This study modelled self-reported confessions and cooperation with police interrogators. Incarcerated men (N = 100) were interviewed about their most recent police interrogation. A logistic regression analysis was performed to predict confession decision using nine predictors: Humanitarian Style, Legal Advice, Interrogation Length, Perception of Evidence, Age, Previous Conviction, Number of Convictions, Offence Seriousness, and Attitude Toward Police. A model containing Perception of Evidence, Humanitarian Style, Previous Convictions, Number of Convictions, and Legal Advice predicted confession decision 79% of the time (versus 60% for a base model). A multiple regression analysis, using the same predictors, revealed that Humanitaria...
Police interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, ...
Police investigators rely heavily on eliciting confessions from suspects to solve crimes and prosecu...
Research suggests just over half of all suspects interviewed inside a police station will either con...
The ability to predict confessions and cooperation from the elements of an interrogation was examine...
The purpose of the current study was to attempt to model various cognitive and social processes that...
This study examined incarcerated persons’ self-reported interrogation experiences and confession dec...
This thesis is a discussion about the inadequacy of the Canadian confessions rule in light of what m...
Layperson perceptions of the use of explicit and implicit promises of leniency in a suspect interrog...
Confessions are crucial to successful police investigations but scholars have significantly overlook...
Confessions are given every day in criminal investigations across the country; countless are true co...
Previous studies have addressed many different kinds of confessions in police investigations – real,...
Interviews with suspects of crime are an important element of police investigations. They can be cru...
It has been established through numerous research studies that police interrogation tactics have the...
Purpose: Suspects are central participants of a police interview and can provide crucial informatio...
We describe a study of more than 1000 interrogations by Metropolitan Police Officers. Obtaining a co...
Police interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, ...
Police investigators rely heavily on eliciting confessions from suspects to solve crimes and prosecu...
Research suggests just over half of all suspects interviewed inside a police station will either con...
The ability to predict confessions and cooperation from the elements of an interrogation was examine...
The purpose of the current study was to attempt to model various cognitive and social processes that...
This study examined incarcerated persons’ self-reported interrogation experiences and confession dec...
This thesis is a discussion about the inadequacy of the Canadian confessions rule in light of what m...
Layperson perceptions of the use of explicit and implicit promises of leniency in a suspect interrog...
Confessions are crucial to successful police investigations but scholars have significantly overlook...
Confessions are given every day in criminal investigations across the country; countless are true co...
Previous studies have addressed many different kinds of confessions in police investigations – real,...
Interviews with suspects of crime are an important element of police investigations. They can be cru...
It has been established through numerous research studies that police interrogation tactics have the...
Purpose: Suspects are central participants of a police interview and can provide crucial informatio...
We describe a study of more than 1000 interrogations by Metropolitan Police Officers. Obtaining a co...
Police interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, ...
Police investigators rely heavily on eliciting confessions from suspects to solve crimes and prosecu...
Research suggests just over half of all suspects interviewed inside a police station will either con...