Stuff You Should Know - Selects: How Police Interrogation Works
Episode Date: July 31, 2021Every year, police across the U.S. get thousands of criminals to confess to their crimes. The trouble is, the procedure that almost all departments use is grounded in bad science and can produce false... confessions. Learn about ways of making you talk in this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey everybody, it's Josh and for this week's sysk selects. I've chosen how police interrogation works from back in
2014 it's a really fascinating look into how the cops get people to
Admit that they did the worst thing they ever did in their entire life and some people who didn't do anything at all
To admit that they did something if you thought that was confusing just wait till you hear this episode
But it is pretty mind-blowing so buckle up. Hope you enjoy and as much as anything. I hope it really opens your eyes
Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant
And Noel guess producer Noel is over there, which makes this stuff you should know Jerry's on the beach
Good for her. Yeah, I'm jelly. Yeah, be nice to be on the beach right now. Sure would podcast me on the beach
Yeah, Jerry's a beach person for sure, isn't she?
Okay, she was flip-flop like in the dead of winter. Yeah, that's true. It's a beach person. She's got nice feet
Can I say that I guess fired for saying that I don't think so, okay?
If you said it like alone in a room or something she didn't feel like she could leave you probably get fired for that
But yeah saying it on the podcast everybody. It's probably in the clear, okay?
We'll find out I mean she edits stuff
She'll say thanks Juckers. There you go. So Chuck. Yes
Have you ever been interrogated by the police?
No, that's good. No, it's a good way to be I was shaking down on the street once but they didn't ask us any questions
Stop and frisk. Yeah in New York in Athens
Just walking to the car after being out
Through us all against the wall, Fristus then left
Sure was a real cop
Yeah, they were cops man. I was like what's going on? I don't even know. I still don't know what happened
Well, I guess they were just stopping and frisking it little known fact
Athens, Georgia is the real home of stop and frisk
Well five minutes after it happened. We didn't care, you know, these were college days
Yeah, now though you must be burning with a sense of injustice over there
Well, I ask you if you've ever been interrogated by the police because we're about to talk about police interrogation
So it seems appropriate and before we get started I have some side reading that I think might interest some people
Okay, there is a New Yorker article called the interview. Yeah
There's one called Joe Erity was the happiest man in the world
There is a New Yorker article called the interview. Yeah, there's one called Joe Erity was the happiest man on death row. It's in westward
There's something called Brooklyn's baddest which is in GQ and then lastly looking left or right doesn't indicate you're lying in Smithsonian
So all those articles are awesome and they all have something to do with this police interrogation which is it turns out becoming an increasingly controversial subject
Yeah, and I think this probably brings our police suite to a close or close to it, don't you think?
I think so every time
I know and I didn't even know this existed and then I saw it and it turned out to be one of the more interesting ones I think
Yeah, and it kind of falls into this law enforcement category into the subcategory of largely debunked armchair psychological or armchair psychology techniques
Yes, like polygraph
Yeah, we did that fingerprints
We did that
Truth serum
We did that
Yeah, like there's all these episodes that we've done out there about just law enforcement techniques. We're doing them. We were like, oh, wow, this is, this should not be the way it is
Yeah
And apparently police interrogation is similar
Yeah, it's a bit of a shake down
So let's talk about this, like in the United States there is a long and storied history of rather intense interrogation
And I think, you know, this comes before the United States too, we did a medieval torture episode as well
There were plenty of interrogations going on. We did the Spanish Inquisition. That was pre-United States
Yeah, I would say that falls into the banner though of police and crime
Interrogation
Yeah
So the United States though has, it will carry it on the torch of basically beating suspects up to get confessions
Yeah
This is where the term the third degree comes from actually
Like when somebody's like, hey, why you give me the third degree?
Yeah
They may or may not know it, but they're speaking about interrogation techniques that cops used to use
Yeah, those third degree techniques, a lot of them were involved deprivation
Or, you know, the one where they shine the bright light in your face, that's old school
Yeah
That's an old movie trope
Yeah
But, you know, no access to food and water, long periods of isolation, we might beach up a little bit, we might threaten you
That's the third degree
Right, and then starting in about the thirties, the public started to say, I don't know if this is such a good idea
Because I might end up in a police interrogation one day and I don't want to get beat up
And then I guess the straw that started to break the camel's back came in 1937 in the case Brown versus Mississippi
Where Brown said, hey, your thug cops tied me up to a tree and whipped me more than once
Not just whipped me more than once, strung me up in a tree to whip me more than once
This happened repeatedly and I don't think that the confession they got should stand
Yeah
And the Supreme Court said, we agree with you
The Keynes two buddies were accused of murdering, there were tenant farmers, murdering their boss basically
And of course they were black guys and the boss was a white guy, so they were pretty determined
And we'll see over and over, a lot of these cases of coerced false confessions are mainly because someone really wants to tab somebody as the criminal
Well, yeah, for a lot of different reasons, there can be a sense of injustice
Yeah
There's a genuine conviction that this person is guilty
Yeah
And then there can be the, you know, the case clearance percentage that a cop needs to keep up
But there's a lot of reasons why a cop might say, you need to confess
Yeah, I think a lot of them too that I've seen documentaries on at least are because of the public
Like, hey man, we really need to finger somebody for this
Yeah
Because people are scared
Right
They're more scared than this person who might not be too smart or might be kind of poor and can't afford and doesn't, you know, representation
Yeah
They don't know what's going on, so let's just run them up
Run them up, ring them up
Sure
Run them up a flagpole
Right, and see if it sticks to the wall
Yeah, but despite the fact that it is not easy to get someone to confess, they estimate between 42 and 55% of suspects do confess
And that's the one thing you don't want to do and up to 55% still do it
Yeah, so we should say supposedly up to 80%, 80% of suspects in the United States wave their right to silence and counsel
Yeah, that's just agreeing to be interrogated
Right
Not necessarily confessing
Right, yeah
So, but you can get around the whole idea of a false confession or of being coerced into confessing or whatever just by remaining silent
Not being part of that 80%
Demand your lawyer
I mean, we're going to give you some tips, not how to get away with a crime
Right
But some tips on if you are rounded up and put in a room, there are some things you can do
Right
This is a public service announcement with guitars
By the 1950s, the confessions that were involuntary, they considered involuntary, not just if you were beaten and threatened, but if you were all the deprivation, third-degree techniques were no longer allowed, like even if you couldn't use the bathroom
Or if you've been promised something in return for confessing
Sure, we'll go easy on you, buddy
Or if you'd even just been threatened, that counts as coercion too
Yeah
And so in about the 50s, the United States said, hey, this kind of gentler interrogation technique thing is starting to work out
Let's put a bow on the whole thing and say that for a confession to be admissible, the confessor has to sign it
Yeah
And say, yeah, I didn't do anything under coercion, this is my own full free confession, and here's my signature
Which helped, but certainly didn't stop false confessions
Right
So the thing is, law enforcement replaced the physical coercion with what amounts to, plainly, psychological manipulation
And it's predicated on the idea that when you are saying you didn't do something and you're guilty
Yeah
Then you become stressed out and that stress is derived from anxiety over knowing you're guilty and having to lie
Because when you're being interrogated and you're denying that you're guilty, the cops don't just say, oh, okay, well, thanks for coming by
Sure
If they think you're guilty or they want to think you're guilty, they're going to keep pressing you
Like interrogations aren't necessarily brief things, right?
