You are here

police interrogations

Delaware AG Pushing for Video Recording of All Interrogations

Delaware Attorney General Matt Denn is close to issuing guidelines that would suggest that police interrogations--from start to finish-- be recorded, The News Journal's Jessica Masulli Reyes reports. The reason for the move is because advocates say recording interrogations helps avoid false confessions.

Advocates also said the guidelines should be made mandatory by stating prosecutors wouldn't use statements obtained from non-recorded interrogations. Denn said law enforcement would be incentivized to follow the guidelines because "'adhering to this policy increases the odds we could successfully prosecute a case."'

Confessions in China Obtained Through Coercion

The New York Times' Andrew Jacobs had an unsettling feature on the Chinese criminal justice system, writing that many convictions in China depend on confessions that are obtained through coercion. Even though President Xi Jinping has made legal reform part of his effort to boost support for the Communist Party and China's highest court have ruled against using evidence obtained through abuse, "Chinese lawyers and human rights advocates say these measures have had limited impact on a police system that for decades has made obtaining a confession the centerpiece of its efforts."

Human Rights Watch found that judges excluded evidence in just 23 cases of 432 in which defendants said they have been abused.

Detective Allegedly Imported Gitmo Tactics into Murder Interrogations

According to an investigation by The Guardian, Richard Zuley, a detective on Chicago’s north side from 1977 to 2007 and who interrogated terrorism detainees at Guantanamo Bay, imported the type of harsh tactics used at America's holding center for terrorism suspects into his work as a police officer. The newspaper's Spencer Ackerman reports that Zuley allegedly "repeatedly engaged in methods of interrogation resulting in at least one wrongful conviction and subsequent cases more recently thrown into doubt following allegations of abuse." The Guardian alleges that Gitmo detainee Mohamedou Ould Slahi and domestic defendants "confessed untruthfully to try and stop the treatment by Zuley."

Patz Trial Latest With Mental Illness Clouding Confession

As the trial proceeds in the murder of Etan Patz, who disappeared in 1979 while walking to a NYC bus, the Associated Press' Adam Geller reports on how confessions like the one in the Patz murder case can be clouded by defendants' mental illnesses. The presiding judge has found that Pedro Hernandez's confession to Patz's murder is admissible, but some experts said the defendant's history of mental illness "raise difficult questions about whether a suspect is exercising free will in talking to police, and greatly increase the potential for false confessions." Only the final part of Hernandez's interrogation was recorded, not the hours of questioning before he gave a videotaped recording.

Of the 300-plus people who have been cleared by the Innocence Project, a quarter falsely confessed, and 30 to 40 percent of those people were mentally ill or mentally disabled.

New Philly Police False Confessions Policy Has a Few Hiccups

For two months, the Philadelphia Police Department has had a new policy to stop false confessions, including putting strict limits on how long suspects can be held for questioning and preventing witnesses from being taken from a crime scene to a detective division for questioning, the Philadelphia Daily News reports. There have been a couple hiccups. The PPD issued a three-page clarification about the new interview and interrogation policy, including that it is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment to temporarily detain people found at a crime scene even though they can refuse to be taken to a detective division, the Daily News further reports.

Innocence Project Advocates Legislation Over Recording Police Interrogations

West Virginia's MetroNews reports that the WVU Law Innocence Project is "pushing legislation at the capitol which would require all police interrogations to be video recorded. Supporters of the bill believe it will reduce the chances of false confessions and ultimately false convictions."

Recording confessions is now considered a best practice to prevent innocent people from falsely confessing to crimes they didn't commit or being wrongfully convicted of crimes they didn't commit.

West Virginia has passed legislation establishing protocols to ensure investigating officers don't influence witnesses during lineups, MetroNews also reported.

Law Clinic Gets Win in Case of Possible Wrongful Conviction

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Sun, 01/26/2014 - 18:35

An excerpt of the piece I wrote for the Connecticut Law Tribune about a possible case of wrongful conviction in a double homicide and the law clinic who won a new trial for their client: 

When eight law school students had their first day ever in court, the stakes could not have been higher: They were representing a man who contends he was wrongly convicted of a double New Haven homicide.

The payoff was not only a learning experience, but a December ruling by a federal judge that their client's constitutional rights were violated when evidence that the key prosecution witness had been coached by a detective was kept from the defense counsel.

Brett Dignam was overseeing the students. These days, she's clinical professor of law at Columbia Law School. But she started working on the case of Scott L. Lewis when she was a professor at Yale Law School who led the institution's prison legal services, complex federal litigation and Supreme Court advocacy clinics.

Along with Dignam, Elora Mukherjee, who co-teaches Columbia's mass incarceration clinic with Dignam, and a rotating cast of law students have represented Lewis in his fight to win a new trial.

Last month, Connecticut U.S. Senior District Judge Charles Haight Jr. granted Lewis' habeas corpus petition.

The case is not over yet because the Connecticut's Commissioner of Correction filed a notice of appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit on Jan. 15. Jo Anne Sulik, senior assistant state's attorney with the Office of the Chief State's Attorney, did not respond to a request for comment.

Lewis, who is serving a 120-year prison sentence, represented himself for 14 years in an area of extremely complicated federal law, Dignam said. As far as she knows, he was the first person to seek DNA testing when Connecticut passed a law authorizing convicted defendants to make such motions.

Lewis went from handling his case all by himself to dealing with the challenges of being represented by a law clinic full of budding lawyers who change with the academic season, she said. There is no continuity because there are eight new students each semester working on the case, Dignam said.

"To be part of the legal education of generations of law students says something" about Lewis, Dignam said.

 

VT Considers Bills to Prevent Wrongful Convictions

Vermont is considering two pieces of legislation to seek the prevention of wrongful convictions. One bill would require blind lineups "in which the officer conducting them doesn’t know which participant is the suspect and therefore can’t influence the witness," The Rutland Herald reports. The other bill would call for taping police interogations in homicide and sexual-assault interrogations, the paper further reports.

Lack of Videotape in Etan Patz Could Affect Case

ProPublica reports on how the criminal prosecution of Etan Patz's alleged killer might have been jeopardized because police did not tape the interrogation: the "interrogation room, it turns out, was fully equipped to do what a growing body of expert opinion has insisted be done in such moments: a full videotaping of a suspect’s interaction with detectives, from the start of an interrogation through any possible formal confession. Judges, defense lawyers, and even many prosecutors have come to see such comprehensive videotaping as the single most important factor in securing reliable confessions and preventing the wrongful convictions that can stem from false confessions. In New Jersey, where Hernandez was being questioned, taping interrogations in homicide cases has been required by law since 2005. The detectives, however, never turned the cameras on during what would become seven hours of interrogation. They remained off, in fact, until 2:57 that afternoon, when Hernandez was finally ready to formally confess."

ProPublica further reports that the accused killer's defense counsel is going to seek to have the confession ruled to be illegitimate.

Police Chiefs Promote Best Practices To Avoid Wrongful Convictions

The International Association of Chiefs of Police is urging law enforcement agencies "to adopt new guidelines for conducting photo lineups, videotaping witness interviews and corroborating information from jailhouse informants, among 30 recommendations," The Washington Post reports. The Post further reports that more than 20 states record interrogations statewide, and another 850 law enforcement agencies voluntarily record interrogations.

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - police interrogations