This article reviews Richard A. Leo’s book \u27Police Interrogation and American Justice.\u27 Prior to entering legal academia, Leo served as an associate professor of psychology and criminology, and performed groundbreaking empirical research into how police interrogators obtain confessions and how their interrogation techniques affect suspects. His body of work shines the bright light on police interrogation in American today. Leo depicts the values and structure of interrogation in a way that few, outside of the actual subjects/victims of interrogation, fully understand. Although I do not agree with all of his conclusions and proposed reforms, his work convincingly raises a point that we must heed: If we are to ensure the integr...
In the past two decades, hundreds of convicted prisoners have been exonerated by DNA and non-DNA evi...
Many studies have been conducted to examine how false confessions occur, and what their impacts are....
In the continuing effort to convict only the guilty and free only the innocent increasing attention ...
This article reviews Richard A. Leo’s book \u27Police Interrogation and American Justice.\u27 Prior ...
This book is a comprehensive empirical study of police interrogation in America. The author examines...
The police interview or interrogation, one of the major tools of criminal investigation is no longer...
Recorded interrogations are one of the chief procedural reforms fueled by the innocence movement. Po...
Police interrogation is designed to convict suspects under arrest or those suspected of crime. It do...
In this lecture, Professor Richard Leo discusses false confession cases, exploring the phenomenon of...
Despite growing concern regarding the problem of false confessions, including due to high profile DN...
Recent attention to police brutality has brought to the fore how police, when they become the subjec...
In this chapter, I review and analyze the most important findings from the extensive empirical socia...
Interrogation practices in the United States have been roundly criticized both for their accusatoria...
Interrogation-induced false confessions are a systemic feature of American criminal justice. In the ...
This Article empirically evaluates the procedural protections given to police officers facing discip...
In the past two decades, hundreds of convicted prisoners have been exonerated by DNA and non-DNA evi...
Many studies have been conducted to examine how false confessions occur, and what their impacts are....
In the continuing effort to convict only the guilty and free only the innocent increasing attention ...
This article reviews Richard A. Leo’s book \u27Police Interrogation and American Justice.\u27 Prior ...
This book is a comprehensive empirical study of police interrogation in America. The author examines...
The police interview or interrogation, one of the major tools of criminal investigation is no longer...
Recorded interrogations are one of the chief procedural reforms fueled by the innocence movement. Po...
Police interrogation is designed to convict suspects under arrest or those suspected of crime. It do...
In this lecture, Professor Richard Leo discusses false confession cases, exploring the phenomenon of...
Despite growing concern regarding the problem of false confessions, including due to high profile DN...
Recent attention to police brutality has brought to the fore how police, when they become the subjec...
In this chapter, I review and analyze the most important findings from the extensive empirical socia...
Interrogation practices in the United States have been roundly criticized both for their accusatoria...
Interrogation-induced false confessions are a systemic feature of American criminal justice. In the ...
This Article empirically evaluates the procedural protections given to police officers facing discip...
In the past two decades, hundreds of convicted prisoners have been exonerated by DNA and non-DNA evi...
Many studies have been conducted to examine how false confessions occur, and what their impacts are....
In the continuing effort to convict only the guilty and free only the innocent increasing attention ...