Recently in Eyewitness Identification Category

Good you identified the witness

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This article was a study that was completed at Iowa State University.  It highlights qualities of identification testimony, feedback to eyewitnesses, On-Line vs. post-computed judgments, and securing false identifications.

This article relates to everything we have previously talked about in class.  I really recommend that you take the time to read through it and post any comments or questions about the study that come to your mind. 

http://www.psychology.iastate.edu/FACULTY/gwells/Wells_articles_pdf/Good,_You_Indetified_the_Suspect.pdf

All About Forensic Psychology

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Here is a fun, yet informative little website that I ran across that has some good information about of variety of topics.  Some of these topics may help you with your project (depending on your role) and others are just full of useful information!

Mind Traps

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I found this website that talks about traps that your mind does to you that usually make you think incorrectly. I thought the first one was most relevant to this class. It's called the anchoring trap and it's when you base your thoughts/decisions off of the first thing you hear. The example they used is a study that asked people two questions: Is the population of Turkey was over 35 million? What's your best estimate? The results showed that almost everyone guessed around 35 million. They asked the same question to other people using 100 million instead. The results were the same. This reminds me of questioning witnesses and how using leading questions can result in false answers. If a witness isn't totally sure about what happened and they're asked if the suspect was fat, they're probably going to think the suspect was fat. The website gave 9 more mind traps that are very interesting as well and it shows how powerful our brain is and how we don't always realize that. Here's the website: http://litemind.com/thinking-traps/

Illusion or Reality?

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This website gives good "demonstrations that we live in a brain-constructed world."

You are given quite a few optical illusions and explanations as to why our brain tricks us into seeing or not seeing things.

Particularly important to this class are the light trick illusions.  The lighting of the crime is very important when determining the reliability of an eyewitness identification.  For example, if the crime happened in the middle of the night and there is very little light, an eyewitness may report that they saw every fine detail of the perpetrator when in fact this is likely untrue.  When sufficient light is not available and visibility is limited, the brain is given incomplete information.  Therefore, if the brain is given incomplete information, it is likely that the witness will fill in the gaps with previous experiences and information, making the identification less reliable.    

I'm not sure if the lighting is documented along with all of the other information that is initially document at the scene, but if it is not, it should be!

I'm not an investigator or remotely close to being labeled one, but something tells me a case with 2 or 3 suspects doesn't seem near as bad as having to deal with 26. How would you even begin? Where would you begin?! The news story I chose deals with the murder or Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Mabhouh. Investigators had it "narrowed down" to eleven suspects when Dubai police announced that they had 15 new suspects. Investigators now have the daunting challenge of narrowing down this huge list of suspects. Police in Dubai, India suspect that secretive Israeli foreign intelligence unit is behind the attacks. Not only is the amount of suspects an issue to deal with, but also the fact that these suspects are carrying passports from various point around the world (passports from Australia, France, Ireland, Great Britain). Countries that are helping out with the investigation also noted that those passports were created in a legal manner - what a shocker.

Check out this story - there are videos along the left side you can view for further information.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/02/24/uae.murder.plot/index.html

Tips: Witnessing a crime

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I was interested after talking about mock witnessing in class and other forms of eyewitness accounts, about what to do if you do witness a crime. I researched some websites to see what they might say about what someone should do if they do see and know that a crime is being committed.

We all might think now that if a crime was going on then, yeah, we know exactly what to do, but when an actual crime is happening in front of our eyes the question is what would we really do in that situation. In example, I thought the first time I was going to get pulled over by the police I would be calm and not panic, but the truth was I cried, and this wasn't how I pictured myself reacting to that situation. I know that people give tips on doing things, and that is what the websites are for below, tips, and whether they are helpful tips to any situation, they are better than not having anything at all. I just thought that it would be interesting to know what the tips were to witnessing a crime, and even though they are common sense it always nice to be reminded just in case something happens in front of your eyes that was extremely quick. So here are some websites with tips for if you ever witness a crime of any kind happening in front of you! Plus they are kinda interesting!!

http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/YoungPeople/CrimeAndJustice/GoingToThePolice/DG_10027687

http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/what-to-do-if-you-witness-a-crime.html

http://crime.suite101.com/article.cfm/witnessing_a_crime

This link will take you to a story featured in FRONTLINE, as a result of a mistaken identification from an eyewitness.  In the story, Jennifer Thompson was trying to identify her rapist, but because of faulty lineups, she chose an innocent man instead of her actual rapist. It really is an interesting story because they give you the lineup with the mistaken rapist and they also show you the real rapist. It also gives the composite, and how the two relate to it. 

