The short answer: yes, you can refuse to talk to police in Texas, and in almost every situation, you should.
The longer answer is that this right is real, but it’s also fragile. There are specific things you have to say to invoke it, specific situations where the rules differ, and specific mistakes that throw away your protection without you realizing it.
This article walks through what your rights actually are, how to use them, and what to do when an officer is asking you questions you don’t want to answer. Murphy & Baker Law Firm defends people questioned or arrested by police throughout Smith County and East Texas.
The Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution gives you the right not to incriminate yourself. The Texas Constitution provides the same protection. This means you cannot be forced to answer questions from police that might incriminate you.
Three things matter here:
It applies whether you’re under arrest or not. Police don’t have to read you Miranda rights to ask you questions on the side of the road. But you don’t have to answer.
It applies to all questions about a crime. Not just “did you do it” but also “where were you,” “who were you with,” “what were you doing,” “is this your car,” “have you been drinking.”
It does not stop being your right just because police keep asking. They can ask the same question ten different ways. You can give the same answer ten times: “I’m invoking my right to remain silent. I want to speak to an attorney.”
In Texas, there are limited things you must give police even if you’re not answering questions:
Your name, address, and date of birth, IF you have been lawfully arrested. Texas Penal Code § 38.02 makes it a Class C misdemeanor to refuse to identify yourself once you’ve been arrested. But you don’t have to identify yourself just because police asked, only after a lawful arrest.
Your driver’s license, registration, and insurance during a traffic stop. This is required by traffic law, separate from criminal questioning.
Evidence the law specifically requires you to provide, like a breath sample under implied consent if you’ve been arrested for DWI (refusing this has separate consequences, including automatic license suspension). We cover this in greater detail in our DWI practice area.
That’s it. Beyond those, you can decline to answer.
Most people don’t know that silence by itself doesn’t invoke your right to remain silent. Courts have ruled that simply not answering questions can be used against you in some cases. You have to clearly say you’re invoking the right.
The magic words are some version of:
SAY THIS
“I am invoking my right to remain silent. I want to speak to a lawyer.”
That’s it. Say it once. Say it again if they keep asking. Don’t say anything else.
What you should NOT say:
If you’ve been clear, police are required to stop questioning you until your attorney is present. If they keep asking, anything you say after invoking your right may be inadmissible, but only if you stop talking.
This is where most cases go sideways. Police are very skilled at having “just a conversation” that turns into a confession.
If police approach you and you’re not under arrest, you generally have the right to:
Police can detain you briefly without arresting you (Terry stops, traffic stops). During a detention, you still have the right not to answer questions about the alleged crime. Declining consent to a search matters most in cases that hinge on what officers find, such as drug possession charges.
The conversation you think is helping you is almost never helping you.
This is the most common reason people talk to police, and it’s the most expensive mistake in criminal defense.
The problem isn’t that you have something to hide. The problem is:
Memory is unreliable. You think you remember what happened. You don’t, completely. Statements made under stress are full of small inaccuracies. Those inaccuracies later look like lies, even if they weren’t.
Police are professionals at extracting incriminating statements. They’re not your friends. They’re trained interrogators. Casual questions are often setup questions. Your honest answer to “what were you doing earlier” might place you near a crime scene you didn’t realize was a crime scene.
The Fifth Amendment exists for innocent people. The Supreme Court has explicitly said this. Justice Scalia put it bluntly: “Truthful statements by an innocent person can provide the government with incriminating evidence.” The right to remain silent protects innocence rather than signaling guilt.
Even if you’re 100% in the clear, talking creates work for your defense lawyer later. Statements have to be explained, contextualized, sometimes even contradicted at trial. None of that happens if you said nothing in the first place.
If you’ve already talked to police and you’re now reading this in panic, take these steps:
Stop talking now. Even mid-interview, you can invoke your right. Say the words. Sit silently. Wait for your lawyer.
Don’t try to “fix” what you said. The instinct is to keep talking to clarify, walk back, explain. Each new statement creates more material that can be used against you. Stop.
Call a defense attorney immediately. Tell them what you said, as best you remember it. They can sometimes minimize the damage of a statement, but only if they know about it before charges are filed. Our guide to the first 48 hours after an arrest covers what to prioritize next.
Once we represent you, we become the channel for all communication with the State. Police, prosecutors, and detectives have to go through us. We can decline interviews on your behalf, preserve evidence that supports your case, and negotiate with the prosecutor before charges are formally filed (sometimes preventing charges entirely).
Many cases never become trials because of work we do in the pre-charge phase. The earlier we’re involved, the more we can do.
If police want to talk to you, even casually, even just to “clear things up,” call us first. The first call is free. Representation starts immediately.
We offer law loans, payment plans that fit family budgets, so the cost of getting an attorney involved isn’t a barrier.
(903) 533-9000. Anytime, day or night.
Related reading: Criminal Defense overview · For Families
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