"Enhanced interrogation" Essays and Research Papers

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    Terrorist Interrogation

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    treatment of any prisoners in U.S. custody. The Bush administration believes that interrogators are acting lawfully‚ gaining useful information to help win the war against al Qaeda and will continue to press detainees for leads. The controversial interrogation technique known as water boarding‚ in which a suspect has water poured over his mouth and nose to stimulate a drowning reflex‚ has been banned by CIA director Gen. Michael Hayden. Human rights groups and a number of leading U.S. officials have

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    false evidence that proves their guilt and presents it as an incontrovertible fact‚ some suspects will internalize the belief that they actually did commit the crime without awareness (Wynbrandt‚ 2016). One study found that 90% of the observed interrogations‚ interrogators presented the suspect with evidence that they were guilty (Janda‚ 2015). In addition‚ interrogators are trained to express unwavering confidence that the suspect is guilty and to refuse to listen to any explanations or alibis.

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    responses and non-verbal behaviour. However the strategic use of evidence (SUE) technique has said to improve the accuracy of detection of deception upon these other method’s. This technique looks at the strategy of providing evidence at the end of an interrogation process or vagely hinting at the evidence. The use of this technique has many strengths however also indures limitations‚ therefore further research has seen improvements been made to this technique. Various methods are used to assist in the detection

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    Reflection Paper

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    further up than just the military staff. If in fact the scandal at Abu Ghraib was the result of “A few bad apples” and that the whole military was not like this‚ why was it that the military ordered anyone who fits the description taken in for interrogation‚ also could the terrorist who attacked the U.S be considered a few bad apples and we now can be considered terrorists to the Iraqi people because of what our military did to many of their innocent people. ​Before the photos came out the Pentagon

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    confessions are a reality. Why would an innocent person confess to a crime that she did not commit? Are personal factors‚ such as age‚ education‚ and mental state‚ the primary reason for a suspect to confess? Are law enforcement officers and their interrogation techniques to blame for eliciting false confessions? Regardless of the stimuli that lead to false confessions‚ society and the justice system need to find a solution to prevent the subsequent aftermath. In the adversarial justice system‚ when

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    Elaborative-Interrogation

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    In the article‚ “Elaborative-Interrogation and Prior-Knowledge Effects on Learning of facts‚” Wolfgang Schneider acknowledges his research on factual learning strategies. According to Schneider‚ elaborative-interrogation is a learning method that promotes students to infer and elaborate about to-be-learned information by asking and answering “why” questions (1992). This way of learning is most effective when students have prior knowledge related to the new facts. Yet‚ even if students lack prior

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    InterrogationTactics

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    using some rather influential interrogation tactics over the years‚ so that may peer in to the twisted mind of these individuals to hopefully provide some understanding on why they do the things they do‚ and it is within minds that we see how they work; their motives‚ reasoning‚ how they prepare themselves to take on such gruesome acts. Interrogation describes the art of convincing an individual to give up information that is perceived to be withheld. Interrogation is commonly employed by law enforcement

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    the authors give us techniques and information on how the police get what they are in search of. These methods include presentation of false evidence such as fingerprints‚ appeals to god and religion‚ false friendships‚ and prison informants. interrogation are done with the same process‚ police

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    the text in various explanations as to why confessions can be tampered with: the puzzle of false confessions‚ contaminated false confessions‚ law enforcement practices‚ corroborated and nonpublic facts‚ denying disclosing facts‚ recorded false interrogations‚ and inconsistent facts (Garrett‚ 2011). In the case of Jeffery Deskovic’s false confession the police officers gave him facts that were explicit to the case and despite the DNA evidence that was pointing to someone else committing the crime‚

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    Psychology of law

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    13. Which aspect of police interrogation procedures do you consider to be most troublesome or problematic? Why? Support your position with evidence I believe the aspect of police interrogations that is most troublesome is the coercive aspect. The reason I believe this is a serious problem is some interviewees are more susceptible to giving false confessions than others‚ even under the slightest pressure from police. Children‚ teenagers‚ the mentally handicapped‚ drug users‚ and people with psychological

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