So the more they press you, the more stressed you should get and the more stressed you get under this idea of interrogation technique
The more obvious it is that you're guilty, which means the more they press, so this feedback loop starts, right?
Yeah, I mean, they're basically relying on a few basic human things inherent to humans, tendencies inherent to humans
One is, you're going to probably open up more to someone who is like you
Two, if you start talking, it's going to be hard to stop
And three, if you're telling the truth, it's going to be harder to lie
Right
So they kind of prey on that with some age-old techniques like the good cop, bad cop
Right, if you feel like you're being persecuted but then you're also being rescued by somebody else, you're going to identify with the rescuer, trust them
That's a classic move
And here's the thing, a lot of this stuff, like the good cop part is predicated on this complete and utter deception
That cop understands where you're coming from and sympathizes with you
That cop does not sympathize with you
That cop may understand where you come from, but he or she probably despises that
And they are not your friend
But one of the whole points of interrogation is for the cop to pretend like they're right there with you
They understand where you're coming from, they feel for you
This is just, you're jammed up and I want to help you get out of it
Oh yeah, you see, I mean, if all this sounds super familiar from every TV show or movie you've ever seen is because it's been written so much
That it's almost like they don't need to do their own, like writers don't even need to do their own research into how this is done
Because it's just how it is in the movies
And how it is in the movies is how it is in real life
When I was reading this, I was like, oh, yeah, I've seen that before
I've seen that technique before
It made me actually researching this article, made me appreciate that there are some TV cop show writers out there who really do their homework
Like The Wire
It was a little more nuanced, like Law & Order, what is it?
I don't watch those
The one with Vincent D'Onofrio
Oh, I can't remember what it's called
Criminal Minds
Something like that, it's not it
Like it's a little more overt
But all the factors are there
Yeah, another one of the tried and true techniques is maximization
That's when they try to scare you if you've ever heard like, oh, you're pretty, Josh, they're gonna love you in prison
I hear that almost every day
That is a classic maximization
Or just, you know, they're gonna throw the book at you for what you've done
Unless you start playing along, you're gonna get the max penalty
Exactly
They may also go the exact opposite route, which is minimization
Which is to create the idea that society will commiserate with you
Because anybody in your position would have done the same thing
That little old lady was asking for her purse to be taken
And this day and age and this economy, that kind of thing
Polygraph was used for a while, and they still use that
But most times, if you listen to our show on polygraphs, they're not admissible in court
So a man named John Reed, he was a polygraph analyst
Said, you know what, there's a lot of things that happen during a polygraph exam that we can use without the machine
Just to root out the truth or lies
Yeah, basically John Reed said, hey, I've noticed through all of my experience
All of these things that a person who is guilty or who confesses at least goes through
And here are some ways to really make this more efficient
To make them react more strongly, to get them to confess faster, more forcefully
And he came up with what are called the Reed technique, nine steps of the Reed technique
Register trademark of John Reed and Associates
Yeah, really, because John Reed and Associates is like this business that's still very much around
Yeah, I don't know if I need to say that, but
It is their technique
And they train the CIA, the FBI, the local law enforcement
They're like the, in the United States, the Reed technique is the gold standard for police interrogation
The problem is, it is also being increasingly proven to be based on basically armchair psychology and not science
It's going through the same thing right now that a lot of the forensic sciences are going through
Based on intuition that doesn't really hold up to scrutiny
And I should say the Reed technique has not been across the board debunked
And it makes sense in a lot of ways, but there are studies out there that have said like, this doesn't really hold up
Yeah, he defends it, he says it's a very sound technique, but false confession comes from improper use in bad police work
And it's not necessarily like the Reed people are treated like they're out to get anybody and everybody
The Reed technique is criticized because the whole foundation that it's built on is the presumption of guilt
And it has been shown to prove or produce false confessions
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Alright, if you sit down in a room to get interrogated by the cops, one thing that they're probably going to start doing is lying to you
And saying, we have evidence that they may not have, we have witnesses that put you at the scene that don't exist
Basically, with a few exceptions, cops can lie and say whatever they want in there
And that is going to make someone nervous, even though you wore surgical gloves when you broke into that house
If they say your fingers are all over the place, you're going to start second guessing yourself and get nervous
Even if you weren't in that house ever, and you know that you weren't in that house, you're going to start to wonder if maybe you suffer from blackouts
And do horrible things like this cop is saying, wow, you're blacked out
And yeah, the courts have upheld the cop's right to deceive
And I read about a study that found that 92% of 630 detectives in the US and Canada that were polled say they use false evidence ploys
How many? 92%? I'm surprised it's not 100
Yeah, you would guess, I mean maybe the other 8% were just like, they didn't even look at what they were saying
But yeah, you can and they do say we have your fingerprints, we have a witness, we have DNA
They can completely lie about what they have and that they have it on you to get you to confess
That's right, because after you confess and sign it, it doesn't matter
You can't say, well that cop said he had evidence, it doesn't matter
And the whole legal basis for this idea, for letting the cops deceive is this long standing notion that no innocent person would ever sign a confession
Even if they were lied to about physical evidence of their guilt being at the scene of the crime because they know they're not guilty
The problem is that long standing idea is coming under more and more scrutiny and is being found to be not the case
Like people, it's been shown, people will, when lied to in situations like that, they will confess to things that they did not do
I know, it seems crazy for people like you and me, because I know I would never do that
But you know, I'm not mentally challenged or I'm not poor and I haven't, you know, there's a lot of reasons why someone might falsely confess
Yeah, and I think though also it's not just necessarily like going, how you are going into it, like yes, a lot of the mentally ill people make up a decent amount of false confessions
Same with mentally handicapped, cognitively impaired people, people of low socioeconomic status
There are a lot of factors that set you up to be more likely to give a false confession
Not knowing your rights
But if we took you and ran you through a long enough interrogation with people who knew what they were doing, who knows what you would sign
I'd be alright
We'll see
Because I understand this all, I know my rights, I have a very strong mind
Well you would probably say I want a lawyer
Well yeah, I'd just end it all
Yeah
And then I'd be like, hmm, I don't know any lawyers
Do you know a lawyer?
