[Originally published in The
Blue Press, by
Dillon Precision Products, Inc.,
manufacturer of ammunition hand loading equipment]
Just Say Nothing
by Dave Kopel
What if you've just been arrested for something which shouldn't be a crime? For
instance, if a burglar breaks into your home, attacks your children and you
shoot him. Should you talk to the police in detail about what happened? In a
word, "No." Shut up, call the best lawyer you can find, and then continue to
shut up. If you talk to the police, you will only make things worse for
yourself.
Sociologist Richard Leo has written several articles which detail the
deliberately deceptive techniques which police use to extract a confession.
First of all, since 1986 the Unites States Supreme Court has required that all
persons under arrest be given the Miranda warnings, so that they will know that
they have a right to remain silent, and the right to a lawyer. So how do police
convince a suspect to talk, even after the Miranda warning?
Professor Leo explains that "police routinely
deliver Miranda warnings in a perfunctory tone of voice and ritualistic
behavioral manner, effectively conveying that these warnings are little more
than a bureaucratic triviality." Of course, the Miranda warnings are
not trivial; your liberty may hinge on heeding those warnings.
No matter how strong the other evidence against you, a confession will make
things much worse. A confession often makes the major difference in the district
attorney's willingness to prosecute the case, and his willingness to accept a
plea bargain. If your confession gets before a jury, your prospects of acquittal
are virtually nil.
If you are foolish enough to reject the Miranda warnings, simply put, the police
interrogators will attempt to deceive you into confessing. As a result of
increased judicial supervision of the police, deception, rather than coercion
("the third degree") has become the norm for interrogation.
First of all, you will be kept in a physical environment designed to make you
want to waive your rights and talk. You will most likely be kept in isolation,
in a small, soundproof area. By isolating you, the interrogator attempts to
instill feelings of anxiety, restlessness and self-doubt on your part. Left
alone for long periods, you may think you are being ignored, and will therefore
be happy to see the interrogator return.
Ideally, from the interrogator's viewpoint, you will begin to develop the "Stockholm
syndrome," in which persons held captive under total control begin to
identify and empathize with their captors. This can occur after as few as ten
minutes of isolation in captivity.
While increasing your dependence, the interrogator works to build your trust by
pretending that he cares about you, that he wants to hear your story, and that
he understands how difficult it may be for you to talk. The interrogator works
to become your only source of social reinforcement.
There is no law against outright lies or other deceptions on the part of police
during an interrogation. Almost certainly, you will be told that the prosecutor
and the judge will be more lenient if you confess. This is a complete lie. The
district attorney will be more lenient if you don't confess and he can't make a
strong case against you, and therefore has to settle for a plea bargain. Nothing
the police promise in the interrogation room is binding on the police, much less
on the district attorney.
There are five "techniques of neutralization"
which the interrogator may use in order to make you feel that the crime really
wasn't so bad, and that it is therefore all right for you to confess. Of course
the interrogator's pretense that he doesn't think the crime was serious will
last only as long as necessary to obtain the confession.
The first technique is called "denial of
responsibility," allowing the subject to blame someone else for the
offense. For example, "it was really the burglar's fault for breaking in; he's
the one to blame for getting shot." (That's true, but it's you, after all, that
the police are interrogating.)
Another technique is "denial of injury."
For example, "The burglar wasn't really hurt; he walked out of the hospital two
hours ago." Maybe true, maybe not. In truth, the burglar could be in intensive
care and the interrogator could be laying the groundwork for a murder case
against you.
In the "denial of the victim" technique,
the interrogator will suggest that the victim deserved what he got.
"Condemnation of the condemners" is always
popular. For instance, "the real problem is all those anti-gun nuts who let
criminals run loose, but don't want guys like you to defend themselves." True
enough, but when the policeman saying this is holding you prisoner, take his
sincere expression with a large grain of salt.
Finally, there's the "appeal to higher loyalties"
such as "What you did is a common sense thing. Regardless of some legal
technicality, the most important thing is for you to protect your family. Your
family comes first, right?" True again, but the man saying this wants you to
confess to violating the legal technicality, so you can be prosecuted for it.
A close cousin to the denial strategies are the "normalizing"
techniques, in which the interrogator claims to understand that the crime was
not typical behavior for the subject; "I can see that you're not a violent
person. You're not a criminal. You're a tax-paying, home-owning, regular kind of
guy. What happened tonight was really unusual for you, wasn't it?"
You have nothing to gain, and everything to lose by talking. You are not going
to outsmart the interrogator. Even if you don't end up producing a full
confession, you may reveal details which will help build a case against you.
Most violent criminals are too stupid to read, and too lazy to pursue a
time-consuming, high-precision hobby like hand loading. So I'm not worried that
a violent criminal will read this column, and avoid confessing to a serious
crime. Anyone who does commit a violent crime should confess, since they've done
something that is wrong. Too often in America, good citizens are arrested for
victimless "crimes," including unjustifiable (and unconstitutional) gun
regulations. The routine use of deception in order to trick good citizens into
confessions is something that deserves more scrutiny than it has thus far
received.
In the long run, routine deception by the police tears at our social fabric, and
undermines the law enforcement system. The more police lie, the more skeptical
juries are going to be, even when police are telling the truth.
Moreover, there are about 6,000 false confessions for felonies every year in the United States. (Huff et al., "Guilty Until Proven Innocent," Crime & Delinquency, vol. 32, pages 518-44, 1986).
False confessions are one of the
major reasons for the conviction of innocent persons.
Sources: Richard Leo, "Police Interrogation and Social Control," Social and
Legal Studies, vol. 3, pages 93-120 (1994); "From Coercion to Deception: The
Changing Nature of Police Interrogation in America," Law and Social Change, vol.
18, pages 35-39 (1992); Jerome Skolnick and Richard Leo, "The Ethics of
Deceptive Interrogation," Criminal Justice Ethics, vol. 11, pages 3-12 (1992).