Chapter 3.2: False Confessions Flashcards

1
Q

Retracted Confession

A
  • claims false confession at a later date
  • says their confession was wrong and they want to explain again
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2
Q

Disputed Confession

A
  • legal technicality
  • claim confession was never made (ex. case of selective recording - confession was never recorded)
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3
Q

False Confessions

Voluntary

A
  • no pressure or prompting by police
    could be because:
  • protect real offender
  • desire for attention (15 minutes of fame)
  • feeling guilty for a different crime they committed (needing to clear their conscious; feel they had it coming)
  • difficulty distinguishing fact from fantasy

case example: Linbergh baby
200 people confessed voluntarily to the murder (for fame?)

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4
Q

False Confessions

Coerced-Compliant (most common)

A
  • suspect knows they’re not guilty
  • decide to comply because of pressure from police and to:
    escape further interrogation
    recieve promised reward/benefit
    avoid/lessen punishment
    short term benefits > long term consequences

case example: Central Park jogger case
- 5 juveniles falsely confessed due to police pressure

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5
Q

False Confessions

Coerced-Internalized

A
  • starts to believe they actually committed the crime
  • usually the result of highlt suggestive interrogation techniques
  • more vulnerable to this confession if: substance abuse, confusion, anxiety, mental state (depression), youth

case example: Amanda Knox
- admitted to murdering her roommate even though she was in italy at the time
- felt she was being brainwashed
- convinced her memory was failing her

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6
Q

What are some consequences of false confessions?

A
  • guilty person still out - taints other evidence
  • waste of time and resources
  • innocent in jail or executed
  • impacts justice for victim(s)
  • hard for jurors to spot because false confessions are believable
  • they don’t believe someone would be stupid enough to do it
  • problems with deception detection
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7
Q

Compliance

A

going along with demande from authority even if you don’t agree

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8
Q

Confabulation

A

reporting events that never occurred

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9
Q

Internalization

A

accepting guilt even when you didn’t do it

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