🛡️ Teen Survival Guide for Police Encounters
Course overview
Lesson Overview

2.3 – You Have the Right to Remain Silent – Use It Safely: Silence is not rudeness; it is protection. Anything you say can be used as evidence later, even if you are innocent. The right to remain silent means you can stop answering questions at any time. To use it correctly, say clearly, “I am choosing to remain silent and I want a lawyer.” After that, stay quiet. Do not explain why you are silent or try to justify your choice. Officers may try to fill the silence to make you talk. Stay polite but firm. Even a small comment can change how your case is viewed. Your words are powerful, so use them only when you have guidance. Being silent is not guilt – it is wisdom.

About this course

This comprehensive guide is designed to help teens navigate real-life encounters with law enforcement with confidence, clarity, and caution. From understanding your legal rights to knowing what to say—and what not to say—this series empowers young people

This course includes:
  • A full series of engaging, age-appropriate lessons designed specifically for teens
  • Real-world scenarios and roleplay examples to prepare for actual police encounters
  • Easy-to-understand breakdowns of legal terms like probable cause, reasonable suspicion, and Miranda rights

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