I was going to post this as a comment, but it was in an anarchism community, and I figured some sections of it might be unacceptable there. Hence, new post.
Hereâs a guideline of how to interact with cops. There are more or less three modes, depending on your read of the situation. Cops are not always the enemy or the maniacal whole-job-is-making-evil thugs that Lemmy sometimes makes them out to be. It really is bad for people to get mugged or their cars broken into, and theyâre the solution our society has come up with to minimize the amount of it that happens. Itâs not always a bad thing.
If you find yourself talking to the cops, there are more or less three ways:
- Theyâre there to solve a real problem. Someoneâs car got broken into, someone got beat up. Just talk with them. Tell them what you know, help them figure out the situation. In almost all of the US, their effect on the problem will be positive, and itâll be a lot more positive if they have a good grasp of what happened. If, in your opinion, the person theyâre trying to catch really did do something that warrants a law enforcement response, then give them a hand. Use your judgement as to whether thatâs warranted of course, and your impression of the justice level in your local area, since it varies quite a lot in the US.
- Theyâre there for you. Shut the fuck up. Donât say a goddamned word. It doesnât even matter if you didnât do it. Donât explain. Shut the fuck up. Be polite, obey lawful orders, definitely donât fight them or youâll get a felony and might also get injured or worse, but tell them that if youâre suspected of a crime, then youâd like to talk to a lawyer, and you have nothing else to say. And then, shut the fuck up and cooperate. Maybe you want to go as far as âWere you shoplifting?â âWhat? No. That wasnât me, man.â But any further explanation than that, just leave it alone. Definitely donât make something up on the spot, to make yourself sound innocent, if you did do it. For the love of God, donât do that.
- Theyâre there for someone who didnât do anything wrong. The reason for this post is, anything and everything with ICE and immigration falls into this category. Some things with local cops will, also. Just be unhelpful and simple. No, I didnât see anything. I donât know. Iâm not sure. Be vague. Donât get creative, keep it simple, donât refuse to give your ID or otherwise antagonize them or commit minor crimes of obstruction, but just do your best imitation of someone who just fell from the sky. âSo youâve NEVER MET your neighbor. Your neighbor across the hall.â âNope.â âAre you sure?â âYeah, I donât know.â âI mean, she gave us your name, she said sheâd talked to you.â âI donât know, I donât remember that.â Donât embellish. Donât explain why. Just calmly let the silence linger and the pressure build up, without adding extra words.
Like I said, everything with ICE or other immigration authorities falls into the third category. No exceptions. Everything. The same applies with any type of federal law enforcement, I suspect, for the next few years.
You can be subpoenaed to testify in court. You cannot be compelled to talk to the police.
Correct. I was mostly responding to your use of âright to remain silentâ when asked about your neighbors. It just doesnât work that way. You could go with âI donât want to tell youâ or âI donât have to tell you,â but if you had to pick one general answer to recommend, Iâm a lot more comfortable going with âI donât knowâ or âI donât rememberâ instead of those options.