You should check out the website and click around on some of the links about the case and what Thompson saw in the lineup. 

This link will take you to an article that went along with this story and goes along with what we've been covering in class about constructing lineups. 

The article is written by Gary Wells, a psychology professor at Iowa State University.  He, like Dr. Maclin, believes that there are faults in our legal system because of the methods of eyewitness identification.

As this case and prior data and findings suggest, several people are wrongfully convicted based on wrong eyewitness identification and faulty lineups.  The two play off each other as well.  For example, say a witness believes they can identify their attacker, however the police constructed a lineup where one suspect completely stands out from the rest, therefore the witness is more compelled to pick the person who stands out more, not realizing that this is actually not the man who attacked her. 

The witness's perception could also bias their pick out of a lineup.  If a guy looks meaner than the rest, or has more tatoos, the witness may associate this person with being more aggressive and therefore, more likely to be the offender.  As this area of research continues to grow and collect more results, better methods of obtaining eyewitness information and constucting lineups are being developed in hopes of improving of our justice system.  The growth of DNA testing and its use as evidence is also becoming more widespread and accurate to put the right people behind bars. 

http://www.keysso.net/commrelations/crimepreprograms/suspect_id.pdf

Monroe County Sheriff's Office in the Florida Keys has a big population with few Sheriff's to cover all of the people. On their web page it states, "the Sheriff's Office employs 578 people187 of those are road patrol officers and detectives, 144 are Corrections Officers, 182 serve as support 65 people are employed by the Sheriff's Office-managed HIDTA Group (High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area)."  They have this many people for as many as 150,000 people in their population and that does not count the tourists that can reach as many as 2,000,000 people.  With so many people in their population, and a high turn-over rate the department needs something to help catch suspects.

To help identify a suspect of a crime, the Monroe County Sheriff's Office has a document that allows the witness to fill in details of the perpetrator they saw. The document has the witness fill out the physical appearance of the suspect (with a drawing of a blank suspect to the right), the clothing they were wearing, what weapon was used and there is a drawing of weapons at the bottom of the drawing of the person, and anything about the vehicle used in the crime (if one was used).  It is a very detailed outline asking anything from the scar marks, speech, or physical defects of the perpetrator,  to the license plate number of the vehicle used. 

I believe this would really help local law enforcement agencies around Iowa to catch the correct people, instead of mistakenly persecuting innocent people.  This document can come in very handy if someone gets victimized and needs to write down anything they can remember of the perpetrator, the weapon, or the vehicle used in the crime.  I believe having this handy will allow anyone to keep their memory less contaminated if they write all of these facts down right away before talking to anyone.

"The Magic of the Mind"

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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/dna/photos/eye/text_06.html

I found this article by Dr. Elizabeth Loftus and Katherine Ketcham in their book "Witness For the Defense: The Accused, the Eyewitness, and the Expert Who Puts Memory On Trial." It discusses everything we have been talking about in class the last 2 weeks: memory as evidence, witness misidentification, and wrongful conviction. It's kind of long, but it covers a lot of information, and provides cases and examples of the different topics discussed. The authors discuss how memory works, and how studies have shown that people have a hard time identifying objects they would see on a regular basis, such as: pennies, the letters that correspond to the numbers on a telephone, etc.

They also discuss how people can create memories from stories/information they are told.

