An encounter with law enforcement can be stressful and scary. Below we describe your constitutional rights during police interactions and offer strategies for handling these encounters. However, it is never your responsibility to de-escalate an encounter—that responsibility lies with police officers only. Unfortunately, you cannot assume that officers will protect your safety, follow the law during your encounter or respect your assertion of your constitutional rights. While you may reduce the risk to your safety by staying calm even if an officer is not behaving respectfully and choosing your words, movement, body language, and emotions carefully, we acknowledge that attempting to put an officer at ease cannot guarantee your safety and people have still been injured or killed after doing so.
Note: if you are given a citation or ticket and are allowed to leave, the officer will ask you to sign the citation or ticket. Signing does not mean you are admitting guilt. It is just promising to show up for your court date. You should consider signing the ticket to avoid being taken to the police station.
If you or a loved one has been arrested or a victim of police violence, you may submit an online intake form and report this to ACLU of SoCal and complete our online form for assistance.
This information does not constitute legal advice.
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