I posted this yesteday and was hoping for feedback, but things got a bit (how do the Brits say this?) argy-bargy? Maybe someone said this before and surely better, but I did want to suggest that there are lies and there ar embellishments and there are lies of omission, and not all of them are the same, nor are they always intentional and can be simply miscommunications, or misremembrances:
The idea of a positive ID might have been an embellishment based on something about the reaction of the witness upon exposure to the suspect rather than upon words that were actually spoken. By this I mean upon a feeling of certainty by the detectives/officers present based upon how the witness and the suspect both responded when confronted with each other, that made it certain in their minds that these two had seen each other before. This would have been a positive ID in the minds of the officers, but without any words spoken that could lead to further detention or a course of prosecution.
This scenario would not have been an outright lie. In their minds, the suspect would have been positively ID'ed, and the witness would not have signed a sworn statement, because he never would have actually made one.
Mike
The idea of a positive ID might have been an embellishment based on something about the reaction of the witness upon exposure to the suspect rather than upon words that were actually spoken. By this I mean upon a feeling of certainty by the detectives/officers present based upon how the witness and the suspect both responded when confronted with each other, that made it certain in their minds that these two had seen each other before. This would have been a positive ID in the minds of the officers, but without any words spoken that could lead to further detention or a course of prosecution.
This scenario would not have been an outright lie. In their minds, the suspect would have been positively ID'ed, and the witness would not have signed a sworn statement, because he never would have actually made one.
Mike
Comment