Saturday, March 1, 2003
Volume 36, Issue 2; ISSN: 0033-3107
"I confess"
by Alexandra Perina
Insights
WHY WOULD AN INNOCENT PERSON PROFESS GUILT?
IN CRIMINAL TRIALS, A defendant's admission of guilt can trump even the
proverbial smoking gun. A confession is the ideal civic solution:The perpetrator
takes responsibility, and the public sleeps soundly. But it's not always
the end of the story. In December, the convictions of five men who confessed
to the 1989 rape and beating of a jogger in New York's Central Park were
reversed after an imprisoned rapist took sole responsibility for the assault.
And in January, Governor George Ryan commuted the sentences of Illinois'
150 death-row inmates to life in prison, due in part to concern about the
role of false confessions in securing wrongful convictions.
Although it is difficult, if not impossible, to estimate the number of false
confessions nationwide, a recent review of one decade's worth of murder cases
in a single Illinois county found 247 instances in which the defendants'
self-incriminating statements were thrown out by the court or found by a
jury to be insufficiently convincing for conviction. (The Chicago Tribune
conducted the investigation.)
Suspects with low IQs are particularly vulnerable to the pressures of police
interrogation:They are less likely to understand the
charges against them and the consequences of professing guilt. One of the
suspects in the Central Park attack had an IQ of 87; another was aged 16
with a second-grade reading level.
But intelligence is by no means the decisive factor. Suspects with compliant
or suggestible personalities and anxiety disorders may be hardpressed to
withstand an interrogation, according to Gisli Gudjonsson, Ph.D., a professor
of forensic psychology at the Institute of Psychiatry in London. Gudjonsson's
suggestibility scale is used by courts around the world to evaluate self-incriminating
statements. But he cautions against seeking only personality driven explanations
for confessions: "A drug addict may not be particularly suggestible but may
have a strong desire to get back out on the street."
Self-incriminating statements are often the result of a kind of cost-benefit
analysis. "False confession is an escape hatch. It
becomes rational under the circumstances," says Saul Kassin, Ph.D., a professor
of psychology at Williams College in Massachusetts. The most common explanation
given after the fact is that suspects "just wanted to go home. "
This often indicates an inability to appreciate the consequences of a confession,
a situation that police cultivate by communicating that a confession will
be rewarded with lenient sentencing. Police may also offer mitigating factors:
the crime was unintentional; the suspect was provoked.
The circumstances of interrogation are crucial. "Everybody has a breaking
point Nobody confesses falsely in an hour," says Kassin.The suspects in the
Central Park case each spent between 14 and 30 hours under interrogation.
The use of false evidence (including statements such as,"Your fingerprints
are on the gun") in interrogation is implicated in
almost every false-confession case, but American courts have upheld the
practice. This is not to say that police intentionally ensnare the innocent.
Kassin notes that detectives are trained to believe they can make accurate
judgments about a suspect's truthfulness, though "there's a level of overconfidence
in the initial judgment, and they begin the interrogation with a presumption
of guilt"
Gudjonsson agrees: "Police officers need to know that they can elicit a false
confession even if they don't intend to."
A particularly vulnerable defendant may begin to doubt his or her own memory
when presented with false evidence. Children and the mentally handicapped,
or people whose recollections are clouded by drugs or alcohol, are particularly
susceptible. Interrogators may suggest that a suspect has repressed the memory.
They then offer false evidence to fill in the gaps. After intense interrogation,
these suspects become sufficiently convinced of their own guilt and accept
an "internalized" false confession.
False confessions are generated in cell blocks as well as interrogation
rooms, a fact not lost on detectives under fire for
the Central Park jogger case. One month after those convictions were vacated,
a chagrined New York City Police Department issued its own revisionist theory:
The inmate who claims he alone attacked the jogger may have falsely confessed
due to threats from other inmates or the desire to transfer to another prison.
-Alexandra Perina
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