Research has demonstrated that false confessors whose cases are not dismissed before trial are often convicted despite their innocence. In order to prevent such wrongful convictions, criminal justice officials must better understand the role that false confessions play in creating and perpetuating miscarriages of justice. This chapter examines police-induced false confessions and analyzes three sequential errors that occur in the social production of every false confession: investigators first misclassify an innocent person as guilty; they next subject him to a guilt-presumptive, accusatory interrogation that invariably involves lies about evidence and often the repeated use of implicit and/or explicit promises and threats as well; and once...
As illustrated by the story of Amanda Knox and many others wrongfully convicted, false confessions o...
This Comment discusses the relationship between police interrogation tactics and false confessions i...
Confession is a traditional and common evidence in Criminal cases. It is assumed that the reasonable...
A steadily increasing tide of literature has documented the existence and causes of false confession...
In the last two decades, hundred of convicted prisoners have been exonerated by DNA and non-DNA evid...
Interrogation-induced false confessions are a systemic feature of American criminal justice. In the ...
This chapter reviews some of the main empirical findings from more than three decades of social scie...
Researchers have amply documented that contemporary methods of psychological interrogation can, and ...
A puzzle is raised by cases of false confessions: How could an innocent on convincingly confess to a...
American studies of wrongful conviction have revealed a disturbing pattern. For roughly 25 percent o...
Focusing on failures to detect false confessions, this article addresses the issue of police contami...
The problem of police interrogation contamination (disclosing or leaking of non-public facts) is per...
This essay furnishes an overview of scholars’ exploration of the phenomenon of false confession in t...
Of the 1,705 post-conviction DNA and non-DNA exonerations that have occurred from 1989 to the end of...
Wrongful convictions have two main negative effects on society: (1) innocent people are imprisoned, ...
As illustrated by the story of Amanda Knox and many others wrongfully convicted, false confessions o...
This Comment discusses the relationship between police interrogation tactics and false confessions i...
Confession is a traditional and common evidence in Criminal cases. It is assumed that the reasonable...
A steadily increasing tide of literature has documented the existence and causes of false confession...
In the last two decades, hundred of convicted prisoners have been exonerated by DNA and non-DNA evid...
Interrogation-induced false confessions are a systemic feature of American criminal justice. In the ...
This chapter reviews some of the main empirical findings from more than three decades of social scie...
Researchers have amply documented that contemporary methods of psychological interrogation can, and ...
A puzzle is raised by cases of false confessions: How could an innocent on convincingly confess to a...
American studies of wrongful conviction have revealed a disturbing pattern. For roughly 25 percent o...
Focusing on failures to detect false confessions, this article addresses the issue of police contami...
The problem of police interrogation contamination (disclosing or leaking of non-public facts) is per...
This essay furnishes an overview of scholars’ exploration of the phenomenon of false confession in t...
Of the 1,705 post-conviction DNA and non-DNA exonerations that have occurred from 1989 to the end of...
Wrongful convictions have two main negative effects on society: (1) innocent people are imprisoned, ...
As illustrated by the story of Amanda Knox and many others wrongfully convicted, false confessions o...
This Comment discusses the relationship between police interrogation tactics and false confessions i...
Confession is a traditional and common evidence in Criminal cases. It is assumed that the reasonable...