Lecture 6 - Investigative Interviewing Flashcards
According to the College of Policing UK, what is investigative interviewing?
Investigation is a core duty of policing. Interviewing victims, witnesses and suspects is central to the success of an investigation.
According to Kassin & Gudjonsson, what percentage of confessions are false and who are most likely to make these?
FC=25%
Juveniles, intellectual impairments and mental illness = largest frequency as more subject to influence and manipulation.
What are the 2 reasons FC are exonerated?
Identifying real perpetrator (74%) Scientific evidence (46%)
10-20% of criminals plead guilty to a crime they did not commit as part of their criminal journey.
What are the main causes of False Confessions?
Coercion, manipulation, age, intellectual functioning, length & intensity of interview, threats & promises.
What are the 3 types of FC?
- Voluntary FC - innocent, no pressure, unconscious need for self-punishment, attention, protect real perpetrator (gangs).
- Coerced-Compliant FC - confess to avoid interview. Trust in legal system to discover truth. Compliance to authority and persuasion.
- Coerced-Internalised FC - innocent coming to believe they actually did it, doubt memory.
What is Memory Distrust Syndrome according to Milne & Bull 1999?
More generally, people may not be able to rely on own memory.
Implicated in coerced-internalised FC.
Briefly outline the US approach to interviewing.
Interviewing & Interrogation.
Interview = informal fact finding (assumed guilt here)
Interrogation = normal interview
Use of:
- Maximisation: false/exaggerated claims about evidence they have.
- Minimisation: underplay seriousness
Use distinction between emotional/unemotional suspects and modify to include/exclude sympathy.
Name the 9 steps of the Reid Technique.
- Direct positive confrontation
- Theme development
- Handling Denials
- Overcoming Objections
- Procurement & Retention of attention
- Handling passive mood
- Presenting alternative Qs
- Orally relate details
- Convert to written confession.
What are some of the problems with the Reid Technique?
- Inherently dangerous (Buckley 2006)
- Guilt-presumptive, confirmation bias (Kassin et al 2003)
- Commercial produce, no scientific evaluation (Dixon 2000)
Outline the cues to deception, detecting deception and the psychophysiological mechanisms used
- Body position, eye contact, grooming gestures, defensive barriers, illustrators.
- Lies may be embedded in truth - adept liars. Cognitive load = lying more demanding.
- Galvanic skin response, CV activity, breathing.
Briefly describe the UK approach to interviewing.
Investigative interviewing
Police & Criminal Evidence Act 1984 = importance of recording.
Training in Conversation Management:
1. Pre-interview: SE3R - skim, extract, read, review, recall.
2. Within-interview: greet, explain, mutual activity, closure.
3. Post-Interview: summary & investifation.
Name the 5 steps in the PEACE Technique.
- Preparation & Planning
- Engage & Explain
- Account
- Closure
- Evaluation
Collect facts not confessions and aim for mutual respect, dignity and empathy.