Is it a sin for a cop to lie to a criminal suspect?

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OK, but should sexual predators be allowed to walk free IF they are only arrested as a result of police deception? I go back to the 20/20 series. None of the predators actually did anything, because it was a setup. But they were arrested for soliciting an underage child for sex. Yet the “child” herself was a fiction. They solicited a fictional child for sex. Is this deception–lying–sufficient to throw out any conviction?
 
OK, but should sexual predators be allowed to walk free IF they are only arrested as a result of police deception? I go back to the 20/20 series. None of the predators actually did anything, because it was a setup. But they were arrested for soliciting an underage child for sex. Yet the “child” herself was a fiction. They solicited a fictional child for sex. Is this deception–lying–sufficient to throw out any conviction?
No, I don’t think it should be. Would it be better had the predator “succeeded” with a “real” 13 year old, rather than a decoy? Then they arrest the guy, convict him, and offer years of counseling to the girl?

Or is it better to remove him from society so there is one less predator out there?

I say get him off the streets!
 
I personally believe that to knowingly lie is a sin. However, and I know 99% will disagree with me here, is it not possible that in SOME rare cases it is an “acceptable sin.” Before I’m beat down, when I say the word “acceptable” I mean it in the sense of being acceptable over the alternative of not lying. I do not mean it in the sense that God accepts the sin itself as being good since that is an impossibility. For example, if a CIA operative must infiltrate a radical Islamic group in order to discover the details relating to a known impending terrorist attack on innocent people, would not the lie told by the operative (though a sin) be far more “acceptable” than deciding not to infiltrate the group and later finding out that 1000s of people died a horrid death? Besides this, one might argue that the one lying is not actually doing so freely. He/she may not wish to lie but in fact has little choice in the matter. If you know that the lives of innocent people depend on you, is there really free-will on the part of the one who is to lie? Going back to the OP’s scenario, if a law enforcement officer lies to a “perp” in order to get information which may prevent further crime or save a life, is that officer really doing so freely because he wants to lie, or is he doing so because it is the only way in which to stop a greater evil?
So, as a sheriff’s deputy, I would have to vote that lying in these situations, while a sin, does not rise to the level of being mortal. Still, it would be wise to confess these lies during Confession.
We are called to serve the Truth and not the truth. So many of the simplistic statements that to not tell the truth is a betrayal of the Truth.

When a policeman poses on the internet as a young girl to catch a predator, is he not serving the Truth? When the Pope told the Nazi’s he wasn’t hiding Jews or cooperating in their escape from the death, was he not serving the Truth? Is the policeman trying to find the truth by using deception with a suspect not serving the Truth? Is not a “mole” trying to prevent terrorists from killing innocent people serving the truth?

The Catechism is clear “2488 The right to the communication of the truth is not unconditional. Everyone must conform his life to the Gospel precept of fraternal love. This requires us in concrete situations to judge whether or not it is appropriate to reveal the truth to someone who asks for it.”

People who are planning to or suspected of doing evil are not entitled to the truth. Is a child predator entitled to the truth that the person on the internet is an undercover police officer? Were the Nazi’s entitled to the location of the Jews? Is a suspect entitled to always know exactly what the Police know? Is a person willing to put himself at risk by infiltrating a terrorist cell required to tell his adversaries that truth?

Additionally, in all cases there is duress (sometimes immediate as in the case of the Nazi’s and the Pope and sometimes it is inherent as in trying to pursue justice) for which one is always able to take appropriate and necessary action to remove the duress.

I resent the implication that a police officer pursuing child predators, the Pope, or an interrogating police officer are somehow denying their call to serve the Truth and in some way sinning to their eternal detriment. They deserve our respect and gratitude as what they do they do serves the Truth- Jesus Christ.
 
I don’t think it is all that common for a cop to lie. I think it is common for Police to pressure and decieve people into a confession under threat of arrest or further charges being tacked on like interfering etc. In cases of interogation they use lies to make people crack, which I disagree with and think is a sin.

Most people don’t know there rights. Cops call people and say I need you to come into the station to answer a few questions. People feel like they have no choice and actually go. Then after 3 hours of verbal torture they confess to the crime. In all reality they could have just said no thanks and hung up the phone. If the Police had enough for an arrest they would have just arrested them to begin with.

I think in all reality that Police take advantage of peoples ignorance to accomplish there objective.

-D
 
I don’t think it is all that common for a cop to lie. I think it is common for Police to pressure and decieve people into a confession under threat of arrest or further charges being tacked on like interfering etc. In cases of interogation they use lies to make people crack, which I disagree with and think is a sin.

