A second wave of false confessions is cresting. In the first twenty-one years of post-conviction DNA testing, 250 innocent people were exonerated, forty of which had falsely confessed. Those false confessions attracted sustained public attention from judges, law enforcement, policymakers, and the media. Those exonerations not only showed that false confessions can happen, but did more by shedding light on the problem of confession contamination, in which details of the crime are disclosed to suspects during the interrogation process. As a result, false confessions can appear deceptively rich, detailed, and accurate. In just the last five years, there has been a new surge in false confessions — a set of twenty-six more false confessions amon...
These reform proposals have been met with vehement criticism, most of which stem from a concern that...
False confessions occur at a rate that contradicts the commonsense belief that only the guilty confe...
No system is without its shortcomings, and the legal system is no different. In the instance of a wr...
A second wave of false confessions is cresting. In the first twenty-one years of post-conviction DNA...
The advent of post-conviction DNA testing in the past twenty years has spawned an Innocence Revoluti...
A puzzle is raised by cases of false confessions: How could an innocent on convincingly confess to a...
This article discusses the problems identified by recent DNA exonerations history. It addresses the ...
In the last two decades, hundred of convicted prisoners have been exonerated by DNA and non-DNA evid...
False convictions have received a lot of attention in recent years. Two-hundred and forty-one prison...
Confession rates in the United States criminal justice system are high, and at least some of those w...
People are generally skeptical that someone would falsely confess to a crime he or she did not commi...
Of the 1,705 post-conviction DNA and non-DNA exonerations that have occurred from 1989 to the end of...
In the criminal justice system, confessions have long been considered the gold standard in evidence....
Interrogation-induced false confessions are a systemic feature of American criminal justice. In the ...
This empirical study examines for the first time how the criminal justice system in the United State...
These reform proposals have been met with vehement criticism, most of which stem from a concern that...
False confessions occur at a rate that contradicts the commonsense belief that only the guilty confe...
No system is without its shortcomings, and the legal system is no different. In the instance of a wr...
A second wave of false confessions is cresting. In the first twenty-one years of post-conviction DNA...
The advent of post-conviction DNA testing in the past twenty years has spawned an Innocence Revoluti...
A puzzle is raised by cases of false confessions: How could an innocent on convincingly confess to a...
This article discusses the problems identified by recent DNA exonerations history. It addresses the ...
In the last two decades, hundred of convicted prisoners have been exonerated by DNA and non-DNA evid...
False convictions have received a lot of attention in recent years. Two-hundred and forty-one prison...
Confession rates in the United States criminal justice system are high, and at least some of those w...
People are generally skeptical that someone would falsely confess to a crime he or she did not commi...
Of the 1,705 post-conviction DNA and non-DNA exonerations that have occurred from 1989 to the end of...
In the criminal justice system, confessions have long been considered the gold standard in evidence....
Interrogation-induced false confessions are a systemic feature of American criminal justice. In the ...
This empirical study examines for the first time how the criminal justice system in the United State...
These reform proposals have been met with vehement criticism, most of which stem from a concern that...
False confessions occur at a rate that contradicts the commonsense belief that only the guilty confe...
No system is without its shortcomings, and the legal system is no different. In the instance of a wr...