Quote:
Originally Posted by BMP02
Law Professor James Duane explains why innocent people should never talk to the police.
1. There is no way it can help
2. If your client is guilty- and even if he is innocent- he may admit his guilt with no benefit in return
3. Even if yiour client is innocent and denies his guilt and mostly tells the truth, he can easily egt carried away and tell some little lie or make some little mistake that will hang him
4. Even if your client ios innocent and only tells the truth, he will always give the police some information that can be used to help convict him
5. Even if your client is innocent and only tells the truth and does not tell the police anything incriminating, there is still a grave chance that his answers can be used to crucify him if the police don't recall his testimony with 100% accuracy
6. Even if your client is innocent and only tells the truth and does not tell the police anytbhing incriminating and his statement is videotaped, his answersx can be used to crucify him if the police don't recall the questions with 100% accuracy
7. Even if your client is innocent and only tells the truth and doers not tell the police anything incriminating and the entire interview is videotaped, his answers can still be used to crucify him if the police have any evidence, even mistaken or unreliable evidence, even if any of his statements are false. (ex Martha Stewart, Marion Jones)
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I think most shooting victims in philly have taken his advice. Seems to be working out really well.

Only they call it stop snitchin'.
See, when you owe a drug dealer money and he shoots you in the lower body to let you know it's time to pay up, you go to the hospital and while there tell police that "once upon a time" you heard gun shots and, surprise, surprise, suddenly realized you were bleeding . . . .
__________________
"The period of the occupation will be much longer than that of the assault. Final judgment with respect to the job as a whole will probably be determined more by the reaction of public opinion throughout the world to the occupation than to the assault."
– Brigadier General Julius C. Holmes
Allied Forces Headquarters
4 March 1943