Current location - Quotes Website - Signature design - The confession and transcript provided by the police station to the public security bureau are completely inconsistent. What should we do?
The confession and transcript provided by the police station to the public security bureau are completely inconsistent. What should we do?
Whether it is an interrogation record or an interrogation record, it needs to be signed and sealed by the interrogated person after reading and confirming that it is correct. The questioned person has the right to raise an objection and ask for correction, otherwise he refuses to sign.

The person being questioned has the right to ask the police to read it to him and to use the national written record.

Only the signed and sealed record has legal effect, and it is recognized on behalf of the person being questioned. If you don't sign and stamp yourself, you can ask for handwriting identification or fingerprint identification.

For the suspect who truthfully records but ultimately refuses to sign (if there is conclusive evidence, it is not limited to this), the case-handling personnel can explain it in words at the back of the record.