Personal tools
Posted: Sep 04, 2015 12:22 PM
To prevent false confessions, which have contributed to more than a quarter of the 330 DNA exonerations, nationally, the Innocence Project advocates that police departments video tape police interrogations so that juries can later determine if the confession was given voluntarily or was coerced. Yesterday, the National Science Foundation released a video explaining that the camera angle used in recording the interrogation can have an important effect on the ability of juries to accurately determine whether or not a confession was coerced.
The video features Ohio University psychology professor G. Daniel Lassiter who explains that when the camera is focused squarely on the suspect -- with the interrogator either nowhere in sight or with only his or her back visible – viewers (i.e. jurors) are more likely to believe the suspect is making a voluntary statement regardless of whether or not the interrogator seems to be coercing the suspect.
Posted: Sep 03, 2015 03:15 PM
Posted: Sep 02, 2015 05:25 PM
Posted: Sep 01, 2015 04:55 PM
Posted: Aug 31, 2015 04:52 PM
Judge Alex Kozinski points to eight myths that perpetuate a false sense of fairness in our criminal justice system, many of which directly contribute to wrongful convictions.
Join with the 65,000 people who are committed to helping free the innocent.