Boytwnmom
Verified Attorney
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2008
- Messages
- 1,652
- Reaction score
- 297
are kidnapped frequently hire lawyers to negotiate the terms of their interviews with law enforcement after they have contacted them to report a crime? Didn't know that. People whoa re suppsoedly crime victims are not likely to hire attornesy to "protect" them from the very people they have just reported a crime to in order to ask for help.
Sure, if LE just calls you up and wants to question you, get a lawyer, negotiate, refuse, whatever. But you wake up and your infant is gone, do you do the same thing? I kinda doubt it.
Sure, if LE just calls you up and wants to question you, get a lawyer, negotiate, refuse, whatever. But you wake up and your infant is gone, do you do the same thing? I kinda doubt it.
It's very frequent to negotiate the terms of an interview. People bring in lawyers to protect them from excessive behavior by government officials. If you think about it, the purpose of the Constitution is to protect the citizenry from abuses by the government.
There is a always a tension in this situation between competing objectives. LE just wants to get a signed confession and move on to the rest of the sludge in the system. (It really is not so much about finding the baby at this point.) Lawyers want to protect their clients from abuses by LE in their desire to get a confession.
The lawyers will most likely work out terms for the Irwins to be interviewed by different detectives. The Irwins did an earlier unrestricted interview that apparently went awry with very aggressive detectives. If the Irwins are innocent and they feel that LE is having a narrow focus on them instead of following other leads to find their baby, you can understand why relations have soured.
I don't know what happened here. I am in favor of due process so that if the Irwins are culpable, they are treated fairly under the law and the conviction sticks.