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General05:00 · Jun 15

What to Know From Arrest to the Detention Extension Hearing

MakoCenter
Translated & summarized from Mako by baba
The story · English

Police detention during the investigative stage, known as remand in custody for days, is one of the most sensitive phases of a criminal case. The article, published June 15, 2026 at 08:00 and written with attorney Dana Shavit, says the first hours after arrest can strongly affect the suspect’s legal position and the rest of the proceedings.

Police ask courts to extend detention when they say further investigative steps cannot be carried out if the suspect is free. They may argue there is a risk of obstructing the investigation, influencing witnesses, harming evidence gathering, or that the suspect is dangerous. A judge then reviews whether continued detention is justified and how long it is needed to complete the probe.

A central right is to consult a lawyer before questioning. The article says that advice can clarify the legal situation, explain rights during interrogation, and help the suspect understand the consequences of each answer. It warns that saying “I did nothing wrong” is not a reason to avoid legal counsel, because some actions may still amount to a criminal offense under the law.

The piece also stresses that questioning does not begin only when formal recording starts. Statements made to officers outside the interrogation room can still be noted and become part of the case file, so suspects should avoid discussing the incident, giving informal explanations, or offering partial versions before getting advice. It notes that police may use interrogation tactics, including partial information or references to evidence, to test responses.

The article says the choice between giving a version and remaining silent has no single correct answer and depends on the facts and available evidence. It adds that artificial intelligence tools are increasingly used in criminal investigations for data processing, analysis, and evidence gathering, but suspects’ rights and legal rules still remain central. The article concludes that early, informed decisions can be crucial to the case.

Read the original at Mako
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