School of Law.
Department of Psychological Science and Criminology, Law and Society.
Law Hum Behav. 2020 Oct;44(5):412-423. doi: 10.1037/lhb0000423.
Firearms experts traditionally have testified that a weapon leaves "unique" toolmarks, so bullets or cartridge casings can be visually examined and conclusively matched to a particular firearm. Recently, due to scientific critiques, Department of Justice policy, and judges' rulings, firearms experts have tempered their conclusions. In two experiments, we tested whether this ostensibly more cautious language has its intended effect on jurors (Experiment 1), and whether cross-examination impacts jurors' perception of firearm testimony (Experiment 2).
Four hypotheses were tested. First, jurors will accord significant weight to firearm testimony that declares a "match" compared to testimony that does not (Experiments 1 and 2). Second, variations to "match" language will not affect guilty verdicts (Experiment 1). Third, only the most cautious language ("cannot exclude the gun") would lower guilty verdicts (Experiment 1). Fourth, cross-examination will reduce guilty verdicts depending on specific language used (Experiment 2).
In two preregistered, high-powered experiments with 200 mock jurors per cell, participants recruited from Qualtrics Panels were presented with a criminal case containing firearms evidence, which varied the wording of the examiner's conclusion and whether cross-examination was present. These variations include conclusion language used by practitioners, language advised by government organizations, and language required by judges in several cases. Participants gave a verdict, rated the evidence and expert in all conditions.
Guilty verdicts significantly increased when a match was declared compared to when a match was not declared. Variation in conclusion language did not affect guilty verdicts nor did it affect jurors' estimates of the likelihood the defendant's gun fired the bullet recovered at the crime scene. In contrast, however, a more cautious conclusion that an examiner "cannot exclude the defendant's gun" did significantly reduce guilty verdicts and likelihood estimates alike. The presence of cross-examination did not affect these findings.
Apart from the most limited language ("cannot exclude the defendant's gun"), judicial intervention to limit firearms conclusion language is not likely to produce its intended effect. Moreover, cross-examination does not appear to affect perceptions or individual juror verdicts. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
传统上,枪支专家曾作证称,武器会留下“独特”的工具痕迹,因此可以对子弹或弹壳进行直观检查,并将其与特定枪支确凿地匹配起来。最近,由于受到科学批评、司法部政策以及法官裁决的影响,枪支专家已经对其结论加以缓和。在两项实验中,我们检验了这种表面上更为谨慎的措辞是否会对陪审员产生预期影响(实验 1),以及交叉讯问是否会影响陪审员对枪支证词的看法(实验 2)。
检验了四个假设。首先,与未作出“匹配”结论的证词相比,陪审员会高度重视声明“匹配”的枪支证词(实验 1 和实验 2)。其次,“匹配”措辞的变化不会影响有罪判决(实验 1)。第三,只有最谨慎的措辞(“不能排除涉案枪支”)才会降低有罪判决(实验 1)。第四,根据具体使用的措辞进行交叉讯问将降低有罪判决(实验 2)。
在两个预先注册的、采用 200 名模拟陪审员的高影响力实验中,参与者从 Qualtrics 小组中招募,他们被呈现一个包含枪支证据的刑事案件,其中变化了检验员结论的措辞以及是否进行交叉讯问。这些变化包括从业者使用的结论措辞、政府组织建议的措辞以及几位法官在几个案件中要求的措辞。参与者在所有条件下作出判决、对证据和专家进行评分。
与未声明“匹配”相比,当声明“匹配”时,有罪判决明显增加。结论措辞的变化既没有影响有罪判决,也没有影响陪审员对被告的枪支是否发射了在犯罪现场发现的子弹的可能性估计。相比之下,但是,检验员作出的“不能排除涉案枪支”这一更为谨慎的结论确实显著降低了有罪判决和可能性估计。交叉讯问的存在并未影响这些发现。
除了最有限的措辞(“不能排除涉案枪支”)外,限制枪支结论措辞的司法干预不太可能产生预期效果。此外,交叉讯问似乎不会影响个人陪审员的看法或判决。