Crime: Topic #3 = Collection Of Evidence - Cog. Flashcards
What can police interviews do if conducted professionally?
- direct an investigation and gather material, which in turn can lead to a prosecution or early release of an innocent person
- support the prosecution case, thereby saving time, money and resources
- increase public confidence in the police service, particularly with witnesses and victims of crimes who come into direct contact with the police.
What did Inbau (1962) & Reid do?
Inbau & Reid wrote the book Criminal Interrogations and Confessions, a police handbook in 1962, which is still used today.
The manual includes a number of techniques for interviewing and interrogation suspects, known as the ‘Reid Technique’.
It includes the Reid Nine Steps of Interrogation.
What is the difference between an interview and an interrogation?
INTERVIEW:
- Search for the truth.
INTERROGATION:
- Manipulate the suspect into talking.
- Believe in guild and search for a confession.
Summarise Reid’s Nine Steps
Step 1: Positive confrontation
Say you have evidence that confirms guilt.
Step 2: Theme development
Shift blame or set up circumstances that prompted them to commit the crime.
Step 3: Handling denials
Never allow the suspect to deny guild – block any denials.
Step 4: Overcoming objections
Don’t argue with suspects objections, use them against them ‘I’d be scared too’.
Step 5: Procurement and retention of suspect’s attention
Re-engage attention, don’t just let them sit there and think.
Step 6: Handling the suspect’s passive mood
If they cry, use this to infer guilt.
Step 7: Presenting an alternative question
Give them two choices of what happened – guild will always be admitted though.
Step 8: Get the suspect to confess orally and to tell in full the details of their crime
Confess all in detail.
Step 9: Conversion of the oral confession into a written or audio or videotaped confession
Full account given and signed.
What criticisms have been made of the Reid Techniques?
If the initial interview to determine guilt or innocence was incorrect and decided that an innocent person was guilty, the Reid Technique doesn’t let them prove their innocence as it works on the basis, they are guilty and uses it against them to get a (and until there is a) confession.
Also, it can be seen as coercion and result in false confessions.
What types of false confessions are there?
- Voluntary:
Where a person admits to an offence that they have NOT committed because they BELIEVE THEY HAVE done it. - Coerced-Internalised:
The person is CONVINCED BY THE POLICE that they committed the crime, even though they DID NOT. - Coerced-compliant:
A person confesses to a crime that they KNOW THEY DID NOT commit.
Voluntary false confession
Where a person admits to an offence that they have NOT committed because they BELIEVE THEY HAVE done it.
Coerced-Internalised false confession
The person is CONVINCED BY THE POLICE that they committed the crime, even though they DID NOT.
Coerced-compliant false confession
A person confesses to a crime that they KNOW THEY DID NOT commit.
What reasons (factors that cause) do some people confess?
(False confessions)
1- Circumstances surrounding the case.
2- High / low media attention.
3- The techniques and processes used in
the interview.
4- The arrest and interrogation process.
5- Personality of the suspect.
6- Suspects demographic profile. (Gender,
race, age, social class, poverty etc.)
7- Mental and physical state of the suspect.
What factors did Gudjonsson (2003) argue could lead to a false confession?
- The defendant – age, IQ
- The arrest – sudden, violent, time of day
- Mental / physical state – stress, mental health, ill, intoxicated
- The interrogation – coercive, biased or leading
Describe the case of the Guildford Four and how this is linked to Gudjonsson and false confessions.
Guildford four:
On the 5th October 1974 IRA bombs destroyed 2 pubs in Guildford, killing 5 and injuring more.
Carole Richardson was arrested on 3rd December and questioned until 12th December.
She had taken a large dose of barbiturates on the 1st day of questioning.
She confessed to planting one of the bombs, but retracted it later.
As questioning continued she became more distressed and was not given a solicitor until 11th December, and was unable to notify anyone of her arrest.
The police were confident of her guilt and had full control over the situation.
With time, Carole came to believe that she was the bomber as she could not remember what she was doing on the 5th October.
She was found guilty in 1975, but 20 years later her conviction was declared a miscarriage of justice.
LINKS:
This links to Gudjonssons suggestion about there being different types of false confession because at first Carole Richardson made a voluntary false confession, as she believed she had done it and she confessed to planting one of the bombs, however later on she retracted her confession, and it became a coerced-internalised false confession because the police made her believe that she was the bomber once again.
What procedures have been put in place in the UK to try to reduce the likelihood of false confessions?
E.g.,:
Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE) in 1984 which encompasses the following:
1- Requires all interviews to be recorded in
triplicate – to ensure interview is not
coercive and leadings.
2- Vulnerable adults should be identified n
and assigned an ‘appropriate adults’.
3- Part of this code is the ‘right to remain
silent’ right given then arrested.
What core study can you link eye witness memory to? What did this core study say about memory?
STUDY:
Loftus & Palmer
WHY?:
It claimed that memory is influenced by leading questions (e.g., from police interviews) as the conclusion stated that memory is a combination of the original information and information given after the event e.g., leading questions.
This means it suggests that no leading questions are asked whilst interviewing a witness as it my unconsciously change their memory of the event, leading to it not being a truthful recall, so it can not be used as evidence in court etc.
What did Fisher & Geisalman (1984) do?
Developed a technique to help improve the accuracy of witness testimony collected by police interviews:
-> The original ‘Cognitive Interview technique’