
False confessions
Silence is
golden
People have a strange and
worrying tendency to admit to things they
have not, in fact, done
Aug 13th 2011
SINCE 1992 the Innocence Project, an American legal charity, has used
DNA evidence to help exonerate 271 people who were wrongly convicted of
crimes, sometimes after they had served dozens of years in prison. But
a mystery has emerged from the case reports. Despite being innocent,
around a quarter of these people had confessed or pleaded guilty to the
offences of which they were accused.
It seems hard to imagine that anyone of sound mind would take the blame
for something he did not do. But several researchers have found it
surprisingly easy to make people fess up to invented misdemeanours.
Admittedly these confessions are taking place in a laboratory rather
than an interrogation room, so the stakes might not appear that high to
the confessor. On the other hand, the pressures that can be brought to
bear in a police station are much stronger than those in a lab. The
upshot is that it seems worryingly simple to extract a false confession
from someone—which he might find hard subsequently to retract.
I must confess
One of the most recent papers on the subject, published in Law and
Human Behavior by Saul Kassin and Jennifer Perillo of the John Jay
College of Criminal Justice in New York, used a group of 71 university
students who were told they were taking part in a test of their
reaction times. Participants were asked to press keys on a keyboard as
they were read aloud by another person, who was secretly in cahoots
with the experimenter. The volunteers were informed that the ALT key
was faulty, and that if it was pressed the computer would crash and all
the experimental data would be lost. The experimenter watched the
proceedings from across the table.
In fact, the computer was set up to crash regardless, about a minute
into the test. When this happened the experimenter asked each
participant if he had pressed the illicit key, acted as if he was upset
when it was “discovered” that the data had disappeared, and requested
that the participant sign a confession. Only one person actually did
hit the ALT key by mistake, but a quarter of the innocent participants
were so disarmed by the shock of the accusation that they confessed to
something they had not done.
Robert Horselenberg and his colleagues at Maastricht University, in the
Netherlands, have come up with similar results. In an
as-yet-unpublished study, members of Dr Horselenberg’s group told 83
people that they were taking part in a taste test for a supermarket
chain. The top taster would win a prize such as an iPad or a set of
DVDs. The volunteers were asked to try ten cans of fizzy drink and
guess which was which. The labels were obscured by socks pulled up to
the rim of each can, so to cheat a volunteer had only to lower the sock.
During the test, which was filmed by a hidden camera, ten participants
actually did cheat. Bafflingly, though, another eight falsely confessed
when accused by the experimenter, despite participants having been told
cheats would be fined €50 ($72).
The number of innocent confessors jumps when various interrogation
techniques are added to the mix. Several experiments, for example, have
focused on the use of false evidence, as when police pretend they have
proof of a person’s guilt in order to encourage him to confess. This is
usually permitted in the United States, though banned in Britain.
A second computer-crash test conducted by Dr Kassin and Dr Perillo used
this technique. Another person in the room beside the experimenter said
he saw the participant hitting the ALT key. In this case the confession
rate jumped to 80% of innocent participants. Dr Horselenberg and his
colleagues found something similar.
Dr Kassin also tested the impact of bluffing. Two participants, one of
whom was again in cahoots with the investigator, sat in the same room
and were asked to complete what appeared to be an academic test.
Halfway through, the investigator accused them of helping each other
and cited the university’s honour code against cheating. The
investigator went on to bluff that there was a video camera in the
room, though the recording, with its definitive proof one way or the
other, would not be accessible until later. In the real world, this
might be like a detective telling a suspect that DNA or fingerprint
evidence had been found but not yet analysed (in Britain as well as
America, if such a statement were actually true, police would be
permitted to say it, though in the case of the experiment it was a
lie). Presumably, the innocent participants knew such a tape would
exonerate them. Even so, half still confessed.
All of which is both strange and rather alarming. Dr Kassin suggests
that participants may have the naive—though common—belief that the
world is a just place, and that their innocence will emerge in the end,
particularly in the case of the alleged video evidence. One
participant, for example, told him, “it made it easier [to sign the
confession] because I had nothing to hide. The cameras would prove it.”
In cases like that, confession is seen as a way to end an unpleasant
interrogation. But it is a risky one. In the real world, such faith can
be misplaced. Though a lot of jurisdictions require corroborating
evidence, in practice self-condemnation is pretty damning—and, it
seems, surprisingly easy to induce.
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