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Public opinion of Japanese interrogation techniques

Public opinion of Japanese interrogation techniques. Taeko Wachi 1 and Michael E. Lamb 2 1 National Research Institute of Police Science, Japan 2 University of Cambridge, UK. This work was supported by Grant -in-Aid for Scientific Research(23730686 ) .. Introduction .

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Public opinion of Japanese interrogation techniques

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  1. Public opinion of Japanese interrogation techniques Taeko Wachi1 and Michael E. Lamb2 1 National Research Institute of Police Science, Japan 2 University of Cambridge, UK This work was supported by Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research(23730686).

  2. Introduction • Introduction of the citizen judge system in 2009 encourages us to study public opinion about the Japanese criminal justice system. • Confessions elicited involuntarily and through inappropriate interrogation techniques are not admitted in court. (Code of Criminal Procedure Article 319).

  3. Purpose • To examine • which interview techniques the participants thought were likely to elicit true confessions from guilty suspects • which interview techniques they thought were likely to elicit false confessions from innocent suspects • To examine whether attitudes toward police officers influence their opinions about interrogation

  4. Participants • Sex:Male 36(48.0%), Female 39(52.0%) • Age:Mean 21.23(SD=3.04) Range 20-45 • Grade:University students Second year 20(26.7%), Third year 34(45.3%), Fourth year 20(26.7%), Other 1 (1.3%) • Nationality:Japanese 100% • Experiences as citizen judges : 0%

  5. Method • Self-reported questionnaire administered during a course on Criminal Psychology • After explanation of the survey, students volunteered to participate in the survey.

  6. Material: Questionnaire • Rating interview techniques • The interview techniques used in Wachi et al.’s (2011) study of police officers were explored. • Participants were asked to evaluate whether each technique was likely to elicit true/false confessions • 1= very likely ~ 5= not at all likely • Rate how they feel about police officers • 1= like very much ~ 7= hate very much

  7. Examples of Five factors used in this study • Presentation of Evidence/Confrontation/ Active Listening/Rapport Building/ Discussion of Crimes • Presentation of Evidence : 4 items • Implying that there was evidence of guilt • Confronting the suspect with actual evidence • Confrontation: 5 items • Expressing impatience and anger towards the suspect • Raising the voice during the interrogation

  8. Five factors used in this study (Contd.) • Active listening : 6 items • Listening to the suspect’s life story or personal history • Listening to the suspect’s stories about his/ her significant others (e.g. parents, spouse, children) • Rapport building : 8 items • Attempting to build a good relationship with the suspect • Treating the suspect in a friendly manner • Discussion of the Crime: 4 items • Attempting to persuade the suspect to think about the meaning of the crime committed • Appealing to the suspect’s conscience

  9. Result : Guilty suspects • Five factors showed significant differences (F(4, 296) = 155.29, p < .001). • “Presentation of evidence” was deemed most likely to elicit true confessions, followed by “Active Listening” and “Discussion of Crime”.

  10. Result : Innocent suspects • Five factors showed significant differences (F(3.16, 234.05) = 107.38, p < .001). • “Confrontation” was deemed most likely to elicit false confessions, followed by “Presentation of Evidence” .

  11. Result : The difference between guilty and innocent suspects Do you think that the following techniques are likely to elicit a true/false confession from a guilty/innocent suspect? 1= very likely to 5= not at all likely

  12. Result : Effect of the attitudes towards police officers • Those who viewed the police negatively considered “Active Listening” to be less effective for obtaining true confessions.

  13. Summary of the findings • “Active Listening” - most preferable • the most likely to elicit true confessions • the least likely to elicit false confessions • “Confrontation” – least preferable • the least likely to elicit true confessions • the most likely to elicit false confessions • “Rapport Building” – preferable • less likely to elicit false confessions

  14. Limitation & Future suggestions • The participants – University students • A study of the general public is needed. • Currently I am administering a Web-based survey on interrogation to the general public. • Questionnaire study- difficult to visualize an interrogation • Studies using other methodologies are required to complement survey studies. • Showing video-taped interviews will be important.

  15. Thank you very much Contact: wachi@nrips.go.jp

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