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Designing Randomized Trials of Informer Recruitment and Management Policies

This study aims to address the lack of scientific inquiry into criminal investigations and the practice of confidential informing in law enforcement. By conducting randomized experiments, the study seeks to provide insights into effective informer practices that can increase intelligence, clearances, and reduce crime. The feasibility of experimentation in recruiting and managing informers will be examined, along with potential outcome measures and examples of informer experiments.

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Designing Randomized Trials of Informer Recruitment and Management Policies

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  1. Designing Randomized Trials of Informer Recruitment and Management Policies Cody W. Telep George Mason University (USA) 6 July 2011

  2. Police Investigations: Building an Evidence Base • “Although criminal investigation is a fundamental mission of the police, there has been surprisingly little scientific inquiry in this area” (Horvath et al., 2001) • Evidence-Based Policing Matrix: only 2 of the 103 total abstracts mention “detective” • In the U.S., detectives make up about 16% of sworn officers, but we know very little about the effectiveness of their actions, even though they play a major role in one major performance measure of the police, clearance rates

  3. Police Informers: Building an Evidence Base • “Though widely acknowledged as vital to law enforcement, social scientists have largely ignored the practice of confidential informing.” (Miller, 2011: 203) • Evidence-Based Policing Matrix: only 1 of the 103 total abstracts mentions “informant” or “informer” • Some focus on cost-effectiveness, but research largely descriptive and focused on issues of threatened legitimacy as a result of close police contact with known criminals

  4. Benefits of Randomized Experiments • High internal validity- would give us new insights into investigations and informers that are more believable than existing research • Helps inform policing practice and policy- would provide a better sense of what works (and what doesn’t) in terms of informer practices to increase intelligence, increase clearances, and reduce crime • Provide a “simple” answer for police leaders- statistics behind experiments are not exceedingly complex

  5. Feasibility of Randomized Experiments • Although there are potential ethical concerns, experimentation is possible in the case of recruiting and managing police informers • Treatment (i.e. investigator time) is limited and so randomization could provide an unbiased way of using resources • Not conducting any rigorous research is perhaps just as bad- current practices are often based on informal policies or hunches that could be wrong • Nothing about an experiment would need to threaten the confidentiality of informers

  6. What kinds of experiments? • Recruitment experiments • Examining how different approaches to recruiting informers lead to differential outcomes in terms of number of informers recruited, amount of intelligence gathered, cases solved, and crime prevented • Management experiments • Examining how different approaches to managing informers lead to differential outcomes in terms of intelligence gathered, cases solved, and crime prevented

  7. Unit of Analysis • Experiments on informers could be carried out on multiple levels of analysis • Perhaps the most obvious is at the level of the individual informer- randomly allocating potential or current informers • Could randomly allocate administrative units (e.g. prisons) • Could randomly allocate geographic areas within a jurisdiction (e.g. drug markets)

  8. Outcome Measures • Number of informers recruited and level of informer cooperation (legitimacy) • Amount of usable intelligence gathered • Number of cases solved (clearance rates) • Crime prevented (crime rates) • Costs and cost-effectiveness

  9. Informer Experiments: 3 examples • Recruiting informers in a prison/jail setting • Managing informers through interview/questioning techniques • Recruiting and managing informers in crime hot spots

  10. Recruiting Informers in Prisons/Jails • Examine traditional informal methods of choosing who to recruit vs. use of research to guide recruitment policies • Example: randomly assign prisoners to either a control group (traditional methods) or a treatment group that uses statistical evidence (e.g. the findings of Jeffrey, 2011) to guide recruitment procedures • Outcomes • Proportion of prisoners successfully recruited • Amount of usable intelligence gathered

  11. Managing Informers • Cooper’s (2010) work suggests that many who agree to be informers while in custody cease to be cooperative upon release • Could develop experiments to examine ways to better keep recruited informers committed to providing intelligence • The impact of how investigators interact with informers (procedural justice) • The impact of bureaucratic control systems (particularly on how intelligence is gathered and shared)

  12. Managing Informers: Procedural Justice • Incorporate Tyler’s (1990, 2004) research on legitimacy and procedural justice into informer management procedures • Control group that receives “standard” interviews from detectives • E.g. may involve deception, typically more confrontational • Treatment group is interviewed by detectives who have received special training on procedural justice and enhancing police legitimacy • E.g. interviewing should focus on detective being respectful, transparent, unbiased

  13. Managing Informers: Procedural Justice • There could be differences across the groups in levels of long-term informer cooperation/compliance with police • Tyler’s research would suggest that a procedural justice framework might enhance informer cooperation • Could also measure informer perceptions of legitimacy of the police • Ideally, if legitimacy levels are enhanced, these informers may avoid future involvement in criminal activity

  14. Informers in Hot Spots Policing • Hot spots policing has a strong evidence base for reducing crime and disorder (Braga, 2007) • Would combining hot spots enforcement with an explicit effort to recruit informers increase crime control effectiveness? • 3 group experimental study of hot spots (e.g. drug markets, gun crime areas): • Control group: receives standard policing as usual • “Standard” hot spots group: receives intensive policing • Informer hot spots group: receives intensive policing AND explicit focus on recruiting and maintaining informers in the hot spot areas

  15. Informers in Hot Spots Policing cont. • Officers working in the informer hot spots group could receive additional training on managing informers and incentives to maximize informer recruitment and intelligence gathering • Outcomes: • Would expect informer hot spots group to lead to increases in intelligence gathered and informers recruited • Could examine experimentally whether there were differences in crime and disorder outcomes across the three groups

  16. Conclusions • Little or no rigorous evidence related to recruiting and managing police informers • There are a number of ways we can think about running randomized experiments on informers • Experimentation is an important way to ensure informer policies are as effective and efficient as possible

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