Any cop (without a chip on his shoulder) will gladly accept someone politely saying "I will not answer any questions, may I leave now?" with a smile and a thank you. Obviously, if you say with attitude, they will respond with attitude. There are polite ways of saying the above and 99% of officers will respond back with a polite, "thank you, have a nice day". You can talk with them, just don't answer their questions...<br><br>"Hey officer, how are you doing? Been busy tonight? Hope all is going wll for you... Sure, here is my ID. Am I sleeping in my van tonight? Sorry, I hope you understand that I will not answer that. Where am I going too? Sorry, I hope you understand that I will not answer that. Am I being detained? Am I under arrest? OK, have a great night and stay safe!. Thanks for your service." (then drive off, nice and simple)<br><br>They all know that we have our rights. They know that they can not infringe upon those rights. They know that we have the upper hand until we ALLOW them to violate our rights. If the officer has a VALID reason to hold you, he will hold you no matter what you say in answer to his questions... so why say anything at all? Often times, they have no reason to hold a person until that person opens his or her mouth and says something that gives the officer probable cause.<br><br>Remember:<strong> It is against the law to lie to a police officer. It is NOT against the law for the officer to lie to you.</strong> (<em>including telling you that they have the right to search your vehicle. They say that only so you give them permission, and THEN they have the right.</em>)<br><br>You have every legal right to ignore a random knock on the door (you do not know who it is and you should not open your door, for your own safety). Maybe if the officer verbally identifies himself as an officer of the law first... at which point, I would ask for his identification before giving him my own. If he fails to supply identification, you should dial the local police dept and inform them that you have someone impersonating an officer trying to get you to step out of the car. <br><br>Ask any lawyer (or even any cop) and every single one will tell you, never answer questions from the police. You may be legally obligated to identify yourself, but you are not legally obligated to say another word after that. If they harass you for exercising your constitutional rights, get a lawyer and take the settlement that they will most certainly be offering.