328 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
328 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
March 1991
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WHY SUSPECTS CONFESS
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By
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David D. Tousignant, M.A.
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Inspector
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Lowell, Massachusetts, Police Department
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Many criminal cases, even when investigated by the most
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experienced and best qualified investigators, are ultimately
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solved by an admission or confession from the person responsible
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for committing the crime. Oftentimes, investigators are able to
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secure only a minimal amount of evidence, be it physical or
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circumstantial, that points directly to a suspect, and in many
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instances, this evidence is not considered strong enough by
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prosecutors to obtain a conviction. In such cases, the
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interrogation of the suspects and their subsequent confessions
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are of prime importance.
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This article addresses the question of why suspects speak
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freely to investigators, and ultimately, sign full confessions.
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The physical and psychological aspects of confession and how
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they relate to successful interrogations of suspects are also
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discussed, as is the "breakthrough," the point in the
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interrogation when suspects make an admission, no matter how
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minuscule, that begins the process of obtaining a full
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confession.
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DEFINING INTERROGATION
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Interrogation is the questioning of a person suspected of
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having committed a crime. (1) It is designed to match acquired
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information to a particular suspect in order to secure a
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confession. (2) The goals of interrogation include:
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* To learn the truth of the crime and how it happened
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* To obtain an admission of guilt from the suspect
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* To obtain all the facts to determine the method of
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operation and the circumstances of the crime in question
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* To gather information that enables investigators to arrive
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at logical conclusions
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* To provide information for use by the prosecutor in
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possible court action. (3)
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Knowing the definition and objectives of the interrogation,
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the question then asked is, "Why do suspects confess?"
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Self-condemnation and self-destruction are not normal human
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behavioral characteristics. Human beings ordinarily do not
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utter unsolicited, spontaneous confessions. (4) It is logical
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to conclude, therefore, that when suspects are taken to police
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stations to be questioned concerning their involvement in a
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particular crime, their immediate reaction will be a refusal to
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answer any questions. With the deluge of television programs
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that present a clear picture of the Miranda warning and its
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application to suspects, one would conclude that no one
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questioned about a crime would surrender incriminating
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information, much less supply investigators with a signed, full
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confession. It would also seem that once suspects sense the
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direction in which the investigators are heading, the
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conversation would immediately end. However, for various
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psychological reasons, suspects continue to speak with
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investigators.
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SUSPECT PARANOIA
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Suspects are never quite sure of exactly what information
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investigators possess. They know that the police are
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investigating the crime, and in all likelihood, suspects have
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followed media accounts of their crimes to determine what leads
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the police have. Uppermost in their minds, however, is how to
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escape detection and obtain firsthand information about the
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investigation and where it is heading.
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Such "paranoia" motivates suspects to accompany the police
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voluntarily for questioning. Coupled with curiosity, this
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paranoia motivates suspects to appear at police headquarters as
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"concerned citizens" who have information pertinent to the case.
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By doing this, suspects may attempt to supply false or
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noncorroborative information in order to lead investigators
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astray, gain inside information concerning the case from
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investigators, and remove suspicion from themselves by offering
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information on the case so investigators will not suspect their
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involvement.
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For example, in one case, a 22-year-old woman was
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discovered in a stairwell outside of a public building. The
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woman had been raped and was found naked and bludgeoned.
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Investigators interviewed numerous people during the next
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several days but were unable to identify any suspects. Media
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coverage on the case was extremely high.
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Several days into the investigation, a 23-year-old man
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appeared at police headquarters with two infants in tow and
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informed investigators that he believed he may have some
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information regarding the woman's death. The man revealed that
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when he was walking home late one evening, he passed the area
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where the woman was found and observed a "strange individual"
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lurking near an adjacent phone booth. The man said that because
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he was frightened of the stranger, he ran back to his home.
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After reading the media accounts of the girl's death, he
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believed that he should tell the police what he had observed.
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The man gave police a physical description of the
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"stranger" and then helped an artist to compose a sketch of the
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individual. After he left, investigators discovered that the
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sketch bore a strong resemblance to the "witness" who provided
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the information.
