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Police Interrogation

NCJ Number
164460
Journal
Psychology, Crime & Law Volume: 1 Issue: 2 Dated: (1994) Pages: 151-157
Author(s)
G M Stephenson; S J Moston
Date Published
1994
Length
7 pages
Annotation
A 1992 study of 1,067 tape-recorded interrogations by detectives assigned to the London Metropolitan Police found that obtaining a confession was the paramount reason for interviewing criminal suspects.
Abstract
Although obtaining a confession was the main purpose of interrogation in 80 percent of the cases, establishing innocence was the principal aim in 5 percent of the cases and police officers were more concerned with establishing what actually occurred and whether a crime was committed in 12 percent of the cases. The main resource used by detectives in interrogation was whatever factual information they had about the suspect's involvement in a crime. The most powerful factor in whether a suspect confessed involved strength of evidence, followed by legal advice, the particular police station where the interview was conducted, and offense severity. The fact that obtaining a confession was the primary goal of interrogation in most cases strongly determined the structure of police interrogations. Further research is recommended to study why confession-oriented interrogation is so prevalent in England and to evaluate effective techniques for training police officers in interviewing skills. 3 references and 5 tables