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Contribution to Book
A History of Interrogation and Interrogative Suggestibility
The Litigator’s Handbook of Forensic Medicine, Psychiatry and Psychology (2021)
  • Laura H. Nirider
  • Deborah Davis, University of Nevada, Reno
  • Richard Leo
Abstract
This chapter traces the history of the law surrounding false confessions, beginning with a discussion of the twentieth-century origins of the “voluntariness test.” With the recent development of robust psychological and legal scholarship relating to police interrogations and the introduction of videotaped interrogations, the psychological impact of particular interrogation techniques on specific defendants is becoming central to courts’ voluntariness inquiries. A growing number of courts are exploring the psychological impact of police interrogation tactics, such as telling suspects lies about evidence, fact-feeding, or furnishing misinformation about the consequences of confession.

The authors survey the various approaches that courts take in determining whether to admit expert testimony on interrogations, noting that some courts have embraced the opportunity to hear testimony from psychologists who study social influence in the context of interrogation. However, some courts have declined to admit such expert testimony.

The authors offer detailed guidance on the selection of false confession experts. When deciding whether to proceed with hiring an expert, attorneys should look carefully at the entirety of the evidence, the characteristics of the defendant, and the circumstances of the interrogation. In order to overcome challenges to the admissibility of expert testimony on confessions, any experts retained by defense counsel should be experienced scholars with multiple publications on false confessions. The chapter includes detailed sample voir dire questions that experts on interrogation and confessions should be able to answer favorably.

The authors review common challenges to expert testimony admissibility, including prosecutorial claims that false confessions are rare, already within the common understanding of jurors, that testimony on false confessions will be unhelpful, misleading, confusing or prejudicial, and that the judicial system has developed adequate safeguards against false confessions, such as Miranda warnings, cross examination at trial, and judicial instructions on confessions. The authors discuss the social science that defense attorneys can use to counter these claims.
Keywords
  • criminal law,
  • criminal procedure,
  • evidence,
  • expert witness,
  • expert testimony,
  • voluntariness,
  • false confession,
  • police interrogation
Publication Date
January, 2021
Editor
Demosthenes Lorandos
Publisher
Thomson Reuters
Citation Information
Laura H. Nirider, Deborah Davis and Richard Leo. "A History of Interrogation and Interrogative Suggestibility" The Litigator’s Handbook of Forensic Medicine, Psychiatry and Psychology (2021)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/richardleo/64/