In other words. Stay calm, stay quiet, and have a lawyer
[QUOTE=JustLookn;3565809]Yes, they can. Here is how you can spot police deception. *.
As a general proposition, courts permit the police*to lie. The lies told by the police to a suspect under questioning do not render the confession*involuntary per se. Mere trickery alone does not invalidate a confession. *The court must look to see whether the deception is reasonably likely to produce a false confession.
1 Police can lie about having physical evidence.
2 Police can trick you into giving up your DNA.
3 Police can give fake tests to prove you're guilty.
4 Police may lie about having an eyewitnesses.
5 Police can lie about recording your conversation.
6 Police can lie about having an accomplice's confession.
7 The police will try to imply that your refusal to cooperate will*be damaging to your case.
8 Police can lie about what will happen to other people.
9)*They will lie about wanting to help you out.
10 Police may ignore your request for a lawyer.
Police do not charge you with a crime the DA does. It is the police job to collect evidence and the court really doesn't care how they do it.
The three basic components to make such an arrest are: Agreeing that there will be sex; agreeing that there will be payment; and making some motion toward making that happen. That is, you got to get up from the bar stool and start walking to your hotel room, or tug down a zipper. These rules will vary somewhat (an offer, even with coded language, may be considered enough) but the criminal offense does not require that anyone actually engage in sex, or even go near.
According to one article I read, many police feel would-be sex buyers make easier targets than many sellers. If you have the mentality to (pay for sex), you are just not going to be remotely cautious about it, An Officer said. Claiming working prostitutes are also more sophisticated about dodging arrest than johns.
Not only is arresting buyers easier, cleaner, and less ethically fraught than arresting prostitutes, it's also effective at deterring the entire enterprise. Arrest the customers, they said. That will stop it in an instant. Customers disappear really quickly. And so will trafficking. It is not worth it for traffickers to traffic women if there are no customers. If a goal of vice policing is to protect women from violence and coercion, starving the market of buyers seems a better if more quotidian use of resources than handcuffing and jailing half-naked women.[/QUOTE]In other words. Stay calm, stay quiet, and have a lawyer. I'm guessing most of us don't have the funds to keep one on retainer, but at least have one you can hire quickly in your phone should something come up. And at some point, it will happen. You don't think it will because you've done this long enough and haven't gotten caught yet. But it's really only a matter of time.
Look whose popped up in M'Boro
Bobbin' Robin.
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