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by chacham15
867 days ago
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IMO the point of stopping police from lying shouldnt be to prosecute the police (as perjury is already illegal), but rather, to indemnify the person who was lied to for actions they took under false pretenses. So, if the police lie to you and say "we have you on camera at the 7/11" and as a result you say "I dont really recall..maybe I got a soda from there and dont remember?" that second statement shouldnt be used against you if they dont actually have you on camera whereas today that statement would be used to show that you couldve been there (because you said so yourself). This is easy to demonstrate in court and consequently toss out that secondary statement which would otherwise be evidence. |
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> today that statement would be used to show that you couldve been there (because you said so yourself).
They can use "I don't remember" ?
Isn't the whole point of interrogation to get a suspect to make conflicting statements, then pressure them when the statements don't line up as a means to get a confession?
Why is this a bad thing? If this tool goes away, couldn't conviction rates plummet (for eg. violent crimes)?
I'm having trouble seeing an ethical problem here?