Kassin Saul M
Department of Psychology, Williams College, Williamstown, MA 01267, USA.
Am Psychol. 2005 Apr;60(3):215-28. doi: 10.1037/0003-066X.60.3.215.
The Central Park jogger case and other recent exonerations highlight the problem of wrongful convictions, 15% to 25% of which have contained confessions in evidence. Recent research suggests that actual innocence does not protect people across a sequence of pivotal decisions: (a) In preinterrogation interviews, investigators commit false-positive errors, presuming innocent suspects guilty; (b) naively believing in the transparency of their innocence, innocent suspects waive their rights; (c) despite or because of their denials, innocent suspects elicit highly confrontational interrogations; (d) certain commonly used techniques lead suspects to confess to crimes they did not commit; and (e) police and others cannot distinguish between uncorroborated true and false confessions. It appears that innocence puts innocents at risk, that consideration should be given to reforming current practices, and that a policy of videotaping interrogations is a necessary means of protection.
中央公园慢跑者案及近期其他无罪释放的案例凸显了错判问题,其中15%至25%的错判案件有认罪供述作为证据。近期研究表明,实际无辜并不能在一系列关键决策中保护人们:(a) 在讯问前的询问中,调查人员会犯假阳性错误,认定无辜嫌疑人有罪;(b) 无辜嫌疑人天真地相信自己的清白是显而易见的,从而放弃自己的权利;(c) 尽管无辜嫌疑人否认有罪,或者正是因为他们的否认,他们会遭到极具对抗性的讯问;(d) 某些常用技巧会导致嫌疑人供认他们并未犯下的罪行;(e) 警方及其他人员无法区分未经证实的真实认罪和虚假认罪。看来,无辜会让无辜者陷入危险,应该考虑改革现行做法,并且对讯问过程进行录像的政策是一种必要的保护手段。