Most people don’t know there rights. Cops call people and say I need you to come into the station to answer a few questions. People feel like they have no choice and actually go. Then after 3 hours of verbal torture they confess to the crime. In all reality they could have just said no thanks and hung up the phone. If the Police had enough for an arrest they would have just arrested them to begin with.

I think in all reality that Police take advantage of peoples ignorance to accomplish there objective.

-D
Then these people are just plain stupid. The moment that a person becomes a suspect the police must read them the Miranda Rights before they continue (or start) to question them. Those Rights are the right to legal counsel and the right to remain silent during questioning. Once a person asks for a lawyer the questioning must stop.

If a person does not know this, even after being told, then they have issues.

I have a friend who is a police officer and he has told me that I should never give up any of my rights when asked to do so by a police officer. If they come back with “if you are guilty then you have nothing to worry about”, he said I should respond that these are my rights and I give them up to nobody.

One other thing, when someone tells a falsehood it is not always a lie. Here is something from the Catechism that I think shows that this would not be considered a lie.

2484 The gravity of a lie is measured against the nature of the truth it deforms, the circumstances, the intentions of the one who lies, and the harm suffered by its victims. To lie is to speak or act against the truth in order to lead someone into error.

In this case, a lie by a law enforcement officer, is not done in otder to lead someone into error, it is done to find the truth. The “victim” in such a case does not suffer any harm, they are brought to justice, unless someone thinks that justice is harm.
 
I personally believe that to knowingly lie is a sin. However, and I know 99% will disagree with me here, is it not possible that in SOME rare cases it is an “acceptable sin.” Before I’m beat down, when I say the word “acceptable” I mean it in the sense of being acceptable over the alternative of not lying. I do not mean it in the sense that God accepts the sin itself as being good since that is an impossibility. For example, if a CIA operative must infiltrate a radical Islamic group in order to discover the details relating to a known impending terrorist attack on innocent people, would not the lie told by the operative (though a sin) be far more “acceptable” than deciding not to infiltrate the group and later finding out that 1000s of people died a horrid death? Besides this, one might argue that the one lying is not actually doing so freely. He/she may not wish to lie but in fact has little choice in the matter. If you know that the lives of innocent people depend on you, is there really free-will on the part of the one who is to lie? Going back to the OP’s scenario, if a law enforcement officer lies to a “perp” in order to get information which may prevent further crime or save a life, is that officer really doing so freely because he wants to lie, or is he doing so because it is the only way in which to stop a greater evil?
So, as a sheriff’s deputy, I would have to vote that lying in these situations, while a sin, does not rise to the level of being mortal. Still, it would be wise to confess these lies during Confession.
I don’t think these are even sins. When John Paul forged baptismal certificates to save people from being killed, that was a moral act. It was not even partly a sin.

If I found out that someone I thought was a friend had been lying to me because they were undercover police posing as something they weren’t in order to find out if I were a criminal, I could accept that. As long as there was reason to believe that I was in fact a criminal, that is acceptable behavior. They have to have some legitimate reason to do that to a person, though.

I really do believe that if we think that this is sinful behavior, it ought to be illegal for the police to do it. I don’t believe that it is sinful myself, but if someone else does, I have to wonder why they are ok with benefitting from the protection of police who use immoral methods to do their jobs.

Are people who think police lying is a mortal sin really willing to ask the police to commit mortal sins and risk their eternal souls in order to put criminals in jail for our safety? I don’t think that is a moral choice. It would be like knowingly buying from merchants who use slave labor. It is a complicity that is in itself a sin.
No, I don’t think it should be. Would it be better had the predator “succeeded” with a “real” 13 year old, rather than a decoy? Then they arrest the guy, convict him, and offer years of counseling to the girl?

Or is it better to remove him from society so there is one less predator out there?

I say get him off the streets!
It is one thing to pose as a potential victim. It is another to lure a person into the crime. That is the difference. I think it is entirely moral and should be entirely legal to pose as someone who could be taken for prey, as long as the police do not do something to actively solicit the illegal behavior. I think it is ok for a police officer to parade around in clothing that a prostitute might wear, as long as the officer is not approaching men and offering them sex in exchange for money. That is crossing the line.
 
Then these people are just plain stupid. The moment that a person becomes a suspect the police must read them the Miranda Rights before they continue (or start) to question them. Those Rights are the right to legal counsel and the right to remain silent during questioning. Once a person asks for a lawyer the questioning must stop.

