That's fine. They refused to talk to the police. That's the right thing to do. Now there is no chance of the police "remembering" what they said incorrectly and it being used against them as testimony. The state will have a much harder time making a case against them, and their lawyer can present their position in the best possible light after first seeing the evidence the state has against them during discovery, if it even goes that far.
That's fine. They refused to talk to the police. That's the right thing to do. Now there is no chance of the police "remembering" what they said incorrectly and it being used against them as testimony. The state will have a much harder time making a case against them, and their lawyer can present their position in the best possible light after first seeing the evidence the state has against them during discovery, if it even goes that far.
(post is archived)