I have an entertainment attorney, does that count?
They know lawyers
Yeah, exactly, this is the whole network
So once they bring you in the room, the room itself, and this is all from Reed's manual, he wrote a manual in 1962 with a Northwestern law professor named Fred Inbaugh called Criminal Interrogation and Confessions
I imagine every writer in Hollywood has a copy of that on their shelf
But the room that you see on TV, that's what they suggest, you know, nothing on the walls, a very plain desk, a very uncomfortable chair on one side, two chairs on the other for the detectives, that one-way mirror that's going to serve a purpose of letting people spy on you and just to make you nervous even if there's no one on the other side
And put you out of reach from, this one I didn't really, I had never really noticed, but out of reach from just light switches and maybe the AC, what do you call those?
Thermostat
Thermostat, yeah
Just to make you feel powerless, it's all a mind game to make you feel helpless
Okay, so far, seems pretty intuitive, pretty logical
Sure
Like if you can't flip the lights on and off, it's not something I would think that I would want to do right then, but maybe knowing, seeing that it was that far away
Would just give me this, reinforce the idea that like, I couldn't even if I wanted to because it's all the way over there
That's probably a smaller one
You need a detective in between me and that light switch
Yeah, exactly
But it makes sense, but I point that out because that's the read technique
Right
Stuff like that
Sure
Keep the light switches away from the criminal because it'll make him feel helpless
Right
Does it?
Sounds a little hinky
But it makes sense in a way
Sure
That is the read technique encapsulated
So let's continue Chuck
So that was, that's just the room
Yeah, yeah
That they suggest
If you follow the read technique to a T, and this is one of the saving graces of it
You are supposed to do what's an initial interview
Right
And if you're the detective and you go into an initial interview of an interrogation
You are, the read technique tasks you with going in without a presumption of guilt yet
That's the point of the initial interview is you're supposed to be sizing your guy up
Yeah
And determining for yourself as a seasoned investigator
Right
Whether you think initially they're guilty or innocent
I'm sure that happened some
Yeah, there was another study that found that it's often skipped as well
And that's
They just start like hammering right away
Well, yeah, you're throwing out the potential for this person to be treated as possibly innocent
Right
And if you're not sizing up, you're going in assuming they're guilty
So, but if you do go through that initial interview
The other point of it is that you're supposed to be creating a baseline
Yeah
Which I think is, that showed up in the polygraph one too
Yeah, yeah
Which isn't surprising because John Reed was a polygraph expert for a while too
Yeah, and you've ingratiated yourself, you know, in the first few minutes by this point
Like, if you're in Philadelphia and your suspect has on like a Philly's cap
You might talk about the game last night
Right, exactly
And that throws back to the suspect being more likely to trust someone
That shares their same views that they feel they can identify with
So the detective will do whatever they can to make it seem like
Oh, you're a Catholic, I'm a Catholic too
That kind of thing, you know
Yeah, and so once you've got a little bit of rapport going on
Is when you're going to set your baseline
And I thought this was pretty interesting
And I'm going to start looking for this on cop shows
To see if they don't overtly talk about it, if they're just how good they are
With their, you know, with their acting
Because if they're looking at the eyes
Then they're going to be accurate
Because that's one of the ways, supposedly, you can create a baseline
You're going to ask some questions that require memory recall
And you're going to ask other questions that require more creativity
And you're going to look at where their eyes go
Supposedly, if your eyes move to the right
That is just recall
Because you're, I guess, looking in the direction of your memory center
Of your brain
If it's more creative, you might look to the left
And then you're going to use these later on
To see if your suspect is creatively making up a lie
They might look to the left
Or if they're just truthfully recalling something
They might look to the right
Is that bunk?
Yes
Alright
It's very dangerous, too
Because they, that is incredibly widespread
It's a popular misconception
If you ask anybody, if you move your eyes a certain way
Does it indicate you're lying?
Most people are going to say, yes, yeah, it totally does
I can't remember if it's right or left
But if you look a certain way, it means you're lying
Yeah
So that's a long-standing thing
That's based actually on a self-help philosophy from the 70s
Oh, really?
It's nothing to do with science
And actually, Richard Wiseman, who we incorrectly said
Did some research that proved that ghosts exist
In our ghost episode
Yeah, that guy
He's done some ones to debunk this
He did a couple studies
And in one of the studies, he found
He used footage of people who were holding press conferences
Searching for lost relatives
But the person pleading for their relatives' return
Was later convicted of like killing or kidnapping
Their relatives
So they were obviously lying
They were committing a huge lie
In front of the public
And he found that they were just as likely to look to the left or the right
There was no correlation whatsoever
Yeah, I'm sure there are facial cues or pantomimes
If you're Christopher Walken
But it all depends on the person too, right?
