I would say that was legal . It’s her fault for not checking with him or simply saying no .
I'm going to guess that since they lied to her about him giving consent (and who knows what else), they certainly were not about to let the two compare notes. Verifying the cop's story was not an option open to her.
I don't think it matters. Cops are allowed to lie in the course of an investigation.
However, she was not under investigation nor a suspect in any crime. She was simply a law abiding citizen that the police literally manipulated to get their way. There is a big difference morally and ethically between that and trying to get a confession from a person suspected of a crime.
Think about this: The police come to your house and say/lie "we have a warrant to search your house. Will you allow us to search?" Think that would fly in court?
How is that different from "we have permission from your spouse/landlord/etc to search your house. Will you allow us to search?"
The unfortunate moral of this story is of course, never volunteer consent to the police or government agents. If they legally don't need it, it won't matter. If they do need your consent and are trying to sweet talk you into it, it's possible that it is not in your best interest.
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