Sgt.
Schultz Says…
by
Eric Peters
EricPetersAutos.com
Say nothing
nothing!
To cops, ever.
Anything you
say can and will be held against you. Remember that?
You ought to.
Even if you
havent been formally arrested (merely detained,
as in the case of a traffic stop) it does you no good and very possibly
much harm to give any information to the cop beyond the simple minimums
of name and perhaps address, as required by law. Nothing more, because
anything more will simply give the cop information information
he can and will use against you, both at curbside
and later on, in court.
This is his
job. Do not forget it.
He is not there
to help you. He is not a good Samaritan. You are not
having a chat with a friend. You have been detained because the
cop believes you have violated some statute or other and
he is investigating you. He is trained to elicit confessions of
guilt, which can and will be used against
you. Depend upon it.
For instance:
Youve
been stopped because you were driving faster than the posted speed
limit. You roll down your window and the cop asks the first leading
question, Do you know how fast you were going? His purpose
is to get you to commit to a number probably a number that
is higher than the lawful maximum, even if lower than you were actually
traveling. He knows you were doing 72 but if you say 65 (and the
speed limit is 55) he has not only obtained an admission of guilt,
he can appear to be a nice guy by giving you a
break that is, citing you for 65 rather than 72. Either
way, he the system wins.
You lose.
So, say nothing
nothing!
Well, nothing
potentially incriminating, anyhow.
Im
sure you have an opinion, officer is an excellent response
though one sure to wipe any patina of nice guy
clean off the cop.
Similarly,
other interrogatories.
Where
are you headed tonight?
Shrug.
Youre
not being very cooperative.
Im
sorry you feel that way, officer.
How much
have you had to drink tonight?
Silence.
Followed, when
pressed, by something along the lines of:
Im
sorry, officer, but I wont be answering any questions this
evening.
Because no
good can come of it.
There are,
in fact, only three things you should ever say to a cop. The first
is:
Am I
being detained?
And next:
Am I
free to go.
Repeat.
Either the
cop will formally arrest you or he will give up and permit you to
leave. Worst case, you are arrested, but if the cop has done so
out of anger at your refusal to cooperate rather than
on the basis of actual evidence, you will be vindicated in the end,
probably. The important thing is you have not been the star witness
in your own prosecution; you have provided no testimony or other
evidence that can and will be used against you later on, in court.
Though we do live in a flowering police state, vestiges of due process
still exist and one of these is that, in general, they (the cops,
the prosecutors) have to produce some evidence of your guilt. It
frustrates them when you do not help them to do so. Which brings
me to the final thing the last thing you should say to a
cop:
I do
not consent to any searches.
Never mind
that you know there are no drugs, illegal weapons or any other contraband
item in your car. Such contraband has been known to magically appear
underneath seats. If you grant entry, youve given opportunity.
By refusing, you force them to abide by at least some procedure
and you have formally refused consent, which could be a lifesaver
later on, if they ignore you and go ahead and ransack your vehicle
(or person) regardless.
It is important
to be polite, calm and collected.
But it is far
more important to not be servile and to assert your rights,
whatevers left of them, anyhow.
Reprinted
with permission from EricPetersAutos.com.
September
9, 2011
Eric Peters
[send him mail] is an automotive
columnist and author of Automotive
Atrocities and Road Hogs (2011). Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Eric Peters
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