Yes
Like you could be really good at lying
Yeah
Or really good at throwing people off with facial cues
Yeah, or the idea that your eyes move in a certain direction at all
Because you're coming up with a lie
Or because you're remembering something might not
It doesn't mean anything necessarily
Yeah, we also did one of micro expressions
This is a culmination of a lot of shows I'm realizing
Yeah, it really is
So that was another one
You've got the baseline set
You're watching the eyes
Even though you really shouldn't be
But for the most part, you're seeing what your suspect appears like when they're stressed
Or I'm sorry, when they're relaxed
And the reason you're creating this baseline
Of what they act like when they're relaxed
Is because if you ask them questions
And they answer them and appear relaxed
Then supposedly they're telling the truth
Again, this is predicated on some faulty ideas
Because here's the problem
Anxiety is not necessarily linked to lying
Like yes, you may appear anxious if you're lying
But that doesn't mean that if you're anxious, you're lying
Right
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, I would do that
I would do the Chuck technique would be the fast thing
Like I would set him up, I'll call him and be like
Hey, did you watch the game last night?
Yeah, oh cool
Why'd you kill that old lady?
Yeah, you like the Phillies? Yeah
Yeah, it was a pretty good game
How do you think they're gonna go far yet?
Did you kill your wife?
Wow
Boom
That was pretty good
You almost said yes
Yeah, really?
And you didn't kill your wife
No, I mean jeez
That was thrilling
The Chuck technique
I like the Colombo
Oh well, you're just like, that's great
I'm glad you like the Phillies
I just want to thank you for coming by
It was good to meet you
Right
If we need anything, can we call you?
And they're like
They're so relieved that they get to leave
And then you're, oh I'm sorry
One more thing
Why'd you kill your wife?
Was that Colombo dude?
Yeah, he was a little better at it than I was
No, that's pretty good
He would say there's one other thing
It's not making sense to me
If you didn't kill your wife
Why were you found standing over with the knife?
Yeah, so you
That's what Colombo would do
Catch him off guard
Like really get them to let their guard down
I like that
So you said
No wait, Colombo was, I was about to say
He went on and killed his wife
But that was Robert Blake
Yeah, that was Beretta
Yeah
What was his technique?
I don't know, I never watched Beretta
Check your gun with the maitre d
Isn't that what he did?
No, what'd he do?
I think he left his gun with the maitre d
That's what he said he did
Like you know, I'm here, table for two
Here's my coat and here's my gun
We can hang on to that for me
Will you be my alibi?
I think we're at the reed technique now, right?
We are
So the other stuff was from the book
That's based on the reed technique
Criminal interrogation and confessions
But now we are at the actual reed technique
The nine point technique
That is designed to maximize
Discomfort
Which leads to more frequent confessions
Yeah, and it's illegal in a lot of European countries
For children
Which it should be
Because that's another risk factor going in
That can produce false confessions at this age
Of course
And we'll get to some of those later
Those are kind of maddening
When you read about like a 14 year old
That's interrogated without their parents
For like a full day
Yeah
But it happens
So step number one in the reed technique is the confrontation
And this is after the initial interview
You're going to present the facts of the case
You're going to tell them about the evidence
What they're faced with
All the evidence against them
Even if you're making some of it up
You might want to invade their personal space at this time
If you're Matthew McConaughey
And then you start looking for things like fidgety suspect
In their lips or they like mussel with their hair
And then if you're an investigator
You might say, alright
I've got this guy just where I want him
That guy ran his fingers through his hair
He's guilty
Exactly
And that's kind of part of the issue
That a lot of critics of the reed technique bring up
Is that basically if you strip non-verbal stuff out
Then you've got some sound stuff there
The biggest problem is when you're trying to read
The verbal cues because it's not rooted in science
It's rooted in armchair psychology and pop science
Totally
So the idea that somebody's fidgeting
Means they're guilty in their lying
Not necessarily
They could be fidgeting because
Any human being would be really uncomfortable
When placed in that situation
And interrogated by cops who are experts at it
So step number two is theme development
And you're going to be a little more soothing here
With a softer voice
And this is when you come up with some theories
And a story maybe of why they committed this crime
Like you just couldn't go on any longer
Knowing your best friend had sex with your wife
You just couldn't live with that, could you?
And if the suspect latches onto that
In some verbal or non-verbal ways
And they'll continue
If they don't
Then they'll just create another theme
Yeah
And the detective will basically just kind of
While they're creating this story
For the suspect to latch onto
They're also actively listening
To the suspect to see if the suspect
Will latch onto it in any way, shape or form
And if they don't
They try another one
If they do
Then they start to kind of beef that one up
And that leads to alternatives
Which actually comes later
Yeah
But in the meantime
One of the main techniques of the read technique
Is stopping denials
But I didn't do it, Josh
Yeah
Listen
I'm telling you, I was...
Imagine my finger on Chuck's lips right now
That's why
You would never do that
No, you stop denials because
It creates a sense of hopelessness
Like don't you feel hopeless with my fingers on your lips?
So hopeless, you have no idea
It makes you feel hopeless that
You don't even have the opportunity
To reason with this cop
Yeah, you can't defend yourself
Not at all
So you have a sense of hopelessness
Plus the other upside
If you're an interrogator
Is that you're keeping the person from talking
Meaning they also can't ask for counsel then
I don't see why people don't just do that
The first thing over and over
Say I need a lawyer, I need a lawyer, I need a lawyer
I read this article in, I think, The Stranger
Aren't they out of Seattle?
I don't know
It wasn't a great article
It was kind of
It was just kind of misleading
Like the author really wanted you to sympathize
With the guy who was guilty
And didn't really reveal that he really was
Pretty guilty toward the end
But it had this really great explanation
For why people don't ask for a lawyer in this article
Makes you seem guilty?
