Jailhouse informants are thought to be one of the leading causes of wrongful convictions. The current studies examined community members’ (E1: N = 99; E2: N = 289) willingness to provide false testimony as a jailhouse informant. In E1, participants were all presented a first offer (1-year sentence reduction) to testify as a jailhouse informant. Those who declined were presented up to three additional offers (four total): a complete reduction in fines, total immunity, and financial support in exchange for testimony. In E2, participants were presented with one of two offers (levels 1 or 4). Notably, 27% (E1) and 17% (E2) of participants were willing to falsely testify against another inmate. Willing participants rated themselves as overall le...
In our court system, confession evidence is known to be especially persuasive. This study attempts ...
People are generally skeptical that someone would falsely confess to a crime he or she did not commi...
Confession rates in the United States criminal justice system are high, and at least some of those w...
Since DNA testing became available in the late 1980’s, there have been approximately 285 DNA exonera...
Informants are an integral part of the American criminal justice system. However, relatively little ...
The goal of this research was to determine whether the size of the incentive (none, small, medium, o...
Jailhouse informants, also commonly known as snitches, are one of the leading causes of wrongful con...
Informants are witnesses who often testify in exchange for an incentive (i.e. jailhouse informant, c...
Jailhouse snitch testimony is inherently unreliable. Snitches have powerful incentives to invent inc...
Justice (2009) defines a jailhouse informant as someone who, while in custody, allegedly receives on...
This Comment briefly surveys in Part I some of the data on snitch-generated wrongful convictions. In...
Criminal justice systems in Canada and around the world have been established to deal with matters t...
Fabricated testimony by informants often plays an important role in convictions of the innocent. In ...
This study investigated the impact of jailhouse informant testimony on mock juries. In addition to a...
'Weak' alibi evidence is the second leading cause of false convictions although psychological resear...
In our court system, confession evidence is known to be especially persuasive. This study attempts ...
People are generally skeptical that someone would falsely confess to a crime he or she did not commi...
Confession rates in the United States criminal justice system are high, and at least some of those w...
Since DNA testing became available in the late 1980’s, there have been approximately 285 DNA exonera...
Informants are an integral part of the American criminal justice system. However, relatively little ...
The goal of this research was to determine whether the size of the incentive (none, small, medium, o...
Jailhouse informants, also commonly known as snitches, are one of the leading causes of wrongful con...
Informants are witnesses who often testify in exchange for an incentive (i.e. jailhouse informant, c...
Jailhouse snitch testimony is inherently unreliable. Snitches have powerful incentives to invent inc...
Justice (2009) defines a jailhouse informant as someone who, while in custody, allegedly receives on...
This Comment briefly surveys in Part I some of the data on snitch-generated wrongful convictions. In...
Criminal justice systems in Canada and around the world have been established to deal with matters t...
Fabricated testimony by informants often plays an important role in convictions of the innocent. In ...
This study investigated the impact of jailhouse informant testimony on mock juries. In addition to a...
'Weak' alibi evidence is the second leading cause of false convictions although psychological resear...
In our court system, confession evidence is known to be especially persuasive. This study attempts ...
People are generally skeptical that someone would falsely confess to a crime he or she did not commi...
Confession rates in the United States criminal justice system are high, and at least some of those w...