Don’t Talk to Cops

GOOD MORNING! My name is investigator Holmes. Do you mind answering a “few simple questions?” If you open your door one day and are greeted with “those words, STOP AND THINK! Whether it is the local police or the FBI at “your door, you have certain legal rights of which you ought to be aware “before you proceed any further.


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The following article is from a leaflet that has been distributed by the
Libertarian Party in New Jersey. Written by an attorney, it deals with
the subject of talking
to police or other government agents.

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**** DON’T TALK TO COPS **** /> *************************************************************

By ROBERT W. ZEUNER,
Member of the New York State Bar

"GOOD MORNING! My name is investigator Holmes. Do
you mind
answering a few simple questions?" If you open your door one day and
are
greeted with those words, stop and think! Whether it is the local
police or the FBI at your
door, you have certain legal rights of which
you ought to be aware before you proceed any
further.

In the first place, when the law enforcement authorities come to see

you, there are no "simple questions." Unless they are investigating a
traffic
accident, you can be sure that they want information about
somebody. And that somebody may be
you!

Rule Number one to remember when confronted by the authorities is
that there
is no law require you to talk with the police, the FBI,
or the representative of any other
investigative agency. Even the
simplest questions may be loaded and the seemingly harmless
bits of
information which you volunteer may later become vital links in a chain
of
circumstantial evidence against you or a friend.

Do not invite the investigator into
your home! Such an invitation not
only gives him the opportunity to look around for clues to
your
lifestyle, friends, reading material, etc., but also tends to prolong
the
conversation. And the longer the conversation, the more chance
there is for a skilled
investigator to find out what he wants to know.

Many times a police officer will ask
you to accompany him to the
police station to answer a few questions. In that case, simply
thank
him for the invitation and indicate that you are not disposed to accept
it at that
time. Often the authorities simply want to photograph a
person for identification purposes, a
procedure which is easily
accomplished by placing him in a private room with a two-way

mirror at the station, asking him a few innocent questions, and
then releasing him.
/> If the investigator becomes angry at your failure to cooperate
and threatens you with
arrest, stand firm. He cannot legally place
you under arrest or enter your home without a
warrant signed by a
judge. If he indicates that he has such a warrant, ask to see it.
A
person under arrest or located on premises to be searched, generally
must be shown a warrant
if he requests it and must be given a chance
to read it.

Without a warrant, an
officer depends solely upon your helpfulness
to obtain the information he wants. So, unless
you are quite sure of
yourself, don’t be helpful.

Probably the wisest approach to
take to a persistent investigator is
simply to say: "I’m quite busy now. If you have any
questions that you
feel I can answer, I’d be happy to listen to them in my lawyer’s

office. Goodbye!" Talk is cheap. But when that talk involves the
law enforcement
authorities, it may cost you, or someone close to you,
dearly.

P.S. "This
leaflet has been printed as a public service
by individuals concerned with the growing role /> of authoritarianism and police power in our society.
Please feel free to copy or
republish."

————————————————
(This file was
found elsewhere on the Internet and uploaded to the
Patriot FTP site by S.P.I.R.A.L., the
Society for the Protection of Individual Ri
ghts and Liberties. E-mail alex@spiral.org)


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