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Published byΑριάδνη Νικολαΐδης Modified over 6 years ago
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Eyewitness testimony The problem is clear: the unreliability of eyewitness identification evidence poses one of the most serious problems in the administration of criminal justice and civil litigation. ~ Elizabeth Loftus
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Testimonial or Direct Evidence
Eyewitness accounts can provide important evidence leading to the arrest of a criminal This also heavily influences the jury However, witness testimonies may be flawed How much does an eyewitness really remember? the crime scene may have been too dark the witness may have been distracted by a weapon the longer the time between the incident and the interview, the more a witness can forget New info can influence a testimony and actually change memories mug shots, news reports, leading questions, etc.
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Police have to be able to judge if an eyewitness is reliable
Police have to be able to judge if an eyewitness is reliable. Here are some things to consider: The type of crime and how the witness saw it. a witness who is physically similar to an offender tends to remember more details victims of serious crimes tend to remember more details over a longer period of time, because they relive the event the presence of a weapon can also affect memory
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Witness Attributes Attributes associated with eyewitness accuracy
Stress Moderate levels of stress tend to enhance eyewitness memory. Orients witness to the event and increases attention. Severe stress decreases eyewitness accuracy. More likely to provide inaccurate reports and to make false ID. Decreases ability to encode information.
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Witness Attributes Attributes associated with eyewitness accuracy
Alcohol/drugs Intoxication at the time of the event impairs memory ability. Can decrease perceptual abilities. Interferes with ability to store information. Decreases ability to recall information at later time. Increases likelihood of false ID.
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Witness Attributes Attributes associated with eyewitness accuracy
Age (children, elderly) Memory ability is fairly stable across the lifespan. Children (up to early teens): More susceptible to suggestive questioning & misinformation. More likely to make an ID, leading to increased likelihood of false ID. Children over 4 are as accurate as adults when the target is in the line-up Children and the elderly less accurate than adults when target is not in the line-up Older children recall more than do younger children Younger children forget more rapidly Children more suggestible than adults Experts cannot tell the difference between accurate and inaccurate statements made by children Elderly (~60 and above): More likely to make a false ID.
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Witness Attributes Attributes that ARE NOT associated with eyewitness accuracy Occupation Police officers are no more accurate than laypersons. However, they tend to provide more useful descriptions. Gender Men & women do not differ in abilities. Witness/victim status Victims & bystanders do not differ in abilities. Any difference between a victim & bystander is likely due to other aspects of the witnessing event. E.g., increased stress, viewing distance, perpetrator- familiarity, etc.
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Other Witness Factors that MUST be Considered
Did the witness already know the a ccused? What was their relationship? How much time passed between the offense and the identification? Had the witness already identified (or failed to identify) the defendant? Has the witness already identified someone else? Most cases of an innocent person being convicted is due to mistaken eye witness identification!
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Interviewing techniques or how information is retrieved can alter the accuracy of an eyewitness' story eyewitnesses tend to be more accu rate answering questions about wh at happened than what the offender looks like open ended questions tend to get better descriptions "What did the offender look like?" vs "What color shirt was he wearing?“ Leading questions lessen accuracy "Was the offenders shirt red?“ A confident witness is more accurate
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Good Interview Practices
Record both the questions asked as well as the answers Have the witness tell the story from beginning to end; from the end to the beginning; Have the witness tell the story from different perspectives (victim, other witnesses, perp) Follow-up with specific questions Elicit partial information
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Avoid Leading questions (reconstructive memory)
Asking questions in a rapid-fire manner go slow give the witness time to think Asking the same questions more than once Multiple-choice questions Interrupting the witness Nonverbal cues or paralanguage indicating your opinion
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Good Interview Practices
Get statement as close to the event as possible Place the witness in the event environment Before asking questions, ask the witness to recreate the incident in his/her mind Start with unprompted recollection use open-ended questions Tell the witness that they should do most of the talking not to edit their thoughts; they should say whatever comes to mind
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Reconstructive Memory Questions Change Memory
How fast were the cars going when they ____ each other? Contacted Hit Bumped Collided into Smashed into
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Speed estimates for the verbs used in the witness question
Estimated Speed 41mph 39mph 38mph 34mph 32mph Contacted Hit Bumped Collided Smashed
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Persuasiveness of Eyewitnesses
Most persuasive form of evidence Eyewitnesses believed 80% of the time Juries cannot tell the difference between an accurate and an inaccurate witness Accurate witness believed 68% of time Inaccurate witness believed 70% of time
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Eyewitnesses are Most Persuasive When
They provide detail (trivial persuasion) They are confident They are adults Children can be persuasive under certain circumstances Elderly are perceived similar to children
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Eyewitnesses are the Most Persuasive Form of Evidence - Loftus (1983)
Type of Evidence % guilty votes Eyewitness testimony 78 Fingerprints 70 Polygraph 53 Handwriting 34 These slides show how persuasive eyewitness testimony is. I like to include the old Loftus stuff to show the history of this type of research.
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Eyewitness Accuracy via Academic Research
Buckhout (1975) Simulated crime on a TV newscast 2,145 callers 14.7% were accurate Buckhout (1974) Staged assault on professor in front of students 7 weeks later, students shown line-up of six photographs 40% identified attacker 36% identified bystander 23% identified person not there
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Eyewitness Accuracy Cromag (1996)
Boeing 747 crashed into an 11-story building in Amsterdam TV footage showed rescue attempts after the crash 66% of students “remembered” seeing the plane actually hit the building
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What do Witnesses Report? Fashsing, Ask, & Granhag (2004)
Attribute % Reporting % Accurate Gender 99.6 100 Height 91.2 44 Clothing (upper body) 90.8 58 Clothing (head) 89.6 56 Build 84.4 57 Weapon 76.4 71 Clothing (pants) 73.6 53 Age 62.4 38 Type of speech 46.8 84
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Common Errors Overestimate the height of criminals
Overestimate the duration of a brief event Notice more about the action than the person Pay more attention to the weapon
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333 people have been exonerated through DNA.
Eyewitness misidentification played a role in over 75% of convictions overturned by DNA.
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Contributing Causes of Wrongful Convictions
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