You bring up another point, because in the heat of the moment, sometimes especially in violent altercations, the police are making decisions in seconds. The last thing you're worried about is the official language of the accused. But the problem is that when it gets to court, those few seconds of your decision as a police officer can be examined for hours on end by the court system. They can determine that you made a decision within seconds that now could potentially jeopardize the case, when in fact that wasn't the intent of the police officer. I guess I liken it to what I said back on Tuesday, which was, regardless of your language, you're going in the back of that car. You decide how you're getting there.
On March 27th, 2014. See this statement in context.