Imagine: a typical civil case about a broken car. One witness swears that he saw the defendant get behind the wheel drunk. Another claims that the defendant was as sober as a glass. The judge looks at both, but who is lying? Perjury is not just a dirty trick from detective novels. It is an everyday headache for any court. The fight against it is a war for the truth, where the stakes are the lives of people and trust in the law.
The motives are simple and as old as the world. Fear — the witness wants to avoid revenge from the criminal. Friendship or kinship — they lie for a brother, son, best friend. Money — paid testimony thrives in economic disputes and divorce cases involving property division. There is also the lie "for the sake of salvation": a nurse hides that the doctor made a mistake because "he is a good person and made a mistake for the first time". And greed: for five thousand rubles, someone is ready to give any testimony. The problem is that the judge often cannot detect a lie with his eyes — he is not a clairvoyant.
Let's start with the basics. The first line of defense is a warning about criminal liability under Articles 307 and 308 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation. The witness is explained: for lying, up to five years in prison. This works for many, but not for everyone. If the fear of punishment does not help, cross-examination comes into play. An experienced lawyer asks the same questions in different forms, asks to repeat the details, specifies the time, the weather, the clothes. The liar's memory is short: in an hour, he will get confused about when he entered the elevator or what color the coat was.
The second level is written evidence. The judge compares the testimony with recordings from cameras, receipts, messages in messengers. Remember the case of the Moscow auto-fraudster? He brought three "eyewitnesses". But the recordings from the intercom showed that none of them went out on the street at the time of the accident. The lie fell apart in a minute.
The third, the most powerful level, is expertise. A psychological-linguistic expert analyzes the text of the testimony for signs of fabrication: excessive details, unnatural chronology, the absence of simple everyday details (a real witness remembers not only the impact but also the smell of coffee in the car). And the polygraph? They use it, but only with the voluntary consent of the witness, and its results are not a verdict, but food for thought for the judge.
Here is a real story from a provincial city. The neighbor accused Petrov of stealing tools from the garage. Witness Ivanova claimed that she saw Petrov with an ax at the garage at night. During the cross-examination, the lawyer asked: "What was the light — the moon or a lantern?" Ivanova: "The moon." Lawyer: "But it was a new moon that night. Dark as the darkest night. How did you see the ax?" Pause. The witness blushed and said: "My neighbor asked me to say that." The lie fell apart. And Ivanova faced not a civil suit, but a criminal case for false testimony.
It seems that the evidence is clear — start a case. But in practice, people are rarely prosecuted for lying. First, it is necessary to prove intent. And the witness can always say: "I did not lie, I made a mistake, I saw poorly." Second, prosecutors and judges do not want to hassle: additional work, summonses, the process. False testimony in a minor case of a fight in a queue almost never reaches a verdict. As a result, liars feel immune. According to estimates by lawyers, less than 5% of witnesses caught in a lie are actually punished.
A professional defender starts preparing before the trial. He records the statements of witnesses under video. He looks for contradictions in their previous statements to the police. He files motions for the collection of phone bills, recordings from cameras, statements of independent witnesses. In court, he does not just ask questions — he builds a logical trap. Suppose the witness says that "he saw a knife in the defendant's hand from 15 meters in the dark." The lawyer brings an expert conclusion: from such a distance in the dark, it is impossible to recognize a human face, not to mention a knife. And the court has to discard these statements.
Now, in major trials, psychophysiological expertise with a polygraph is used. There is also the technology of voice stress analysis — OSA, but its data is often not accepted due to errors. But the analysis of the digital footprint is gaining momentum: they check if the witness discussed "bought testimony" in messengers, if they transferred money to him before the trial. In one case, the wife of the accused gave false testimony against her husband, and her correspondence showed that her lover promised her an apartment for this. Technologies are increasingly catching liars.
First, document everything in writing. Draft a statement of falsification of evidence. Second, ask the court to summon witnesses who refute. Third, if you yourself have become a victim of lying, file a statement of crime under Article 307 of the Criminal Code. Fourth, hire a competent lawyer who will conduct a cross-examination. Do not rely on the judge to see everything himself. The judge is a person, and a cunning liar can deceive him.
The fight against false testimony is a marathon, not a sprint. As long as impunity is high, people will lie. But every exposed liar is a small victory. And the best way to dry up the swamp of lies is to make sure that the court sees everything: cameras, experts, cross-examinations, digital footprints. And then the courtroom will finally become a place where truth is more valuable than profit.
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