Yes, really
And I've seen it before
But this article really got the point across
That this guy was like, I mean, he'd done some stuff before
Like he dabbled in drugs
And like ran an illegal poker game
And stuff like that
Sure, light malfeasance
Yeah, and he
So enough so that he was like
He knew he was technically guilty in the eyes of the law
But not for this thing that they wanted him on
So he had that guilt to begin with
And then these cops saying like
You're going to really look guilty if you ask for a lawyer
Yeah, that's true
And then the other aspect was
If you lawyer up, we can't help you
Oh, yeah, I've seen that one on TV
If you talk to us, that's the only way we can help you
Get out of this jam
And we want to help you get out of this jam
Like we know we might
We would have done the same thing you did
But the cops never want to get you out of a jam
No, that's not what they're trying to do
And so what they were saying was
Like if you clam up, this
Like who knows what's going to happen to you
They were doing all sorts of really effective psychological manipulation
And the guy they were talking to was a lawyer's son
And this guy, like 40 years old, a lawyer's son
So he'd known his whole life to ask for a lawyer
And even this guy didn't immediately ask for a lawyer
Because these cops got him
You know, I probably wouldn't either actually
If I was arrested today after work
And obviously completely innocent of anything
Mind-blowing if that happened
And I was completely innocent
I would, at first, my first instinct would probably be like
I don't need a lawyer, I didn't do anything
Like why that expense?
Well, I think that's another aspect of the initial
Initial consultation
That initial discussion where it's like
Oh, it's all friendly, we're talking about the Phillies
Why would you need a lawyer for that?
I retract my statement, I get it now
But you should stick to your original statement
No matter what
Like, you have a right to counsel
And there's no reason you should not invoke it
Your punishment is not going to be worse
For asking for a lawyer
Yeah, you should open up
You sound like one of those legal commercials
Called Josh Clark
That reminds me, we should do
We should mention the ACLU episode
That was a pretty good one too
Yeah man, this thing is just so many tangential podcasts
So the stopping denials
That's a big part of the read technique
And then there's something that's similar
That John Reed noticed
But is a little nuanced
There's a difference
And that's objections
To read denials were different than objections
And objections were something to be treated differently
As a result
Yeah, an objection that example they gave here
Was like, I would never rape somebody
Because my sister was raped
And it destroyed our family
So of course I wouldn't do something like that
So to a cop, that's not a denial
A denial is like, I didn't do that
I didn't do that
That's not me, you got the wrong guy
Those are denials and the cop would try to stop you
From completing those sentences
That objection you just said
Is a denial, but it's encapsulated with
Like a reason
Yeah, a justification
Something to it
Do you remember when you used to take multiple choice tests
In high school
They always said that if you don't know the answer
Usually the one with the most
Verbiage, the one with the most words
Is the right one
I never heard that
That was not good at taking tests either
We need to get in the way back
You can go take some more multiple choice tests
Knowing that now
But I think that's kind of the same premise
For an objection
It's not just a denial
There's more to it
And the fact that somebody put that much more thought into it
Means that there's something to that
The cop will take that and cultivate it
And try to turn that around
Right
And they would say
I know you love your sister
And you stood by her
While she was raped
Of course this wouldn't be like a recurring thing
This is just one time thing that you did
And you were out of your head or whatever
Because you care about your sister
So you would never do this all the time
And so all of a sudden
You're giving the suspect
Like a
Something to latch on to
Something for them to
Basically
Re-enter society to an extent
Because at this moment, especially if they're guilty
They are totally
On the outs with society
And the sole representative of society
And who's speaking with them right now
Is the cop that's interrogating them
And everybody wants to be included
Yeah
And if you don't then you're a sociopath
They're going to get you anyway
Yeah, but they're going to have a hard time
Through interrogation
So number five is getting the suspect's attention
Are these the real titles
Or is this just
The liberties of the author of this article
I don't know
We'll call it getting the suspect's attention
And this is when you pretend
To be the ally of the suspect
Because at this point
They're probably looking for a way out
And that's when you might go
If I caught my best friend having sex
With my wife, I'd kill him too
I understand where you're coming from
And
Maybe a little pat on the shoulder
A little rub on the back
Or maybe a pat on the back
And just some reassurance
Like I get to where you're coming from
And it could happen to any of us
And you're in big trouble at that point
Yeah, and that's probably going on
Like throughout
And the themes run, these all overlap quite a bit
But if there's an objection
That you've noticed that you're working
You've turned around and you're working
That objection with an extra layer
Of compassion and commiseration
Can, I guess, really
Kind of start to ensnare
The suspect a lot more
Yeah, it's weird because
I'm repulsed by a lot of this
But I'm also very impressed
By what I've seen on TV
What you can tell is someone who's really good at it
Oh yeah, it's effective
In art form
I believe something like
76%
Of suspects
Who are interrogated in this manner
When you take out people who
Invoke their Miranda rights
Confess
Like it has an enormous
Confession rate
And there's a lot of people
Who, the vast majority
The study I saw
Or the number I saw
39.6%
Of those confessions
Are from guilty people
That's something like 0.04%
Are false confessions
The problem is, there's still such a thing
As false confessions, there's no safeguards
It just so happens that
The false confessions are
In that small of an amount
Yeah, and that percentage isn't high
But if you think about how many people are interrogated
That's like several hundred per year in the US
Up to several hundred per year
That's a lot of people, interesting falsely
Yeah, and it's not like
That those people just
It gets found out at trial
Or somewhere down the road that they're
Innocent, like those people may spend
The rest of their lives in jail
At the worst case, they may be executed
Which has probably happened in the history
Of the US, although it hasn't been
Irrefutably proven yet
Yeah, and you can listen to
How the Innocence Project works
From June 2010
We interviewed Paula Zahn
Oh yeah, that's right
I wish I'd known a lot more about
The Innocence Project back when we did that episode
Yeah
I kind of got it and understood it
But just over the last few years
I've kind of, I've understand it
Even more, I wish I would have known
Better than, it's still a good episode
We talked to Paula Zahn
Yeah, she's a real pro
Yeah, she's Zahn's sister
No, it's not, is it?
