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Forensics, Law, & Psychology: False Confessions It Research Paper

Forensics, Law, & Psychology: False Confessions It is a well accepted law in the forensic field, that only recently slipped through, that investigations can be helped by compelling people to confess. However this forensic law that encourages and enables forced confession spirals off methodological research in psychology that shows that such confessions can be harmful to the field since many prisoners end off confessing under duress and admitting to actions that they actually never perpetrated.

More than 80% of criminal cases are settled by a coercive confession (Zimbardo, 1967) and indeed, Dr. W. Sargant said that without confessions convictions may be reduced by about 70%. Confessions are an accepted part of the forensic scene and an "attractive way of solving crimes" (cited in Brandon & Davies, 1973). However, many confessions are elicited under duress -- an acceptable law in forensics -- and consistent empirical research shows that this may well result in miscarriages of judgment where the individual resorts to false confessions. How often false confessions actually occur, and how often they result in wrongful conviction, is unclear although there is significant research on the subject (e.g. Zimbardo, 1967) showing that the phenomena happens enough times to elicit signficant concern, particularly if the confession results in a conviction. Huff, Ratner, and Sagain (1986) estimated 6000 wrongful convictions in the U.S.A., whilst taking all the research into consideration and estimating that much remains unknown. Conti (1999) approximates that 300 false confessions occur each year in a high-volume area

Forensic law accepts three different types of confession: voluntary, coerced-compliant, and coerced-internalized (Conti, 1999). The latter two types of confession...

In fact, the history of confessions in forensic legal system is interesting. In the nation's early history, confessions were seen as a significant part to conviction. Physical coercion to elicit confession was common but waned during the later 1800s to 1900s when the U.S. courts became cynical of such confessions and tended to dismiss them as questionable. Forced confessions however continued and were particularly common in Black / White cases where Blacks were often falsely convicted under duress of coerced confessions. One such notorious case was the Brown v. Mississippi (1936) case where three Black men had to sign a police-written confession to a murder of a white individual. The men were beaten, tortured, and threatened with their lives and were disallowed consultation with an attorney. Each was convicted and sentenced to death, but the Supreme Court reversed the decision insisting that a trial "is a mere pretense where the state authorities have continued a conviction resting solely upon confessions obtained by violence" (Conti, 1999, p. 287). So the confession has to be voluntary, given freely and compliantly without physical or other coercion. The repercussions of the Civil Rights Movement in the '60s and '70s set the precedent that "that a state court conviction resting upon a confession extorted by brutality and violence violated the accused's general right to due process guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment" (McCormick, 1992, p. 232).
Confessions elicited by mental abuse fall under the same category. In the case of Chambers v. Florida (1940) for instance, five drawn-out days of interrogation were castigated by the Supreme Court and similarly in the case of Haynes v. Washington (1963) where the defendant was refused telephone contact with his family…

Sources used in this document:
References

Brandon, R., & Davies, C. (1973). Wrongful imprisonment. London, England: Allen and Unwin

Brothers Ltd.

Conti, R.P. (1999) The Psychology of False Confessions. The Journal of Credibility Assessment and Witness Psychology, 2, 14-36.

Huff, C.R., Rattner, A., & Sagarin, E. (1996). Convicted but innocent: Wrongful conviction and public policy. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
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