I shot the clerk !?!?!?!?!
Unconfigured Ad Widget
Collapse
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interrogation and Interviewing Questions.
Collapse
X
-
-
That would have been interesting and probably a bit easier. Im trying to do one paper to fit two classes, personality and forensic psychology. I don't really like the the fact that the current topic steps on the toes of law enforcement a little bit.
Someone else suggested that movie when I was asking about media references. Fortunately I came across two Law and Order episodes that hit on two different scenarios.Last edited by ankyle62; 03-08-2011, 9:21 PM.Comment
-
-
In twenty-eight years I never saw anything close to a classic "coerced" confession. That is the stuff of TV and movies. That said, cops do receive training on different styles of interrogation and then develop their own style from there. You tend to repeat what style works for you, that's just basic human nature. The other training you'll get is what courts have ruled as "coersive" during interviews. Case law dictates more what cops do in interrogations than policy, at least in my experience. The bottom line is you want the guy to tell you the truth, not "force" a statement out of him that may or may not be true. You want to build trust, not necessarily use some Jedi mind trick.I know it's rare, but do you receive training on it or is it is discussed in training that certain techniques could lead to it? Is there policy related to limits on interrogation such as time limits, the time it can take place, or even the type?
There are quite a few cases and research into the subject on the psychology side, but I wanted to know if it was something covered in training or something officers are aware of.If you buy anything because it has "tactical" or "operator" in the name, we probably don't run in the same circles.Comment
-
Thank you for all the info. As far as my response for the paper I'm going to go ahead say that it's like trying to find a unicorn and you probably have a better chance of getting struck by lightening on duty than witnessing a false confession as long as rules, regulations, and integrity are used by the law enforcement representatives.
Here is a decent Frontline episode covering a case.
Why would four innocent men confess to a brutal crime they didn’t commit? FRONTLINE producer Ofra Bikel (Innocence Lost, An Ordinary Crime) investigates the conviction of four Navy sailors for the rape and murder of a Norfolk, Va., woman.
Mods, you may lock this thread as I no longer need responses, and rather not clutter the forum up anymore.
Thank You Gentleman.Last edited by ankyle62; 03-11-2011, 9:31 PM.Comment
Calguns.net Statistics
Collapse
Topics: 1,865,381
Posts: 25,129,773
Members: 355,945
Active Members: 3,860
Welcome to our newest member, glocksource.
What's Going On
Collapse
There are currently 9145 users online. 63 members and 9082 guests.
Most users ever online was 239,041 at 10:39 PM on 02-14-2026.


Comment