A helpful post... hopefully...
1. Document everything. The sequence of events, dates, times, officer badge numbers etc. I wouldn't mind telling them at all why you wanted the information. What was said to you, what you said to them. Use full words, all letters in the words, so it is easy to understand
2. Make sure the sequence of events is as accurate as it can be. Do this sooner rather than later, as details disappear with the passing of time.
3. Know your local laws. What qualifies as DIC. Were you in the driving seat? Were keys in the ignition? Different states/countries have different laws. You may have no way out, you may be able to argue it completely successfully. If you know the laws (or rules of the game) then you know where you stand.
4. Ask police for a copy of their case notes or records. You may have to find out if you're even able to do this.
5. Personally, if they asked any questions, I'd make it clear what I was up to. It may make them behave a bit better... it may not. If it doesn't, well, it's only going to look worse for them.
6. Leave passion/emotions out of the equation, and approach everything in a logical manner, calmly explaining things where necessary. You're still dealing with humans. Sugar works far better than salt.
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