Okay, that's how rumors get made
Well, I just liked her like
50% more after you said that
Oh yeah? Yeah, I love Steve Zahn
He's great
All right, and back to the read technique
At this point, number six, the suspect might lose resolve
And
This seemed really obvious to me
If the suspect has
Shoulders hunched, or
Got his head in his hands, or is crying
Then
You've got them just where you want them
Right, you are going to get your confession
Whether it's a false confession or not
That's not guaranteed by
These outward signs
Again, if you strip away the non-verbal stuff
From the read technique, it's pretty
Pretty good stuff
And apparently this is where you really want to regain
Their attention, like if they start crying
Like force them to look you in the eye
Because I guess that works, that increases the stress level
So
Remember we talked about
That theme development?
It's like here's what happened
And they object to that
And then you take that objection, you turn it around
And they start to latch on to that theme
Couched in that objection
You take that next
And as you're developing it
It becomes one of two
Or more alternatives
But basically you're taking
The theme that the person latched on
To
And you're making that the minimal
Example
It's almost like a good cop, bad cop
Version of reasons why you did it
Exactly, so it's
You shot that lady in the back
Because she was a horrible person
Nobody is going to think
That you did it because
You just wanted to insurance money
Exactly, anybody in your position
Would have done this
And everyone's going to understand
This is why you did it
Not this horrible reason
This reason
Society can live with
Maybe you'll go to jail for a year or two
But when you come out everybody's going to say
Hey, that Bernie guy is okay
I would have shot that old lady in the back too
Did you see that movie?
It's not
Hey, that Bernie guy needs to burn in hell
For the rest of his life because he killed some poor old lady
For her insurance money
So with the cops
Sitting there saying
We're saying you're agreeing to
Here's this horrible interpretation
That I can't control
But this I've created
And sculpted with your help
So let's throw this horrible big thing away
And this thing that doesn't seem nearly as bad
Is what the press will hear
They'll start to put it down on paper
Yeah, but here's what you're not thinking about
What you're doing
It's the same in both cases
Is you're confessing to a murder
And you are just at a point
To where you think
Man, that sounds way better than a newspaper
And this other thing
And also it's coming out of the mouth of this detective
That is appearing
To commiserate with you
That has empathized with you
That maybe told you on the side like
I hated that old lady too
And I'm glad you did it
The cop can totally say that
And to win the trust of the suspect
So all of these factors combine
All of a sudden you have a story
You're working out with the cop
You may not even realize that that's what's going on
And then the cop's going to say
I have
A piece of paper and a pen here
And I want you to write down
What we just talked about
I want you to write down your confession
Yeah, well they're going to bring someone else in there first
Well there's probably already someone else in there
They may bring a third person in there
Yes
To try and force them to retell their story
Which they probably won't want to do
And that's when you can introduce
Like hey, you don't want to tell the story again
To this new detective
I know you're tired
Just take this pen
By this time
The person will likely want to
Do just about anything to get out of that room
And from
Writing and signing this confession
There's salvation on the other end
There's a light at the end of the tunnel
Even if it's possibly jail
They can get out of this room
They can get out of this horrible
Interrogation
They may promise like a hot meal
Like something as simple as that
Can get someone to sign a confession
At the end of a long, long day
Right
So you've got the written confession
You have it signed
They probably have to sign an additional waiver
That says I didn't write this under coercion
Or else they'll include that in the confession
And then you have
Basically what amounts to
A slam dunk conviction in court
Yep, and that is the read technique
And we're going to talk about some real cases
Of interrogation
Right after this break
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But you might have an Airbnb too
Find out what your place could be earning
At airbnb.ca
Alright Chuck, so that's the read technique
Yep, you've got your perp
Super effective
And
It has been used in plenty of cases
Like we said, the number that I saw
Is like 0.04%
Of confessions
Or false confessions
Which is extraordinarily small
Which means that a lot of truly bad guys
Get caught through the read technique
Right?
That's right
And there's this one in this article
On how police interrogation works
And it's with
A woman named Nicole Michelle Frederick
It's between her
And a detective named Victor Lauria
And it takes place in Detroit
In September of 2003
And Nicole Michelle Frederick
Was the stepmom
To a two year old daughter
And the two year old daughter had
Shown up in the hospital
I believe unresponsive
With bruises all over her body
Had clearly been physically abused
And the stepmom was saying
She falls down a lot
And anybody heard her
Like she just gets bruised like that
And it certainly wasn't me
But not only was it not me
I don't think it was anybody
The little girl just falls down
She does it to herself
And with that
Detective Lauria
Took her to be blaming the victim
That she was trying to
Go free by blaming this little girl
For being clumsy
Well, clumsy and difficult
Was that sounds
By trying to get some
Empathy going like hey, I get it
Like this is a tough baby
And I'm sure it's trying
And it's very difficult
So all of a sudden
Detective Lauria has this
I guess this theme
This justification that was set up
By the suspect
He starts to play it out
He's saying like
This girl, she was a difficult baby
She's crying
You lose your head for a minute
And you get a little rough
It could happen to anybody
And
Ms. Frederick says
That's not right at all
Nobody hurt this kid
I don't understand why you don't believe me
You seem to be not listening to me
From what I understand
You're in the danger zone right there
In your interrogation
If somebody's saying
You're the detective
You're not in control right then
They are
So Lauria started to look for another theme
And it was along the same lines
But rather than losing your head for a minute
It was a split second
Something happened in a flash of a minute
Or flash of a second
And she perked up a little
Yeah, she started to latch on to that one
Yeah, so then he knew he had her
In a pretty tough spot
And she started nodding her head
And said, you know what
If you don't explain this thing
Everyone's going to just assume
That you're this awful, abusive person
I think people might understand more though
Because everyone's been there
If it was just a split second thing
And you lost control
People are going to get that
So those are the alternatives all of a sudden
And then it came out
That her daughter had
Had brain damage
And was likely not going to die
And then all of a sudden
The suspect started saying
They're going to get me for murder
Yeah, well, he pointed out to her
He's like, by the way, you haven't even asked
About the condition of your daughter
And she was like, no, I have it, totally have
And he's like, no, you really haven't
And she's like, well, how is she?
