eftychia: Me in kilt and poofy shirt, facing away, playing acoustic guitar behind head (cyhmn)
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posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 05:24am on 2020-08-10

"This tendency to lie pervades all police work, not just high-profile violence, and it has the power to ruin lives. Law enforcement officers lie so frequently-in affidavits, on post-incident paperwork, on the witness stand-that officers have coined a word for it: testilying. Judges and juries generally trust police officers, especially in the absence of footage disproving their testimony. As courts reopen and convene juries, many of the same officers now confronting protesters in the street will get back on the stand.

"Defense attorneys around the country believe the practice is ubiquitous; while that belief might seem self-serving, it is borne out by footage captured on smartphones and surveillance cameras. Yet those best positioned to crack down on testilying, police chiefs and prosecutors, have done little or nothing to stop it in most of the country. Prosecutors rely on officer testimony, true or not, to secure convictions, and merely acknowledging the problem would require the government to admit that there is almost never real punishment for police perjury."

-- Mark Joseph Stern, "The Police Lie. All the Time. Can Anything Stop Them?", Slate, 2020-08-04

There are 3 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 12:27pm on 2020-08-10
I am reminded of, many years ago, reading that juries in the Bronx were less likely to vote for convictions than those anywhere else in New York, simply because they didn't assume that cops were telling the truth. I don't think the people of the Bronx were more likely to have heard about testilying, but they were more likely to think it into account if they were serving on a jury.
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
posted by [personal profile] dewline at 01:21pm on 2020-08-10
We have anecdotal reports that the problem exists in Canada as well. I am not pleased with this for a number of reasons, to put it mildly. Societies need to be able to rely upon their LEOs for truth in testimony for reasons stated and implied in that article and elsewhere. Lying on the stand as standard procedure undermines that needed trust.
metahacker: A picture of white-socked feet, as of a person with their legs crossed. (Default)
posted by [personal profile] metahacker at 02:21pm on 2020-08-10
Of the three times I watched a police officer give testimony, all three lied thoroughly and completely. There was no punishment nor consequence, all were important lies that would have exonerated their victim, and there was no appeal.

(In one case the magistrate did toss the charge, after the witness "clarified" the actual facts.)

It is all very disheartening.

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