🛡️ Teen Survival Guide for Police Encounters
Course overview
Lesson Overview

4.3 – What to Write Down After a Police Encounter: Your memory can fade fast, especially after stress, so writing down what happened keeps the truth solid. Start with the basics—time, date, and location. List everyone present, including officers, passengers, or witnesses. Describe what led up to the stop or event and what actions each person took. Note exact words if you remember them, but don’t guess. Include any force used, property taken, or searches made. Write what you felt and noticed—like tone, gestures, or threats. These small details paint a full picture later if you need to defend yourself. Keep your notes organized in one safe place or backed up digitally. Don’t edit or change them once written; label them as “original.” If you recorded video, note the file name and where it’s stored. Even if nothing major happened, that record proves your awareness and credibility. Sharing accurate facts beats arguing with emotion. The best defense is a written timeline that no one can twist. What you write becomes your truth when the noise fades. Documentation is your quiet form of power and protection.

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

Our platform is HIPAA, Medicaid, Medicare, and GDPR-compliant. We protect your data with secure systems, never sell your information, and only collect what is necessary to support your care and wellness. learn more

Allow