She's not going to make it
And that's when she goes, oh, no
I'm going to be tried for murder
I'm going to be
She confessed, I believe, right?
Yeah, she admitted to shaking
Shaking the baby
And then said out loud, I killed the little girl
I killed her
So she was convicted
Of killing her two-year-old stepdaughter
And last I saw
I found an appeal in 2005
That was denied
That was the last I saw of her
After her conviction
So it does work
It takes steps
And got
A bad guy in this case
Yeah, and so a lot of times
It goes down just like it should
But it is super controversial
Which we've talked about some
And you mentioned at the beginning
One of the biggest problems is
It's guilt presumptive
They go in there thinking, alright, this person's
The goal of the interrogation
Is to get a confession
Not to find out whether or not
In many cases they go in there
Thinking this person's guilty
And
If you're going in there thinking you're guilty
Even if you don't mean to
You're going to start to filter out
Any reasons why they might be innocent
Even if they're good reasons
And valid reasons
No, it's not
Well, it's a pretty huge flaw
Really
Even if it does result in only 0.04%
Of false confessions
You also mentioned that
The whole purpose of the interrogation
Is to make someone stressed and uncomfortable
And then when you notice people
Behaving stressed and uncomfortable
That's a presumption, an indicator of guilt
Supposedly when
It's like you said what you call a feedback loop
Right
I want to make you stressed and uncomfortable
You're being stressed and uncomfortable
That means you're guilty
Exactly, yeah, it's
An odd way to approach things
Is coercion
And then there's also been a lot of people
To point out that a lot of these techniques
Are the same thing that are used
In brainwashing
Which we did a show on July 2009
Did a brainwashing show
Invading personal space
Not allowing the person to speak
Using contrasting alternatives
To have them come to
Make them feel like they're
Making a decision
That they have a choice or some sort of power
I think you brainwashed me in that episode too
We did a little role play
It was awesome
I turned you into a prep
That was five years ago
And then position and confession
Is a means of escape
That was the last step
Before resolution
Was to say
Denounce your family
And you'll be saved
In this case it's signed this thing
And you're going to get that hot meal
And you'll figure it out
The thing is
It does produce false confessions
And I saw somewhere
That 20 to 25%
Of people who've been exonerated
With DNA evidence
Gave a false confession
So people go to jail
For years for this kind of thing
Here's a few of the more famous cases
Peter Riley in 1973
Was an 18 year old
Whose mother was murdered
I think no siblings
And no father
So like the only parent he'd ever known
And after eight hours of interrogation
By Connecticut police
He confessed to brutally murdering her
And was convicted on manslaughter
Based on the confession alone
There was no evidence, no motive
Medical findings suggested there were at least
Two attackers
And the town really got behind
Him apparently and like
Said this kid didn't do this
And let's have bake sales and raise money
And Arthur Miller
The famous playwright lived in the town
And he championed it
Because he did a lot of work with ACLU
And eventually new evidence
Came out that exonerated him
And he was set free
After three years in prison
Three years, not too bad
That's better than Earl Washington Jr
Who in 1982
He was described as in police everybody
I'm using scare quotes here
And Earl just as mildly retarded
He had an IQ of 69
Which is a whole other kettle of fish
That doesn't mean anything anyway
But he confessed
To raping and murdering a 19 year old woman
Under interrogation
He was convicted on the confession alone
Right?
Just on the confession
And spent 18 years in prison
Some of it on death row
And was apparently rescued from
The executioner
With like nine days to go
Yeah, but at the same time as a jury
What are you to do when someone says I did this
You know?
I mean hopefully
I don't know maybe add some other evidence too
No, I agree
The thing is
Is Earl Washington's thing
He was
Somebody else was caught doing it using DNA
That's been a huge change
To this kind of thing
At least exonerated people
Free and clear
But that brings up another problem
With false confessions
Guilty people stay free
And they accumulate more victims
Over time
How many more children
Would that lady in Detroit
Have abused
If she'd gotten off or something
And the guy who
Created
The read technique
Actually had a false confession
Wrongful conviction under his belt
A guy
If you read the article
The interview
The first thing it talks about
Is this guy in the 50's who was in jail
For 20 years for murdering his wife
Even though he didn't do it
Who was interrogated by John Reed himself
Wow
The guy who actually did do it
Went on to rape pregnant women
And commit all these other
Horrible crimes
He wouldn't have
Done had he
Been caught the first time
Or had the cops still been looking for him
It's a huge point
It's not just innocent people
In prison, it's guilty people out
Still
If you really want to see
This all firsthand
I highly recommend the documentary
From Ken Burns, Sarah Burns, and David McMahon
The Central Park Five
And this is the famous story in 1989
Of
Five young African American men
Who were set up the river
For a rape in Central Park
And they did not do it
And it's a great documentary
And it just summarizes
How you can get a false confession
Very nicely
And it all plays out and you see these interviews
And get really angry
But that was definitely a case
Of sort of like with the Atlanta child murders
Like people are scared
And we've got these five youths
Who aren't so smart
And they're poor
And we can
We think they did it and I don't care what the evidence says
We need to finger them for the crime
And put them all over the news
So people will feel safe again
But they were eventually exonerated
Thanks to DNA again
And they spent
Depending on which guy
Between six years and twelve years in prison
And really great documentary
I think it's on Netflix
It is
Have you seen it?
