Abstract
In this article we introduce a novel interviewing tactic to elicit admissions from guilty suspects. By
influencing the suspects’ perception of the amount of evidence the interviewer holds against them, we
aimed to shift the suspects’ counterinterrogation strategies from less to more forthcoming. The proposed
tactic (SUE-Confrontation) is a development of the Strategic Use of Evidence (SUE) framework and
aims to affect the suspects’ perception by confronting them with statement-evidence inconsistencies.
Participants (N 90) were asked to perform several mock criminal tasks before being interviewed using
1 of 3 interview techniques: (a) SUE-Confrontation, (b) Early Disclosure of Evidence, or (c) No
Disclosure of Evidence. As predicted, the SUE-Confrontation interview generated more statementevidence inconsistencies from suspects than the Early Disclosure interview. Importantly, suspects in the
SUE-Confrontation condition (vs. Early and No disclosure conditions) admitted more self-incriminating
information and also perceived the interviewer to have had more information about the critical phase of
the crime (the phase where the interviewer lacked evidence). The findings show the adaptability of the
SUE-technique and how it may be used as a tool for eliciting admissions.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 244 –252 |
Journal | Law and Human Behavior |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 6 Apr 2015 |
Keywords
- admissions, statement-evidence inconsistency, strategic use of evidence