Police-induced confessions: Risk factors and recommendations.
City University of New York · John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Abstract
Recent DNA exonerations have shed light on the problem that people sometimes confess to crimes they did not commit. Drawing on police practices, laws concerning the admissibility of confession evidence, core principles of psychology, and forensic studies involving multiple methodologies, this White Paper summarizes what is known about police-induced confessions. In this review, we identify suspect characteristics (e.g., adolescence; intellectual disability; mental illness; and certain personality traits), interrogation tactics (e.g., excessive interrogation time; presentations of false evidence; and minimization), and the phenomenology of innocence (e.g., the tendency to waive Miranda rights) that influence…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.96
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 355
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Interrogation
- Suspect
- Confession (law)
- Psychology
- Innocence
- Commit
- Legal psychology
- Fidelity
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions