Ex Narc Barry Cooper Teaches How Cops Know When You Are Lying

How Cops Know When You Are Lying

How cops know when you are lying isn’t a mystery. They’re trained in it, and so was I. 

During my years as a narcotics officer, I mastered the same techniques used by law enforcement agencies across the country to detect deception in seconds. It didn’t matter how good the perp thought they were; I was always ten steps ahead of them. 

This isn’t Matlock. It’s the real world, where cops don’t rely on gut feelings or hunches. Instead, they rely on behavioral science, body language analysis, and psychological cues to determine whether someone is bluffing, buzzed, or both. Meanwhile, you become a case study the moment you engage. 

I spent countless hours studying FBI polygraph manuals to learn how cops know when you are lying, and here’s what I found: Most people give themeselves away without even realizing it. When so many cops are dirty, knowing how to navigate their tactics is a valuable skill. 

How Cops Know When You Are Lying: The Top 3 Indicators 

Are you at risk of getting busted? Each person I arrested for contraband committed one or more of these 3 indicators of deception.

Cops Know When You Are Lying Because 

Cops can tell when you’re not being truthful, even if you’ve got your story straight. Menawhile, these three behaviors will give you away almost instantly:

Hand-to-Head Contact 

According to studies in behavioral science, people often subconsciously touch their head, face, or neck when lying. That’s because being dishonest can cause distress, which requires the release of nervous energy and self-soothing techniques.

It may only be a wipe of the brow or a scratch of the nose, a quick hat adjustment or a pull on the ear. All of those behaviors can indicate deception during interviews with law enforcement. To the trained eye, they’re signals of cognitive dissonance. It shows you’re uncomfortable with the lie, and your body is reacting. 

I once caught a cop lying in a federal deposition just by watching him scratch his head at the wrong moment. That one gesture was enough for me to double down on my line of questioning and trap him in his lie. Well-trained law enforcement will use those same tactics against you, so beware.

Grooming Yourself 

You raise an instant red flag when you groom yourself in front of a cop, especially during questioning. It’s the number one indicator of deception I’ve seen in my career as a narcotics officer. 

This isn’t a campaign against vanity; it’s about anxiety. Grooming yourself reads as a nervous attempt to self-soothe while stalling for time. Pulling on your clothes, applying makeup, or fixing your hair are all signs you’re suppressing something. 

I’ve seen suspects give themselves away just by adjusting their appearance mid-lie. Moral of the story: never groom yourself in front of police. Your attractiveness won’t win or lose the case, but your ability to dodge their deception detection will. 

Repeating the Question

This is one of the oldest tricks in the bad liar’s playook. If an officer asks, “Where are you headed,” and you respond with, “Where am I going?,” you’ve already told on yourself. Repeating the question gives your brain time to formulate a believable answer, which isn’t a problem if you’re telling the truth. 

Cops are trained to ask short, direct questions because they want to see how fast and confidently you respond. When you pause or echo, they assume you’re withholding information. 

Always have your story practiced when traveling, especially when riding with your stash. That way, you don’t have to invent a lie on the spot when the police start asking probing questions. 

Why Knowing This Could Save You 

Protect yourself from making uninentional mistakes that raise suspicion. The less you fidget, the better. Know your rights, and use police interrogation techniques to your advantage. 

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