If a person does not know this, even after being told, then they have issues.
Actually the Police do not need to read Miranda the moment someone becomes a suspect. They only marandise a person who is ‘under arrest’. During the investigation is when people are pressured and decieved which leads to the arrest and the Miranda act. People are questioned and “detained for investigative purposes” all the time until they crack. People are often “handcuffed for officer safety” during an investigation. Basically Police do whatever they need to for whatever reason they need. Creative report writing assures that Police don’t get into trouble after they test those legal limits on a regular basis. Law enforcement is operating in a broken system. They always find ways to get it done in spite of the systems obvious problems. Police are not just out to help people. Police hunt people and get a nice adrenaline rush when they swoop in for the pinch. I am totally pro Police by the way, but they are people with ego’s and areas of brokeness just like everyone else.

-D
 
Actually the Police do not need to read Miranda the moment someone becomes a suspect. They only marandise a person who is ‘under arrest’. During the investigation is when people are pressured and decieved which leads to the arrest and the Miranda act. People are questioned and “detained for investigative purposes” all the time until they crack. People are often “handcuffed for officer safety” during an investigation. Basically Police do whatever they need to for whatever reason they need. Creative report writing assures that Police don’t get into trouble after they test those legal limits on a regular basis. Law enforcement is operating in a broken system. They always find ways to get it done in spite of the systems obvious problems. Police are not just out to help people. Police hunt people and get a nice adrenaline rush when they swoop in for the pinch. I am totally pro Police by the way, but they are people with ego’s and areas of brokeness just like everyone else.

-D
This is unfortunately why we have to have dismissal of the prosecutions against guilty parties as the penalty for using illicit means to catch them. It is the only way to make sure that police will make a good-faith effort to not get over-zealous and harm the innocent in the process.
 
This is unfortunately why we have to have dismissal of the prosecutions against guilty parties as the penalty for using illicit means to catch them. It is the only way to make sure that police will make a good-faith effort to not get over-zealous and harm the innocent in the process.
right said!! Boo Tha Po-lice!!
 
The Catechism is clear “2488 The right to the communication of the truth is not unconditional. Everyone must conform his life to the Gospel precept of fraternal love. This requires us in concrete situations to judge whether or not it is appropriate to reveal the truth to someone who asks for it.”
Note that this is not the same as lying. As Mr. Spock (who could not tell a lie) once said to the Romulans when caught as a spy:“It is not a lie to withhold the truth”

I couldn’t resist a chance to quote Star Trek.

Jim
 
Being one of the good guys puts us at a disadvantage against the bad guys who will use any means to an end, good or bad. Deliberately telling an untruth to deceive is always wrong. Dipping into the bad guy’s playbook is a no-no, no matter what the TV shows like The Shield and 24 tell you.
 
Being one of the good guys puts us at a disadvantage against the bad guys who will use any means to an end, good or bad. Deliberately telling an untruth to deceive is always wrong. Dipping into the bad guy’s playbook is a no-no, no matter what the TV shows like The Shield and 24 tell you.
When the Nazi’s knocked on the door of the Pope and asked if he was cooperating with the escapte of Jews or harboring Jews he should have said which of the following:
  1. I am not harboring or assisting any Jews.
  2. I refuse to answer your question (at which moment the Nazi’s would have been smart enough to know the answer was yes leading to the Jews death, the death of the Pope and the likely occcupation of the Vatican if not its destruction)
  3. They are here. (leading to the Jews death)
I’m assuming that since you claim it is always wrong, you’d vote for #2.
 
Being one of the good guys puts us at a disadvantage against the bad guys who will use any means to an end, good or bad. Deliberately telling an untruth to deceive is always
wrong. Dipping into the bad guy’s playbook is a no-no, no matter what the TV shows like The Shield and 24 tell you.
Two wrongs don’t make a right.
So will you two agree, then, that by your standards we are all profitting from living in an immoral system in which the police are allowed to use immoral means to achieve a moral end? What do you intend to do to change that?

If convictions were thrown out because the police lied, then lying by the police would drop sharply. Are you advocating, then, that the law should be changed if possible so that if the police deceive suspects in order to catch them, the guilty parties should not face prosecution?

Now mind you, I am not saying that morality must be based on what is practical. The poverty inherent in morality is that if you can’t obtain something by moral means, you muddle on without. I think police deception can be seen in the same realm as lying to the Nazis—in other words, if I were hiding Jews during the time of the Gestapo, I wouldn’t just lie to them but also to anyone I was remotely unsure I could trust—but I am still listening here. Let me go on the record, though….I don’t think that a moral man gives the Jews a sad shake of the head with the claim that a moral man must never seek to deceive even the evil one.

