A common juror instinct is to assume that an innocent person would naturally want to tell their side of the story. If the defendant doesn’t testify, something must be off. Defense attorneys spend their careers fighting this assumption โ and they advise most clients not to take the stand anyway, because the trial-strategy math almost never favors testimony.
Cross-examination is the entire problem
Direct examination by your own attorney is rehearsed and contained. Cross-examination by the prosecution is not. Prosecutors are trained to ask short, leading questions that produce yes-or-no answers, isolating contradictions and forcing the defendant to defend every prior statement they ever made. A defendant who has spoken to police, given a statement to a reporter, posted on social media, or told friends a slightly different version of events will be confronted with each variation in front of the jury. Memory’s normal imperfections โ mixing up days, getting timing wrong โ get framed as deception. Even truthful defendants frequently come across as evasive under skilled cross. Studies of mock jurors show that cross-examination performance affects credibility judgments more than the underlying facts.
Prior bad acts can become admissible
If a defendant testifies, the door opens to impeachment with prior convictions and, in some circumstances, prior bad acts that would otherwise be excluded. Federal Rule of Evidence 609 allows impeachment by prior felony convictions; state rules are similar. A defendant with a record can testify, but doing so puts the record in front of the jury โ exactly what the defense usually fights to keep out. The strategic cost of a witnessed history is often higher than the strategic gain of personal testimony. For defendants with prior records, declining to testify is almost always the right call.
Juries are instructed to ignore silence โ and mostly do
The Fifth Amendment guarantees a defendant the right not to testify, and the judge instructs the jury that silence cannot be considered evidence of guilt. Studies of jury behavior show this instruction is genuinely effective for many jurors, though not all. Defense attorneys weigh that residual bias against the much larger downside of testimony going badly. In most cases, the math favors silence, even understanding that some jurors will hold it against the defendant. The trial penalty for bad testimony is larger than the penalty for no testimony. Mock-jury research and practitioner experience converge on this point.
Specific cases call for testimony
Some defenses functionally require the defendant to speak โ affirmative defenses like self-defense, duress, or entrapment, where the defendant’s state of mind is the central question. In those cases, a confident, well-prepared defendant who has been intensively coached by counsel may help. Even then, decisions are made case-by-case after weighing the specific witness’s strengths and the cross-examination risks. A defendant who comes across as arrogant, inconsistent, or unsympathetic in prep sessions is usually kept off the stand regardless of legal strategy.
Bottom line
Silence isn’t guilt; it’s strategy. Defense attorneys aren’t hiding the truth when they keep clients off the stand. They’re protecting them from the system’s most effective truth-distorting mechanism: hostile cross-examination.
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