confessions
In his publication this month titled the Psychology of Confessions , Dr. Saul M. Kassin discusses confessions such as in the unsolved murder of JonBenet.
Annual Review of Law and Social Science
(Volume publication date December 2008)
The Psychology of Confessions
Saul M. Kassin
Department of Psychology
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
New York, NY 10019
email: skassin@jjay.cuny.edu
"Despite the potency of confession evidence in criminal law, recent DNA exonerations indicate that false confessions are a contributing factor in numerous wrongful convictions. After distinguishing between voluntary, compliant, and internalized false confessions, this article reviews research implicating a sequence of three processes responsible for false confessions and the adverse consequences of these confessions. First, police often target innocent people for interrogation because of erroneous judgments of truth and deception made during preinterrogation interviews. Second, innocent people are sometimes induced to confess as a function of certain police interrogation tactics, dispositional suspect vulnerabilities, and naive mental state that accompanies innocence. Third, people cannot readily distinguish between true and false confessions and often fail to discount those confessions they perceive to be coerced. At present, researchers are seeking ways to improve the accuracy of confession evidence and its evaluation in the courtroom."
Labels: confessions, JonBenet
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