Cops don’t collect evidence to prove your innocence. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. Never for you. You and your lawyer provide your own evidence. The cops won’t be collecting it for you.
If a criminal says a cop planted drugs or whatever on them why don't they ask for a finger print test? And vice versa a cop could also request it to clear up everything?
Submitted 3 days ago by Patnou@lemmy.world to [deleted]
Comments
ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca 3 days ago
NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. Never for you.
What shitty country is that?
ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca 3 days ago
Every country on Earth? Is there someplace police accuse people of crimes and then argue why they’re wrong?
xmunk@sh.itjust.works 3 days ago
A cop that planted evidence on you would then, usually, find that evidence to announce that you had it.
That finding action would likely excuse any fingerprints on the evidence unless they were extremely careless and left a fingerprint inside the baggie.
socialmedia@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Besides all the other arguments, fingerprints aren’t like the movies. You need a reasonably flat surface to get a fingerprint from.
Getting a fingerprint from a house or a car to prove that someone was there at some point, any time in the past, is possible. Getting a fingerprint from a plastic baggy to prove someone held it would be much harder.
The distortions would make it extremely hard to match against a database. If they compare it to you then it might show a match, so if you’re a suspect they might make a direct comparison. If they compare it to the cop? Remember the cop is innocent until proven guilty, so they can’t compel them to give fingerprints for comparison. Yes, they could be in a database, but remember the distortion makes it hard to automatically find this.
Any lab work has a cost, and police are lazy. They aren’t going to spend time or money trying to solve a case. They go with best effort.
FuglyDuck@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Uhm, cops are already fingerprinted. It’s on file as part of the background check. Any defense attorney would be able to file the necessary subpoena for that record. (It’s kept for all sorts of reasons.)
Further, fingerprints are considered “evidence”, and can just be collected, even if they weren’t on file, a simple subpoena would compel it- and again, any defense attorney can file and get it.
The cop-legally- enjoys exactly the same protections of due process you do. And that includes access to any potentially exculpatory evidence.
It’s going to be much harder to prove that the cop planted it, though, for one thing fingerprints on the outside are easily explained away, even if they exist or aren’t so damaged as to be useless. And cops normally aren’t stupid enough to live prints in hard to explain places.
For another, the deck is stacked in the cop’s favor- the court trusts them. Frequently, in the face of overwhelming evidence they can’t be trusted.
FireTower@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Yeah no one is fingerprinting a possession case.
Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Because fuck you, the whole system is rigged.
admin@lemmy.haley.io 3 days ago
It’s because ACAB
SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Cops wear gloves when “searching”
ShepherdPie@midwest.social 3 days ago
And even if they don’t it doesn’t really matter. I saw a recent bodycam video of a cop planting drugs in someone’s car in Philly, NYC, or somewhere nearby and they didn’t do shit to him.
lurch@sh.itjust.works 3 days ago
because the cops give their fingerprints to rile them out, because they touched it while searching
superkret@feddit.org 3 days ago
why don’t they ask for a finger print test?
STOP RESISTING!
str82L@lemmy.world 3 days ago
I think the point OP is making is less about the cop’s fingerprints and more that your fingerprints would be missing. Might at least introduce reasonable doubt if you are claiming they were planted.
xmunk@sh.itjust.works 3 days ago
Fingerprints aren’t a magical marker that remains visible on a surface for a set period of time. If you handle an object thoroughly and then hand it to your buddy there’s a good chance that only your buddy’s fingerprints will be detectable (and it’s also pretty likely that no ones’ would be clear enough for a match).
theunknownmuncher@lemmy.world 3 days ago
You don’t get to make requests lol
southsamurai@sh.itjust.works 3 days ago
The problem is that the container is evidence.
Even if planted, what does a cop do with evidence? They take it from the person. They’ll usually do so with their hands.
If they’re not wearing gloves, they can still explain away those prints by dint of touching them while taking them as evidence. If they’re wearing gloves, the only way they’d leave prints is if they weren’t while they were getting the container ready, but then they can still claim to have handled it without gloves at some point
It’s an impossible to prove claim unless there’s other evidence supporting the claim.
Since most court systems default to a cop being a credible witness instead of them having to back up their claims with other evidence, you’re fucked.
So it’s a bad defense. To make it stick, you have such a barrier to break down just to try to gain supporting evidence that you ain’t gonna be doing it from jail unless you’re rich.
Not that nobody tries. They do. It’s essentially a waste of time, but people will claim that evidence is planted. It’s just extremely rare for it to work, even when there is supporting evidence. It’s also a trope, so getting a jury to believe the claim is hard. You see it in movies and shows so often where the hero cop arrests someone with drugs and they say that it isn’t theirs, it’s planted.
Copaganda is a thing, and it works. Because it’s such a common trope, people have the idea that it’s something only claimed by people that are obviously lying. It doesn’t help that if you’re the kind of person to take the claim seriously, and take the other evidence into account, there’s a lower chance of you being on the jury. Jury selection, any prosecutor is going to ask questions that will find folks predisposed to a bias against their case. Same with defense lawyers wanting to exclude those against their defense
That’s not exclusive to drug cases, but drug cases are such that it’s easier for fake evidence do be planted. It’s very hard to fake a weapon in a murder case because testing can be used to exclude things. But a bag of drugs? Much easier to fake things. Hell, a cop wanting to do it, all they have to do is wear gloves, then push the baggie against the hands of the person, and now the planting claim is harder to prove
deegeese@sopuli.xyz 3 days ago
If the cop planted drugs and didn’t have the foresight to put on a latex glove, do you think they’ll forget to wipe their prints before dusting for their own prints?