That's exactly what the police are counting on. When a detective says they "just want to get your side of the story," understand what's actually happening: the investigation is already pointed at you, and the interview has one purpose — locking you into statements that can be used against you. Innocent people talk themselves into charges every single week, because innocence doesn't protect you from a misremembered time, a nervous contradiction, or a sentence taken out of context.
The Fifth Amendment exists precisely for this moment. Your silence at the station cannot be presented to a jury as evidence of guilt. Your words absolutely can — and here's the part nobody tells you: under the rules of evidence, what you tell police generally can be used against you, but your self-serving explanations generally can't be used by your own lawyer to help you. Talking is a one-way valve, and it only flows in the State's direction.
Memorize two sentences:
Say them politely. Then stop talking — not to the detective, not to the friendly booking officer, not to your cellmate, and not on the recorded jail phone. Once you clearly invoke your right to counsel, questioning must stop.
Whether the police get a second run at you, whether charges get filed at all, and what gets charged often turns on what happens in the first 48 hours. When Mike calls a detective and says he represents you, the dynamic changes instantly — they're no longer dealing with a nervous suspect, they're dealing with the lawyer they least want to see at trial. Investigations have quietly died at that phone call.
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