 "...Child psychologist Jean Piaget, in his Plays, Dreams, and Imitation in Childhood, related a personal story about the malleability of memory:

'...one of my first memories would date, if it were true, from my second year. I can still see, most clearly, the following scene, in which I believed until I was about fifteen. I was sitting in my pram, which my nurse was pushing in the Champs Elysees, when a men tried to kidnap me. I was held in by the strap fastened around me while my nurse bravely tried to stand between me and the thief. She received various scratches, and I can still see vaguely those on her face. Then a crowd gathered, a policeman with a short cloak and a white baton came up, and the man took to his heels. I can still see the whole scene, and can even place it near the tube station. When I was about fifteen, my parents received a letter from my former nurse saying that she had been converted to the Salvation Army. She wanted to confess her past faults, and in particular to return the watch she had been given as a reward on occasion. She had made up the whole story, faking the scratches. I, therefore, must have heard, as a child, the account of this story, which my parents believed, and projected into the past in the form of a visual memory.'..."

Another topic they discuss is what psychologists refer to as "event factors,"  defined as 'those factors inherent within a specific event that can alter perception and distort memory.' The case used as an example of this follows.

"Two men in their mid-twenties were hunting for bears in a rural area of Montana. They had been out all day and were exhausted, hungry, and ready to go home. Walking along a dirt trail in the middle of the woods, with the night falling fast, they were talking about bears and thinking about bears. They rounded a bend in the trail and approximately twenty-five yards ahead of them, just off the trail in the woods, was a large object that was moving and making noise. Both men thought it was a bear, and they lifted their rifles and fired. But the "bear" turned out to be a yellow tent, with a man and a woman making love inside. One of the bullets hit the woman and killed her. When the case was tried before a jury, the jurors had difficulty understanding the perceptual problems inherent in the event; they simply couldn't imagine how someone would look at a yellow tent and see a growling bear. The young man whose bullet killed the woman was convicted of negligent homicide. Two years later he committed suicide." 

The two hunters were in the woods all day, looking for bears, thinking about bears, wanting to see a bear. In the low light, they saw a large object moving and heard noises, they assumed it was a bear, and shot.

Loftus and Ketcham also discuss witness misidentification and wrongful conviction. They use the case of Jimmy Landano, an ex-convict who spent time in prison, who was wrongfully convicted by four eyewitnesses and three accomplices as the man that killed a police officer in 1976. Despite overwhelming evidence and an alibi proving his innocence, he is still in prison writing letters to lawyers and other wrongfully convicted people trying to prove his innocence.

 

 


 

Almost everyday we hear about the effects of being positive on our health and social relationships.  However, current research suggests that bad, negative moods can also be useful especially at improving one's memory. 

Researchers found that people in bad moods were less susceptible to believing urban legends and rumors as well as being less prone to stereotype others or have a racial bias.  The study found that those in a negative mood were better at remembering what they had seen and had more effective communication styles.  Joseph Forgas, the study author wrote "....people in a negative mood are less prone to judgmental errors, are more resistant to eyewitness distortions and are better at producing high-quality, effective persuasive messages." 

Better yet, the study suggests that being mad be very beneficial when something bad happens to you by bettering your ability to remember and identify the perpetrator.  Because of this, it is more likely that law enforcement will be able to catch the perpetrator and hopefully lessen the likelihood of falsely accusing others. 

According to this research, maybe law enforcement should consider deliberately making eyewitnesses mad in order to yield better results from their recollections of the crime.  Anything that helps law enforcement catch whoever is responsible is good right?...but would intentionally making eyewitnesses who may already be emotionally distraught mad be ethical?        

 

Cops Get Drunk While on the Job

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This is actually a smart way for an Officer to get trained on how to recognize a drunk driver.  This type of training envolves police officers getting drunk inside a controlled environment while the police officers that are sober examine the intoxicated police officers motor skills and speech.  Not only that but it will also come in handy when an intoxicated person is brought into court.

 

http://www.cnn.com/video/?/video/us/2010/02/25/dnt.cops.get.drunk.wdtn 

Eyewitness Identification Activity

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During the past two weeks of class, we've been discussing both the power of eyewitness testimonies, but also how unreliable memories can be. People do not realize how difficult it is to accurately identify someone even when a witness may be paying close attention to their surroundings.