Just to crank up the debate, I found the following piece on the Internet. lib.jjay.cuny.edu/cje/html/sample1.html

Here’s a quote from the conclusions (the italics are mine…I’m not sure the cut-n-paste worked perfectly):
If there is a distinction between investigative and interrogatory trickery and deceit, it has to be based on situational ethics, the morality of practical necessity. Practically speaking, it is impossible to enforce consensual crime statutes, bribery, drug dealing, prostitution; without employing deception.
This need for deception may not be as clear at the interrogation stage. Often, evidence can be produced independently of confessions, and occasionally, false confessions are elicited.
But confessions may also be practical necessity in many cases, particularly when dealing with the most serious sorts of criminals, such as murderers, rapists, and kidnappers. Miranda himself, it may be recalled, had confessed to the forcible kidnapping and rape of a nineteen-year-old woman. Why should situational ethics permit lying to a drug dealer, but forbid custody incustody conversational questioning of a forcible rapist? That question can be answered on historical and constitutional grounds, but it is hard to see how to make consistent common sense out of it.
I cannot here reconcile such inconsistencies, nor am I writing to lobby the Supreme Court. But I would like to conclude by suggesting that apparent inconsistency makes law look more like a game than a rational system for enforcing justice. Because of this appearance of inconsistency, police are not likely to take the stated rules of the game seriously and are encouraged to operate by their own codes, including those which affirm the necessity for lying wherever it seems justified by the ends.
And just in closing: I think it makes all the difference in the world that all of us, including those of us who commit crimes, have every opportunity to know the law concerning the circumstances under which the police may or may not deceive, and by what methods. Those rules are set up to expose crime and yet protect the innocent.
 
Pax vobiscum!

For those of you who think that it is not acceptable for police to lie, what will your opinion be when you’re caught in a shootout between drug dealers or when your airplane is highjacked by terrorists because the police and CIA felt that it would be immoral to infiltrate those groups and lie to them?

Again, I will bring up the example of the pope during the Holocaust. I think Orion’s three examples summed that up pretty nicely.

In Christ,
Rand
 
Deliberately telling an untruth to deceive is always wrong.
Two wrongs don’t make a right.
You have two beautiful teen daughters, cheerful, liked by everybody in school and with a great future. You are proud and love them to pieces. You have many memories of them as they are growing up, from infants to playful children to young mature teens; full of life. You see in the TV news where a couple of rapists are loose in your neighborhood. Their MO is to rape then kill young women. You of course are extra careful with you daughters. You hear noises and see somebody breaking into your house. You run up to your daughters and tell them to go up and hide in the attic. Before you are able to call 911 the intruders overcome you and your wife. They know you have two daughters and ask you where they are. Now, who in their right mind is going to pull a George Washington and say, “I cannot tell a lie. They are hiding up in the attic”. Is it wrong, to tell a lie and risk your soul to hell, by telling the intruders you do not know, or is it right to tell them the truth that they are up in the attic and risk your daughters lives? Which is right and which is wrong?
 
They know you have two daughters and ask you where they are.
Just thinking like a moral theologian, here, but the correct response might be “I don’t know.” This is the truth, since you don’t know where in the attic they are.

Still, the safer response would be an outright lie: “They are out of town.”

And if the question was “Are your daughters in the house?,” I would not hesitate to reply “No.” The intruders have no right to the truth.
 
What about the kid who’s friend may tell them about how they’re planning on killing themselves and ask their friend not to tell anyone? THe friend may say okay (to appease the friend)knowing full well he’ll tell an adult a.s.a.p. and try to talk the friend into getting help. This would be a lie from one friend to another, but it will save the life of the other. Or how about someone who confides in another not to tell anyone that they are/were abused? The person will usually say that they won’t tell anyone (before finding out what was going to be discussed) and then will proceed to tell the proper people so that the person will get help. These two examples are practical examples that if not all of us, many of us have been a part of in one form or another. Yet, these are examples of lies.
 
All lies, every last one. I refuse to resort to such deception. Remember what Shakspere said? Ah, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to decive.
 
Pax vobiscum!

For those of you who think that it is not acceptable for police to lie, what will your opinion be when you’re caught in a shootout between drug dealers or when your airplane is highjacked by terrorists because the police and CIA felt that it would be immoral to infiltrate those groups and lie to them?

Again, I will bring up the example of the pope during the Holocaust. I think Orion’s three examples summed that up pretty nicely.

In Christ,
Rand
A terrorist scenario or the Pope lying to survive and keep people out of Nazi ovens are justified ‘survival means’. When a cop catches two gang bangers who were suspected of being involved in a shooting thats a different scenario. Lets say the cops can’t find any real evidence and need a confession for the pinch. They seperate the bangers and tell both of them that the other has already confessed to the shooting. One of them will crack and feel betrayed by the other and start singing like a bird. Any sort of deceptive tactic is fair game? The system is so broken that this sort of thing is required. Does that make it right? I say no, but then again whats the alternative? I wish the Church would define all of this in great detail.

-D
 
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