Believing Liars: How Can You Tell When A Liar is Not Lying

(`) Joe BltzI had a conversation recently with my old friend Jake who told me that Stevie Flemmi had said something about someone. I asked him what was said. Jake replied, “Flemmi said that Louis the Lip told him that he paid off Judge Neil Gorsuch  to take care of a case for one of his friends.” 

Jake asked me if I thought Judge Gorsuch was on the take. I asked him what he thought. He said that he didn’t know. Why would Flemmi have said it if it was untrue?

I said to Jake what if I told him his uncle Detective Luke Warm was on the take. Would believe it? He said he’d ask me more to see why I was saying it. I said I’d tell him Detective Roy Roman told me. He said he’d want to know more about what Roy was talking about. I replied Roy had passed away and that is all he told me.

Jake said he knows his uncle is on the up-and-up so he wouldn’t believe it. I said what if you didn’t know  anything about your uncle  what would you then conclude.

He said I’d believe what you told me. I’d believe Roy said to you Luke was on the take.  I asked him why. He said because he has known me for years so he believes I would not lie to him. I then asked him what if over the years he knew I had lied to him, would he still have the same opinion. Jake laughed. “Get lost. If you lied to me I wouldn’t believe anything you said.” 

So I asked him why he would give a second thought to what Flemmi had said. He said he saw my point. He really shouldn’t. Flemmi was a known liar.

Then Jake said, “if Flemmi is a known liar how can anyone believe him? How can he testify in court? Shouldn’t guys like that not be allowed to testify at all?” 

You would think that would be the case but it isn’t. Witnesses known to have lied in the past under oath are allowed to testify as to things like the statement Flemmi made about Judge Neil Gorsuch.  It does not have to even be of their own personal knowledge. You know if Flemmi said he paid off Gorsuch that would be one thing. He could be cross-examined on that to show that it was just another lie. But in a conspiracy case Flemmi’s hearsay testimony is admitted for the truth of the matter stated even though there is no way to cross-examine Flemmi on Louis the Lips’ knowledge.

We have a system where the jury or the judge sit to decide what are the facts of a case. They have no particular skill in deciding whether a person is telling the truth or not just by listening to him. No one has that skill upon meeting a stranger yet that is what is expected of those fact finders. How do they do it in cases where there is no corroborative evidence to support the witnesses’ statement? Does it boil down to that us having a system based solely upon guess-work? Do people go to prison for long terms based on other people guessing what is true?

The answer to that is that it does happen. Judges and jurors listen to witnesses who are strangers to them and must decide whether that person is telling the truth. In conspiracy cases they not only have to believe the witness is telling the truth but also whether the person whose  statement the witness is quoting, a person they know absolutely nothing about, is telling the truth.

It’s difficult at best. We pretend that it works. How badly do we pretend? We let witnesses who are known liars testify. It is bad enough trying to find out if a stranger is truthfully testifying; how is it even possible to begin to judge when a known liar is telling the truth.

 

12 thoughts on “Believing Liars: How Can You Tell When A Liar is Not Lying

  1. Dear Honest Abe,
    It actually happened. Kevin Weeks committed perjury and nobody seemed to care.

    1. Do any of these criminals and mobsters ever do long stretches? It seems as long as they can give up information of any kind they walk.

      There was a TV show, reality if you will excuse the expression, a few years ago. I was wondering if that was the real Kevin Weeks they showed on the screen. It was something about Southie or the mob in Boston. It was horrible.

  2. Dear Matt,
    You wrote an excellent Patriot Ledger article mentioning your suspicion that Kevin Weeks was dishonest in his testimony of the Brian Halloran and Michael Donahue murders. Weeks testified Whitey’s associate wore a mask. The same 1st Circuit Court accepted my brother’s testimony concerning those murders and there was no mask. In your knowledge of United States federal court history – have two opposing testimonies ever been given in the same court without creating a judicial inquiry? Or, to shorten the question – do you know of any other instance where opposing testimonies have been accepted by the same court?
    If not, that’s a great reason for another excellent Patriot Ledger article.

  3. I still think Flemmi’s obvious tendency to lie discredits any testimony which implicates Bulger in the killings of Hussey or Davis. Flemmi had all the motive and opportunity, Bulger had neither.

  4. I made this up when I was in high school. It was just before they threw me out. There is some relevance there but I need not go into it now.

    “Everything I tell you is a lie.”

    Am I lying or telling the truth?

      1. Great minds…..

        I really didn’t know the answer, but I asked the question. I have been told many times that my idea was not original. Its just similar to what you have posted. I assume many people have come up with the question.

    1. Honest:

      You should have added like the federal witnesses that lie: “But I’ll give you a hint, this time I am telling the truth.’

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