Week 3 To 4
Week 3 To 4
TECHNOLOGY
COLLEGE OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE
I. INTRODUCTION:
This module discusses the interview and interrogation techniques. Although the
purpose of both interviews and interrogations is obtaining information, the interview is an
informal procedure whereas the interrogation is formally questioning a person with
information about a suspected crime. And also we discuss the different types of
techniques methods.
II. OBJECTIVES:
At the end of this lecture, you should be able to:
1. Gain some knowledge about the interview and interrogation techniques.
2. Acquaint on the different types of techniques and methods.
Interview and Interrogation Techniques
A vital aspect of working as an investigator is skill as an interviewer Numerous
systems and methods exist for interviewing suspects and witnesses, as well as various
types of interview training.
Reid Technique
For a long time, the Reid Technique of Interviewing and Interrogation has been the
standard for law enforcement and other professionals. This method employs basic human
psychology and skills its creator learned as a polygrapher. Various law enforcement
agencies have adopted the procedures and regularly use them in interviews and
interrogations.
False confessions
Critics argue that various features of the Reid interrogation method may lead
certain innocent suspects to confess. For example, one critique arques that "the guilt-
presumptive nature" of the Reid method “creates a slippery slope for innocent suspects
because it may set in motion a seguence of reciprocal observations and reactions
between the suspect and interrogator that serve to confirm the interrogator's belief in the
suspect's guilt" (Moore and Fitzsimmons,)
According to some critics of the Reid Technique, aspects of Reid-style
interrogation that may lead to false confessions include (1) misclassification (the police
attributing deception to truthful suspects); (2) coercion (including psychological
manipulation); and (3) contamination (such as when police present non-public information
to a suspect, and the suspect incorporates that information in his or her confession)
Reid and Associates, Inc. disputes the contention that their methods lead to false
confessions. They argue that: False confessions are not caused by the application of the
Reid Technique...[but instead] are usually caused by interrogators engaging in improper
behavior that is outside of the parameters of the Reid Technique ... such as threatening
inevitable consequences; making a promise of leniency in return for the confession;
denying a subject their rights; conducting an excessively long interrogation;
The company also cites court cases upholding their methods or denying the
admission of expert testimony that would link those methods to false confessions (e.g.,
U.S. v. Jacques, 784 F.Supp.2d 59,D. Mass. (2011)).
PEACE Model
Both the United States and Great Britain recognized the potential for inaccuracy in
pressurized interviewing environments. In 1992, a study of police interviews in Great
Britain found approximately one-third of 400interviews less than satisfactory. This led to
the creation of the PEACE interview technique. PEACE is an acronym for the five steps
of the process.
1.Preparation and planning
2.Engage and explain
3.Account clarification and challenge
4.Closure
5.Evaluation
Cognitive Approach
The Cognitive Interview technique also shares similarities with the PEACE model.
This method hinges on three psychological processes: 1) memory and cognition, 2)
social dynamics, and 3) communication. The Cognitive method attempts to guide
interviewees through their memories to obtain the richest and most relevant information
possible. This usually is accomplished by using cognitive resources efficiently and asking
open-ended questions followed by more specific probing inquiries. In this technique, there
are separate approaches for witnesses and suspects.
For witnesses, the Cognitive approach involves five steps.
• Introduction
• Open-ended narration
• Follow-up questions
• Review
• Closing
In this model, subjects are "encouraged to generate large amounts of information
before any challenge is made."10 In effect, the Cognitive technique allows interviewees
to provide the details they deem important to their experience. The interviewer's purpose
in the process is "to guide the witness to those memory records that are richest in relevant
information and to facilitate communication when these mental records have been
activated."
This technique does not rely on confrontation, but rather on the interviewer helping
the witness revisit the scene and recall as much as possible. Interviewees should do
approximately 80 percent of the talking. This distribution can be accomplished by an
interviewer who relies on open-ended questions and careful guidance to assist the
interviewee in invoking the external (e.g., weather, room details), emotional (e.g., fear,
mood) and cognitive (e.g.,thoughts) factors around the event.12
When interviewing a suspect, the Cognitive model differs in that it includes eight steps:
• Introduction
• Narrative
• Drawing/sketch
• Follow-up with open-ended questions
• Reverse-order technique
• Challenge
• Review
• Close
"[Several] interview techniques rely on the interpretation of verbal and nonverbal
behaviors classified as deceptive, but science has shown that humans are not good at
interpreting such signals."
Much like the PEACE method and the interviewing stage of the Reid system, the
Cognitive technique is generally nonconfrontational. However, there are built-in
mechanisms designed to increase the cognitive load on the brain.
One example of this is the reverse-order technique, wherein interviewees must tell their
stories backwards. Research reveals the reverse-order process is particularly difficult for
people with fabricated stories. This is because people are used to telling stories
chronologically. Changing the order requires more thinking and processing, causing liars
to make mistakes in their narratives, which collected evidence and witness testimony can
disprove.
Kinesic Method
The Kinesic Interview Technique is like the Cognitive method in that it relies on
moving the mind and body out of equilibrium and on the human reaction to stress.
Advocates of the technique believe that this reaction, prompted by questioning, will lead
to meaningful behaviors exhibited by verbal and nonverbal indicators of deception.
The Kinesic method identifies three distinct categories into which meaningful behavior
can be divided.
1.Self-initiated statements by suspects, which they make without prompting
2.Prompted verbal responses after interviewers ask certain questions
3.Nonverbal body positioning - physiological changes and gestures or lack thereof
·After establishing baseline behaviors for the interviewee, investigators watch and listen
for deviations from the norm.
Importance of Silence
• The future of interviewing, regardless of technique, may be best advanced if
interviewers allow their subjects to do more of the talking.
• One afternoon in January 2012, a man's head and other severed body parts were
found in Los Angeles, California. Police identified a suspect, but because they had
nothing but circumstantial evidence, they needed a confession to charge him.
However, despite consenting to three different interviews, he revealed nothing of
substance.
• In March 2014, detectives arranged for another interview of the suspect, who since
had established a new life in Texas. He told the interviewing officers that he only
had half an hour to talk before he had to return to his job. The detectives agreed
and told the man that they wanted to hear his side of the story. They did not
interrupt his narration or ask many questions.
• What happened next completely surprised them. The suspect spoke with the two
interviewers for almost 5 hours. During this time, he called his work to say he was
sick and his wife to tell her that he would be home late. In the interview, the man
revealed details that later would lead to information needed to obtain an arrest
warrant and a conviction. "It was the strangest thing. He should have been on his
guard. But, the less police talked, the more he did “