I find I accept blame all too easily. When I'm in the conversation, the accuser will say words that start to implicate me. It wasn't something I did, nor was I responsible, but for some reason I'm all to ready to accept partial blame immediately, as if thinking that defusing the tension is what is most important rather that making the firm point that I'm not culpable. Just because my hands touched the piece of machinery that broke within the approximate time-frame of the breakage, doesn't necessarily mean that I'm the one responsible for breaking it. Especially if I didn't even use the function that is what broke on it.
Like with what I've just said, I didn't use the function that actually broke, if I say that in my defense, they'll say, "Well, if you were doing any of these other three functions improperly, that could have caused failure of this other fourth one. How did it sound when you started it up?" "I don't know. We use this every day and I wasn't thinking about how it sounded. It sounded to me just like it does every day."
And they still look for some flaw in your logic that they can use, as if the real facts are now secondary to your ability to present a logical case. Your case now rests more on your debating ability than on their detective skills which can't be bothered by investigating the facts. And under stress, even just finding words is somewhat tricky.
What I've found while trying to make my case for innocence in the past is that I don't seem to use the word sets that others understand as descriptive of a non-guilty situation. My brain seems to pull up and present what they regard as tangential issues to the assigning of culpability. And since I'm pulling up non-related issues, it only seems to cement the reasonableness of blaming me for it. "If he can't make a firm case other than just denial, he must be responsible." It's utter lunacy. And somehow my inner resources don't seem to be geared toward resistance of blame, but seem okay accepting it. It's more than just standing up for oneself... it is on a deeper level of feeling like there's always the possibility that something I did was partially the cause, or that I just don't want to put the energy into the arguing and it's less effort just to walk away and let them decide what they're going to decide.
Not sure if it happens to others, but this is one particular challenge that I'm wondering is a subset of the experience of living with ASD. It's so frustrating. Anyone developed successful thought patterns for negotiating this with more success?