So Chuck this
We've basically been talking mostly about the read technique
But there are alternatives
There's some law enforcement agencies
Have lost faith in
The read technique
And in Britain apparently in 1990
There was a bunch of false confessions
That came to light
And the British government said
We need to figure something else out
So they created a blue ribbon task force
And said come up with
An alternative to the read technique
Which ironically is
A technique in the read technique
But what they came up with
Was called peace
Which this is the worst
Acronym of all time but preparation
And planning engage and explain
Account closure evaluate
Clearly spells peace
Yes
So they
Came up with it after a couple of years
And by 2001 it was pretty widespread
But the peace technique
Is predicated on the idea
That you're not going after a confession
I love this technique
Like you as an
Investigator an interrogator
You're going in to just
Get the whole story out
And as much detail as possible
And you're not going after a confession
You're not accusing the person of the crime
You're being polite
Here's another thing
And a lot of people think that this will
Cure false confessions
Almost in and of itself
Video taping the confession from beginning
To end
And so what the cops do is they interview
The suspect
They say well what about this
Here's a discrepancy what about this
And they're not being accusatory
They're just putting everything out there
And letting this person explain it
In front of the video tape
The theory apparently decides whether the person is lying
Or not
And this is all built on the
What I think is
A pretty rock solid theory
That it is really hard to lie
And lie and lie
And keep it all straight
And keep it all
In that congruous line
That's believable
At some point if you keep talking
And you're lying a bunch you're going to mess up
And that's what they prey on
They just spent the last eight hours
Like drinking cruddy coffee
And eating a few ho-hos
And being asked questions by
Intergears even if they're being polite
Like yeah
You're going to have a really hard time keeping up
With what you've already said
Like you've got to be a real skilled
Sociopath to lie for hours
And hours and hours
And then they'll bring them in again a week later
And say you know let's have some more tea
And let's sit down and talk
A week later you might forget some of the things you said
Oh yeah
And the cops have the video and they're writing down all the details
Seems pretty solid to me
So good on you Britain and there are some people here
In the US trying to teach it to cops here
But apparently it's just like word of mouth
And the particular
Jurisdiction has to be down with it
And support it and
It's just not super widespread here yet
I mean the read technique isn't the force of law
It's just the gold standard
It's the one that everybody uses
I don't want to be like the cops on the shows
I don't want to do the peace technique
In Canada
I found a completely different technique too
It's called the Mr. Big Technique
Have you heard of it?
It's extremely involved
Basically
You, the suspect
Will meet an undercover cop
Who's posing as a criminal
While you're out and about and free
And easy or whatever
And you guys are going to become friends
And over the course of the next several months
This undercover cop
Is going to gain your trust
And get you to ultimately confess
That shows how little crime there is
Or like, so would you cut down your neighbor's tree
Right, exactly
They can spend like three months on
A single confession, you know
But it's called the Mr. Big Technique
And the reason it's called Mr. Big is
In its ideal form
You
The suspect
Will become like kind of criminal compatriots
With this undercover cop
Who then introduces you to Mr. Big
This crime boss
Who wants you to step up to the next crime level
But is going to get you to talk about this murder
That you did or whatever
And then you confess it and you're being secretly taped
And you don't know it
And you've just entrapped yourself
I love Canada
I might have to move there, man
Are you going to stick around after
Toronto or Vancouver?
One way flight
So we said earlier we were going to give some tips
I think we'd be remiss if we didn't
They seem a little silly but
They recommend you just don't talk
You don't talk
They said, imagine the words I invoke my rights
To remain silent, paint it on the wall
And stare at them
Ask for counsel
Ask for a lawyer
And then the number five thing they say to do
Is cultivate hatred for your interrogator
Who's that from?
Is there something weird like that?
Yeah, it's for recommendations for animal rights activists
Who get arrested
Oh, gotcha
It seems kind of basic to me
It is, but I think it's one of the things
Where they can easily go out the window
When you're in that situation
You know?
And again, if you're in the United States
And you invoke your right to counsel
That's that
They have to stop, and if they don't
That's a big problem
I don't want to know how I would hold up
I know it's no laughing matter
And I shouldn't joke around about it
But I would like to be interrogated
Just to see
So, I guess that's it
If you want to learn some more about
Police interrogation
Check out this article, Police Interrogation
On howstuffworks.com
It's a good one
And you can find that by using the search bar
Of course, and since I said that
I'm going to call this
Jittery Joe's
Coffee
Hey guys, so Paul as well
My wife Cassie and our big fans, y'all
And we've been listening for years
This summer we took a two month honeymoon
To Southeast Asia, it was a blast
Your podcast kept us sane
Thanks for that
We sent you a postcard from Angkor Wat
In Cambodia
It was bought there, written in Borneo
And mailed from Malaysia
And loved to hear your stories about Athens
We actually live in Five Points
On the shortcut road
Where Chuck told about his mystery
Creepy old lady ghost story
I drive by there every day and I always keep an eye out for her
So scary
But my day job is with Jittery Joe's Coffee Roasters
A local Athens institution
And he brought
A huge box of
Coffee and shirts
And hats
And hand delivered it to the office
I think he was surprised to know
That I remember when Jittery Joe's first opened
He was like, oh well that was before my time
I think he
Didn't think I was as old as I was
But I remember Jittery Joe's opening up
It was a big deal, it was like the first kind of
Good indie coffee house in Athens
I didn't know they were the first
But I'm not surprised
The first one I remember at least
But he suggests the Sumatra Wahana
He said it's unlike any coffee I've ever had
People either love it or hate it
So
That is from Mike Lord
And you can just look up Jittery Joe's online
I'm sure you can order this stuff
Thanks for the coffee Mike, it's good
And thank you to your wife Cassidy
For all the support
If you want to give Chuck and I free stuff
We are happy to accept it
You can get in touch with us to ask for
Our physical mailing address
And we'll give it to you
I have to say showing up at the office unannounced
Was a little weird
Since he had a huge box of coffee
It was all for gifts
You come bearing gifts
It's social lubricant
Gifts are
Especially good ones like Jittery Joe's coffee
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You can find in Major League Baseball
International Banks
K-pop groups, even the White House
But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject
Something completely unbelievable happened to me
And my whole view on astrology changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer
Give me a few minutes
Because I think your ideas are about to change too
Listen to Skyline Drive
On the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast
Or wherever you get your podcasts