One Way or Another? Criminal Investigators Beliefs Regarding the Disclosure of Evidence in Interviews with Suspects in England and Wales

Date

2015-07-11

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

0882-0783

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

The research base concerning interviews with suspects remains to be comprehensively developed. For example, the extant literature provides differing views regarding how best to undertake the important interview task of disclosing evidence. In the current study, using a self-report questionnaire, 224 investigators based in England and Wales were asked as to their own preferred methods. Most respondents advocated a gradual method of disclosing evidence, stating that this approach would better reveal inconsistencies and obtain a complete version of events (similar to the reasoning of those who preferred disclosing evidence later). Those who advocated revealing evidence early stated this approach would more likely elicit confessions. Several respondents would not commit to one single method, arguing that their chosen strategy was contextually dependent. The study’s findings suggest that it remains arguable as to whether there is one best approach to evidence disclosure and/or whether particular circumstances should influence interviewing strategies.

Description

The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link

Keywords

Investigative interviewing, Evidence disclosure, Investigative interview tactics, PEACE model, Investigative interview strategy

Citation

Walsh, D., Milne, R., and Bull, R. (2015) One Way or Another? Criminal Investigators’ Beliefs Regarding the Disclosure of Evidence in Interviews with Suspects in England and Wales. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology, 31(2), pp. 127-140.

Rights

Research Institute