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After further investigation, the witness was asked to
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return to the police station to answer more questions, which he
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did gladly. Some 15 hours into the interrogation, he confessed
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to one of his "multiple personalities" having killed the woman,
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who was unknown to him, simply because the victim was a woman,
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which is what the suspect had always wanted to be.
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This case clearly illustrates the need for some suspects to
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know exactly what is happening in an investigation. In their
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minds, they honestly believe that by hiding behind the guise of
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"trying to help," they will, without incriminating themselves,
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learn more about the case from the investigators.
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INTERROGATION SETTING
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In any discussion concerning interrogation, it is necessary
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to include a review of the surroundings where a suspect is to be
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interrogated. Because there is a general desire to maintain
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personal integrity before family members and peer groups,
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suspects should be removed from familiar surroundings and taken
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to a location that has an atmosphere more conducive to
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cooperativeness and truthfulness. (5) The primary psychological
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factor contributing to successful interrogations is privacy--
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being totally alone with suspects. (6) This privacy prompts
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suspects to feel willing to unload the burden of guilt. (7) The
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interrogation site should isolate the suspect so that only the
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interrogator is present. The suspect's thoughts and responses
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should be free from all outside distractions or stimuli.
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The interrogation setting also plays an important part in
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obtaining confessions. The surroundings should reduce suspect
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fears and contribute to the inclination to discuss the crime.
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Because fear is a direct reinforcement for defensive mechanisms
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(resistance), it is important to erase as many fears as
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possible. (8) Therefore, the interrogation room should
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establish a business atmosphere as opposed to a police-like
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atmosphere. While drab, barren interrogation rooms increase
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fear in suspects, a location that displays an open,
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you-have-nothing-to fear quality about it can do much to break
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down interrogation defensiveness, thereby eliminating a major
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barrier. (9) The interrogators tend to disarm the suspects
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psychologically by placing them in surroundings that are free
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from any fear-inducing distractions.
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PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS
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More than likely, suspects voluntarily accompany
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investigators, either in response to a police request to answer
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questions or in an attempt to learn information about the
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investigation. Once settled in the interrogation room, the
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interrogators should treat suspects in a civilized manner, no
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matter how vicious or serious the crime might have been. While
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they may have feelings of disgust for the suspects, the goal is
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to obtain a confession, and it is important that personal
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emotions not be revealed. (10)
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Investigators should also adopt a compassionate attitude and
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attempt to establish a rapport with suspects. In most cases,
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suspects commit crimes because they believe that it offers the
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best solution to their needs at the moment. (11) Two rules of
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thumb to remember are: 1) "There but for the grace of God go
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I"; and 2) it is important to establish a common level of
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understanding with the suspects. (12) These rules are critical
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to persuading suspects to be open, forthright, and honest.
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Suspects should be persuaded to look beyond the investigators'
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badges and see, instead, officers who listen without judging.
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If investigators are able to convince suspects that the key
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issue is not the crime itself, but what motivated them to commit
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the crime, they will begin to rationalize or explain their
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motivating factors.
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At this stage of the interrogation, investigators are on
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the brink of having suspects break through remaining defensive
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barriers to admit involvement in the crime. This is the
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critical stage of the interrogation process known as the
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breakthrough.
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THE BREAKTHROUGH
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The breakthrough is the point in the interrogation when
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suspects make an admission, no matter how small. (13) In spite of
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having been advised of certain protections guaranteed by the
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Constitution, most suspects feel a need to confess. Both
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hardcore criminals and first-time offenders suffer from the same
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pangs of conscience. (14) This is an indication that their defense
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mechanisms are diminished, and at this point, the investigators
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may push through to elicit the remaining elements of confession.
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In order for interrogators to pursue a successful
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breakthrough, they must recognize and understand certain
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background factors that are unique to a particular suspect.
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Many times, criminals exhibit psychological problems that are
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the result of having come from homes torn by conflict and
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dissension. Also frequently found in the backgrounds of
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criminals are parental rejection and inconsistent and severe
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punishment. (15) It is important that investigators see beyond
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the person sitting before them and realize that past experiences
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can impact on current behavior. Once interrogators realize
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that the fear of possible punishment, coupled with the loss of
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pride in having to admit to committing mistakes, is the basic
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inhibitor they must overcome in suspects, they will quickly be
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able to formulate questions and analyze responses that will
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break through the inhibitors.
