falcon123
NES Member
I guess it's possible, but I've never heard of a witness statement used against the witness when it was given in good faith. It would depend on the situation. It's a well known fact (even discussed in police academies) that witnesses see different things under stress. They even have training exercises where you look at a stack of statements from a crime scene and try to develop a suspect from the conflicting reports.
Being wrong is only a crime if it is intentional and no DA could ever prove it was intentional unless you had some connection to the crime beyond "wrong place, wrong time"
If I saw a murder on the street for instance or was present during a bank robbery, no harm can come from a statement.
If it was something vague that you could potentially get sucked into, then a lawyer would be a smart move.
Use the hillary statement. "I don't recall."