This activity allows you to play the part of an eyewitness and accurately "describe" the person. Although incredibly over simplified, it illustrates that it's not as easy as it may seem. I did the exercise a few times, varying the amount of time I looked at the top picture to mimic a situation in which I only saw the perp for a few seconds. I may have a horrible memory, but I didn't do well at all. To have this kind of evidence be taken as absolute truth in a court of law with no other supporting evidence would be tragic and unfair.

http://www.quickflashgames.com/games/eye-witness/

Eyewitness Identification

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In class we have been talking a lot about the different procedures that law officials go through from the first 911 call to the end of the trial. Recently, we have talked about the importance of memory and eyewitness identification and all the implications these two forms of evidence can have. Below is a link to an article written by Gary Wells, Mark Small, Steven Penrod, Roy Malpass, Soloman Fulero and C. A. E. Brimacombe, (1998). This article is often times referred to as the "white paper". This article is meant to be an eye opener to people, and for them to realize the many implications in conducting lineups. Also, it goes into great detail explaining the many ways our legal system can avoid contaminating memory evidence and limit the amount of false witness identifications. (This is kind of long, but is worth your read if you are interested in this sort of topic).

http://www.law.northwestern.edu/academics/colloquium/Gary%20Wells/Gary%20Wells%202.pdf

Wells, G., Small, M., Penrod, S. Malpass, R., Fulero, S., & Brimacombe, C. (1998).       Eyewitness identification procedures: Recommendations for lineups and photospreads. Law and Human Behavior, 22




False Memories

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While on the topic of eyewitness identification and memory in general I want to show this video that I saw quite some time ago that Elizabeth Loftus did on 60 minutes about false memories involving Disney World and Bugs Bunny.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RLvSGYxDIs 

This other clip is also about being able to suggest memories that never happened.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQr_IJvYzbA

I believe because of cases like this that it is very hard for me to believe memories that have been brought up in therapy to be used as evidence in court.  It just goes to show that with memory anything is possible and if it never happened that's not a problem because one can suggest a picture so vivid that in your mind you can see it happen even though it never did.

 

 

With all the talk about eyewitness in class last Tuesday, it reminded me perfectly of a Dr. Phil episode I watched a couple of weeks ago.  Dr. Phil talked about how often false eyewitness identifications are made, and he made his audience participate in an eyewitness account.  He showed them a short clip of a crime, I can't remember exactly what it was, and then he put a lineup of possible offenders, and had the audience key in which person they thought committed the crime.  Results showed that a high percentage was towards one of the suspects, when in reality, the offender wasn't even in that line up.  He went into more detail of explaining how often this happens. 

After this brief introduction, he brings in a woman, Loretta, who was brutally raped at age 15.  The man convicted was Dean, who was 29 at the time.  He was in prison for 14 years, until DNA evidence proved he was not Loretta's rapist.

To this day, Loretta still believes than Dean is the man who raped her.  She can't believe that they let him out of prison, and despite all the DNA evidence proving it wasn't him, she still believes it was.  Dr. Phil has an emotional interview with her, explaining all the DNA evidence is correct, and that Dean is innocent.  In turn, Dr. Phil also has Dean come on the show, and he interviews him as well.  He feels horrible for this woman, but at the same time, he lost 14 years of his life in prison for being falsely accused.

I couldn't find the full episodes for this anywhere, so I put a clip of Dean and Loretta's meeting for the first time. It's the link entitled "See Loretta and Dean's first encounter since she helped put him in prison in 1994."

Also, you can click around on this website as well and watch other little clips from the show.  It's a really interesting story.

 

 

 

Face Recognition

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In class, we have been talking about memory and how witness identification is a key role in many cases. I came across this website, which has a couple face recognition tests. It was really interesting to see that my memory isn't as good as I thought it was. Memory, as defined in class is the ability to recover information and keep it stored safely. These tests mostly focus on short term memory. Try one of the three tests, its shocking to see how good, or bad your memory is!

http://www.faceblind.org/facetests/index.php

 

"Caucasians and Asians don't examine faces in the same way, according to new research. PhD student Caroline Blais, of the Université de Montréal Department of Psychology, has published two studies on the subject: one in Current Biology and the other in PLoS One."

http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/1h3Ypm/www.brainmysteries.com/research/Recognition_of_facial_expressions_is_not_universal.asp 

  Above is a great, albeit quick, example of research being done on facial recognition, and featural processing strategies.  The article suggests that the common assumption that all facial recognition follows a bottom-up approach, in that various individual parts of a persons face are combined and an overall impression is then formed, may be accurate for causasions, but not other races. 

