights or
told you what you're being charged with. Part of the game is to keep you
disoriented and guessing your situation. If you hear the new cop say "just tell
the detective what he wants to hear and you'll get out of here faster on a
lesser charge" then you are being "played" and you definitely need to keep
quiet. Don't say something just because you think it will get you out faster,
because you're already in there and you're going to go through the arrest
process no matter what.
When the police tell you the consequences of a crime they intend to charge you
with, or that they can lower the charge, don't believe anything they say. They
can and will lie to you to get you to talk so they can make an arrest. The
police are not your attorney, they are not your friends-- they are there to make
an arrest.
The only way to protect yourself is to remain silent at all times. Enforce your
right by consistently and politely stating "I am remaining silent until I have
counsel." The police can not interrogate you once you invoke that right,
although they will try to interrogate you. They also can't interrogate you
unless they first read you your rights.
When you arrive at the police precinct , the police should have you sign a paper
with your legal rights listed on it. They should have you read your rights while
they read it to you, and then have you initial each right and sign the paper at
the bottom with the time and date. This paper is a good thing for the police to
prove they followed procedure and it will coordinate the time of your arrest
closely with the time of reading your rights. It is not mandatory that they give
you this paper with your rights, because they can by law verbally read you your
rights and note in their notebook the time they read you your rights. Of course,
they could never read you your rights and later say they did.
Hiring An Attorney
If a detective is hounding you with phone messages and coming by your house
leaving cards with your roommate or family, immediately get an attorney. An
attorney can determine if the police are going to arrest you. If you are going
to be arrested then your attorney will advise you what to do (and what to say or
not say), explain the arrest process, arrange for you to turn yourself in and
get you through the process quicker. Also, the police will know they can't
interrogate you if you're represented by counsel.
A good attorney will fax a letter of representation to the precinct and follow
you through the arrest process by calling the proper offices and getting you to
arraignment and out quicker. Your attorney should also fax a notice of
appearance on your behalf to the Arraignment Clerk's Office the minute he or she
discovers you've been "docketed" by the District Attorney's office (meaning
they've drafted and filed a Criminal Complaint against you and assigned a docket
number to your case so it can be heard by the court).
If you do not voluntarily turn yourself in then the police will remember you
made it harder for them to arrest you and they may purposely delay your arrest
process and make you sit for three days in jail before you see a judge. They'll
delay filling out your paperwork and sending it to the proper offices. They may
even lose your paperwork.
The last thing you want to do is spend a minute longer being arrested and in
jail so here's a valuable tip: don't turn yourself in or get arrested at night
or on a weekend because there are less people working those shifts and the
courts close certain hours, so the process can take three days or sometimes
longer.
http://www.appellate-brief.com
Law Offices of Susan Chana Lask
853 Broadway, Suite 1516
New York, NY 10003
(212) 358-5762
©2004 Susan Chana Lask All Rights Reserved
Susan Chana Lask is a New York attorney with law offices in New York City. She
has over 20 years experience and practices in State, Federal and Appellate
Courts nationwide, handling civil, criminal and commercial litigation and
appeals. She represents high profile cases and appears on all major television,
print and radio news media, earning the title "High-Powered" New York attorney.
She can be reached at www.appellate-brief.com.
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