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SUCCESSFUL INTERROGATIONS
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Investigators must conduct every interrogation with the
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belief that suspects, when presented with the proper avenue,
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will use it to confess their crimes. Research indicates that
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most guilty persons who confess are, from the outset, looking
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for the proper opening during the interrogation to communicate
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their guilt to the interrogators. (16)
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Suspects confess when the internal anxiety caused by their
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deception outweighs their perceptions of the crime's
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consequences. (17) In most instances, suspects have magnified,
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in their minds, both the severity of the crime and the possible
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repercussions. Interrogators should allay suspect anxiety by
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putting these fears into perspective.
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Suspects also make admissions or confessions when they
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believe that cooperation is the best course of action. (18) If
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they are convinced that officers are prepared to listen to all
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of the circumstances surrounding the crimes, they will begin to
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talk. The psychological and physiological pressures that build
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in a person who has committed a crime are best alleviated by
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communicating. (19) In order to relieve these suppressed
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pressures, suspects explain the circumstances of their crimes
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they confess.
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And, finally, suspects confess when interrogators are able
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to speculate correctly on why the crimes were committed.
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Suspects want to know ahead of time that interrogators will
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believe what they have to say and will understand what motivated
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them to commit the crime.
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CONCLUSION
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It is natural for suspects to want to preserve their
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privacy, civil rights, and liberties. It is also natural for
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suspects to resist discussing their criminal acts. For these
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very reasons, however, investigators must develop the skills
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that enable them to disarm defensive resistors established by
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suspects during interrogation. Before suspects will confess,
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they must feel comfortable in their surroundings, and they must
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have confidence in the interrogators, who should attempt to gain
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this confidence by listening intently to them and by allowing
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them to verbalize their accounts of the crimes.
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Interrogators who understand what motivates suspects to
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confess will be better able to formulate effective questions and
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analyze suspect responses. Obviously, more goes into gaining a
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confession than is contained in this article. However, if the
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interrogator fails to understand the motivations of the suspect,
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other factors impacting on obtaining the confession will be less
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effective.
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FOOTNOTES
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(1) Charles E. O'Hara and Gregory L. O'Hara, Fundamentals
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of Criminal Investigation, 5th ed. rev. (Springfield, IL:
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Charles C. Thomas, 1988), p. 117.
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(2) W. E. Renoud, Criminal Investigation Digest (Springfield,
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IL: Charles C. Thomas, 1981), p. 10.
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(3) John J. Horgan, Criminal Investigations, 2d ed. (New
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York, NY: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1979), p. 78.
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(4) Fred E. Inbau, John E. Reid, and Joseph P. Buckley,
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Criminal Interrogation and Confessions, 3d ed. (Baltimore, MD:
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Williams & Wilkins, 1986), p. 16.
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(5) Robert F. Royal and Steven R. Schutt, The Gentle Art
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of Interviewing and Interrogation: A Professional Manual and
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Guide (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1976), p. 56.
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(6) Supra note 4, p. 24.
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(7) Charles R. Swanson, Jr., Neil Chamelin, and Leonard
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Territo, Criminal Investigation, 4th ed. (New York, NY: Random
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House, 1988), p. 210.
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(8) Supra note 5, p. 57.
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(9) Ibid.
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(10) Supra note 2, p. 12.
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(11) Ibid., p. 13.
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(12) Ibid., p. 13.
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(13) Supra note 5.
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(14) Supra note 7.
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(15) James C. Coleman, James N. Butcher, and Robert C.
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Carson, Abnormal Psychology and Modern Life, 7th ed. (Glenview,
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IL: Scott Foresman and Company, 1984), p. 261.
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(16) Supra note 7, p. 209.
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(17) John Reid and Associates, The Reid Technique of
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Interviewing and Interrogation (Chicago, IL: Reid & Associates,
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1986), p. 44.
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(18) Supra note 5, p. 115.
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(19) Supra note 7, p. 209.
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