Well then you're playing a very dangerous game, just making assumptions about what is "very obvious" in a murder case. As someone else said, I think there's an element of bravado in your "I ain't telling you nuffin" stance when being interviewed. If you've got nothing to hide, and you're happy...
Exactly. If you've got nothing to hide, if you're confident you've done nothing wrong, then clamming up under interview is not the thing to do.
I saw the flipside with a guy up on a charge of affray. He was interviewed on the night of the incident, and gave chapter and verse of his version of...
I don't think you really understand how this works. They will STILL question you on the incident. Whether you say no comment or sit there in silence, the result is the same - you would be wilfully choosing not to cooperate. You can't choose to get interviewed "off the record" - the police must...
"You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned something which you later rely on in court".
Answering "no comment" to every question when being interviewed by police whilst under caution can certainly cause harm to your defence. I was on a...