Criminological-Interviews Flashcards
What is a cognitive interview?
A method of interviewing eye witnesses. The aim is to help witnesses produce more accurate recall of a crime scene using techniques based on psychological research.
What is a ethical interview?
A method of interviewing that acknowledges that suspects are human beings and are more likely to co-operate with police if rapport is established and they are treated with respect.
Define rapport
Connection between two people - the spoken and unspoken connections between two people
Define unstructured interviews
Interviews that have no clear structure of questions
Define semi-structured interviews
Interviews that have some structure of questions and then no structure in questions
Define structured interviews
Interviews that have a structure to follow and a pattern of questions
What is involved in the stages of a standard police interview?
1) Orientation - the purpose of the interview is stated and the legal requirements are fulfilled such as informing interviewee of their rights.
2) Listening - the interviewee gives free recall of the events with minimal questions.
3) Questions and answers - the interviewer asks specific questions based on the previous stage that is intended to fill in any gaps and reduce any ambiguities, and obtain additional information. The statement is then read through and signed.
4) Advice - the interviewee is informed of any further action e.g. the need to be re-interviewed.
What are the criticisms of the Standard
Police Interview?
•criticised for being ineffective, including inappropriate or leading questions,
•witnesses often being interrupted. (Failed to build rapport)
•A report by Baldwin (1993), argued that these police interviews often used coercion and oppressive interviewing procedures, potentially leading to false confessions, wrongful convictions and miscarriages of justice.
What is the PACE act 1984?
The PACE ACT (1984) provides Police with a legal framework which they must follow in order to protect the human rights of those being interviewed. This led to the development of the PEACE MODEL of interviewing, which is the guidelines recommended for police to use whilst interviewing potential suspects or witnesses.
What are the five principles in the PEACE model?
P- Preparation and planning - Identifying key objectives of the interview
E- Engage and Explain - Active listening to promote rapport
-Account, clarification, challenge - Using open-ended questions to elicit
information
C-Closure -Giving the suspect chance to ask any questions
E- Evaluate - Reflecting on the interviewer’s performance
Give a strength of the PEACE model
P: A strength of using the PEACE model in police interviewing is that it is a more ethical way of interviewing.
E: This means that there will be hopefully fewer false confessions from suspects and therefore fewer miscarriages of justice.
Give a weaknesses of the PEACE model
• P: A weakness of the PEACE model of interviewing is that it is not always used consistently throughout he police forces.
• E: This means that its effectiveness may be limited as not everyone will use it and therefore miscarriages of justice may still occur.
Describe 2 ethical problems that could occur from Standard Police Interviews
• Another ethical issue could be protection from harm. This means that witnesses may become upset if they are discussing their trauma of a crime. A police officer could ask many probing questions which could lead to the witness etc becoming distressed.
• Witnesses may have been harassed or bullied during the interview and made false confessions leading to miscarriages of justice
What are the two main memory theories/principles used in the application of the cognitive interview?
•Encoding Specificity Principle
(Tulving) The idea is that when an
event occurs it is first encoded, other important cues are stored alongside it. These might include sensory details and emotional state, being reminded of these context cues may facilitate a more accurate recall.
•Schema & Reconstructive Memory
Describe Encoding Specificity Principle
(Tulving)
• When event occurs, it is first encoded and other important cues are stored alongside it.
• These might be sensory details of the context (e.g. weather or smells)
• Assumes that being reminded of these context cues may facilitate a more accurate recall
• (Related to the Report Everything and reinstate the context)