Plausible deniability
-
A condition in which a subject can safely and believeably deny knowledge of any particular truth that may exist because the subject is deliberately made unaware of said truth so as to benefit or shield the subject from any responsibility associated through the knowledge of such truth.
-
Plausible deniability actually is a legal concept. It refers to lack of evidence proving a allegation. Standards of of proof vary in civil and criminal cases. In civil cases, the standard of proof is more likely so than not whereas in a criminal matter, the standard is beyond a reasonable doubt If your opponent lacks incontrovertible proof (evidence) of their allegation, you can plausibly deny the allegation even though it may be true.
Because many lawyers are in politics, they brought this lower standard of ethics and integrity with them. This is why they rarely put anything controversial in writing. This is also why they most often have you talk to an underling or an agency bureaucrat so they can plausibly deny knowledge of the conversation or be able to say the underling or bureaucrat misstated their position. -
When it is acceptable for a party to lie about what they did because the truth would hurt too much and cause many problems.
Explore More Definitions
Browse our collection of 300,000+ community-written definitions