This Article reviews the law on deceptive interrogation practices, discusses empirical evidence of the role police deception plays in eliciting false confessions and argues that the law should circumscribe interrogation techniques that rely on misrepresentation to induce suspects into incriminating themselves. This Article also asserts that there are good policy reasons, in addition to the increasing exposure of wrongful convictions, which should encourage courts and legislators to proscribe the use of deception by law enforcement in a criminal justice system expressly designed to elicit the truth about a crime
Of the 1,705 post-conviction DNA and non-DNA exonerations that have occurred from 1989 to the end of...
Police interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, ...
Although the Miranda decision changed police behavior insofar as they routinely provide at least a n...
This Article reviews the law on deceptive interrogation practices, discusses empirical evidence of t...
Interrogation-induced false confessions are a systemic feature of American criminal justice. In the ...
The jurisprudence on the use of police deception during interrogations is singularly unhelpful. Poli...
article published in law reviewThis Article has been a preliminary effort at identifying those limit...
Although perjury is a criminal offense in all states and a felony in many, law enforcement may routi...
In the United States, police officers regularly employ deceptive interrogation tactics to extract co...
Virtually all interrogations - or at least virtually all successful interrogations - involve some de...
The job of the police is to stop crime by stopping criminals. It is a real life, deadly cat-and-mous...
This essay, for a symposium on Citizen Ignorance, Police Deception and the Constitution, relies on m...
American studies of wrongful conviction have revealed a disturbing pattern. For roughly 25 percent o...
A police interrogation that induces a false confession not only may result in a wrongful incarcerati...
Abstract: The law governing police interrogation provides perverse incentives. For criminal su...
Of the 1,705 post-conviction DNA and non-DNA exonerations that have occurred from 1989 to the end of...
Police interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, ...
Although the Miranda decision changed police behavior insofar as they routinely provide at least a n...
This Article reviews the law on deceptive interrogation practices, discusses empirical evidence of t...
Interrogation-induced false confessions are a systemic feature of American criminal justice. In the ...
The jurisprudence on the use of police deception during interrogations is singularly unhelpful. Poli...
article published in law reviewThis Article has been a preliminary effort at identifying those limit...
Although perjury is a criminal offense in all states and a felony in many, law enforcement may routi...
In the United States, police officers regularly employ deceptive interrogation tactics to extract co...
Virtually all interrogations - or at least virtually all successful interrogations - involve some de...
The job of the police is to stop crime by stopping criminals. It is a real life, deadly cat-and-mous...
This essay, for a symposium on Citizen Ignorance, Police Deception and the Constitution, relies on m...
American studies of wrongful conviction have revealed a disturbing pattern. For roughly 25 percent o...
A police interrogation that induces a false confession not only may result in a wrongful incarcerati...
Abstract: The law governing police interrogation provides perverse incentives. For criminal su...
Of the 1,705 post-conviction DNA and non-DNA exonerations that have occurred from 1989 to the end of...
Police interrogators across the United States employ tactics that can lead to coerced, often false, ...
Although the Miranda decision changed police behavior insofar as they routinely provide at least a n...