| If you've been arrested... |
| Tips on What to Do |
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• Do be polite and as courteous
as possible to the police.
• Do ask for the police officer's name and badge number,
or read it off of his or her badge. Try to remember it. Try to get
a good look at the officer's face so that you can identify him or her
later by that method, if necessary.
• Do, if you are arrested in your car, show the police officer your driver's
license and registration information. Note that in other situations
where you are not stopped in your car, you cannot be arrested for the
sole reason of refusing to provide information, including your name
and address, to the police.
• Do place your hands where the police can see them.
• Do, if you are taken into custody, demand the right to have an attorney
present before speaking to the police.
• Do ask if you are under arrest. If you are, you have the right to be
told why.
• Do clearly inform the police that you will not speak to them about
anything without an attorney being present.
• Do, as soon as you can, write down everything that happened during
the course of your arrest so that you can use that writing to refresh
your memory at a later date.
• Do, if you are physically injured by the police during the course of
your arrest, seek medical attention and inform your medical providers
of the cause of your injuries. Take photographs of your injuries as
soon as possible.
• Do remember that you do not need to answer ANY question that the police
ask of you. If you answer a question which at first seems harmless,
be aware that it may come back to haunt you later. |
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| Tips on What NOT to Do |
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• Don't offer information to
the police, no matter what tactics they use.
• Don't assume that the police have a search warrant just because they
say that they do. If they say they have a search warrant, ask to see
it.
• Don't get into an argument with the police, no matter how hard they
may try to bait you into losing your temper.
• Don't initiate physical contact with the police, even if you mean them
no harm.
• Don't give them any reason to find you threatening. Do not give them
the impression that you are hard to deal with or irritating.
• Don't run away from a police officer if you see one (or more) approaching
you. Running away may give the police reason to suspect that you are
hiding something from them, even if you are totally innocent.
• Don't interfere with or obstruct the police. If you do, you can face
additional criminal charges.
• Don't resist arrest. Even if you think you are innocent, the time to
protest comes later. If you resist arrest, you may face additional
charges.
• Don't allow the police to listen in on any telephone call that you
make to your lawyer once you have been arrested. While the police may
listen in on conversations to other individuals, they cannot listen
to a conversation with your lawyer because it is protected by the attorney-client
privilege.
• Don't speak to the police about anything before your attorney arrives
and talks to you first.
• Don't provide the police with any information other than your name
and address if you are arrested unless your attorney is present and
approves.
• Don't sign anything, no matter what it is, without an attorney being
present.
• Don't say anything if your attorney instructs that you remain silent.
Let your attorney do the talking for you, no matter how hard it may
be to resist the urge to speak.
• Don't agree to participate in a line-up without your attorney being
present.
• Don't lie to your attorney, or to the police if you choose to talk
to them |
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| To arrange a free initial consultation
with Attorney David LiBassi, call us at (978) 441-9339, or contact
us online. |
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