  Using eye-tracking technology the research demonstrated that causasions spend most time shifting between both eyes and the mouth forming a recognizable "triangle" pattern.  However, Asians were demonstrated to spend time focusing on the nose and using a wholistic or top-down approach.  The research went on to demonstrate that Asians also had a difficulty distinguishing between various negative emotions which included subtle facial distinctions (e.g. variations in mouth positioning). 

   I'm interested to know some of the implications of this research to witness identification.  The article suggests that neither bottom-up nor top-down processing is better per se, only that they function differently in various contexts.  It would seem that bottom-up processing should take longer yet be more detailed, however I guess research does not suggest this to be the case.  And what reasons are there for this distinction between Asian and Caucasians facial processing techniques? 

  

   

The First 48

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The ever so popular TV show, The First 48 on AE.TV is one that you can count on for truth and facts. The first 48 is a show about homicide detectives that respond to a crime and try and solve it within the first 48 hours. These are real cases with the real people...no actors or replaying of a scene. What you see is what you get!
This show focuses mostly on people that go from suspicion to suspect, eye witnesses, and the interrogation, or interviewing. This really helps you see what a detective does from the moment they get that call.
You can also get a sense of how they figure out what happened and who was involved. They start with the facts that they have off hand and work their way down from there. The one thing that I have started to notice sense we have talked about it in class is the interrogations done by the detectives. In class we learned that a detective will tell you anything you want to hear. They will exhaust you mentally and physically, they will lie to you. Basically they will do anything to get you to confess or turn on anyone. If you notices, in most shows, the detective will either try and play friend, or yell and scream and lie to get them to crack. I find it interesting to watch, now that you really know what is going on.
I have posted the link to the First 48 TV shows. The one on the link I am posting is about a homeless man who is murdered, and a 911 call that has gun shots firing in the background. I urge you to watch the whole show and really pay close attention to the detail that goes into being a detective, especially the ones that do the interviews.
If you are interested after watching this show, you can watch many other episodes with different stories. They get very interesting!



http://www.aetv.com/the_first_48/video/index.jsp?paidlink=1&vid=AETV_SEM_Search&keywords=first%2B48&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=first%2540&utm_term=first%2048

http://www.aetv.com/the_first_48/video/index.jsp?paidlink=1&vid=AETV_SEM_Search&keywords=first%2B48&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=first%2540&utm_term=first%2048 

This is a very interesting article about how the point of a finger gave a man a 50 year prison sentence on a rape charge.

Three days after the rape, Detective Gauldin called the rape victim Jennifer Thompson in to do a photo lineup. He lay six pictures down on the table, said the perpetrator may or may not be one of them, and told her to take her time.

Thompson did not immediately identify a photo, taking her time to study each picture.

"I can remember almost feeling like I was at an SAT test. You know, where you start narrowing down your choices. You can discount A and B," Thompson said.
.

I find it so interesting that the flaws of eyewitness identification can be so obvious. When taking a multiple choice test you being narrowing down the answers. When you come down to the bottom two you seem to make an educated guess. When dealing with 50 years in prison, I would hope the question only has one obvious answer, and isn't multiple choice.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/03/06/60minutes/main4848039_page2.shtml?tag=contentMain;contentBody

Throughout this class we have dealt with many aspect of witness identification. Through the construct a line up project I was amazed at how many people actually guessed the suspect right. So not only is this whole process biased in that a person basically picks as a multiple choice guess sometimes, but also that a line up can be very biased. Many line ups are made with an obvious answer to be picked. Many of think us probably think, so what! That person is probably guilty. However, in this above case we see that a man was wrongly picked from a line up and the consequence was major jail time. When picking out of a line up the person is basically choosing the course for the person. We also learned in class that eye witnesses are of HUGE impact to a jury. This can also lead to false testifying which can easily sway a jury. It starts to make you really reflect upon our justice system and the ways that eye witnesses, juries, and even line ups can be extremely biased.

The Reader

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Bernhard Schlink's novel, The Reader, is one of my all favorite novels because it not only deals with law and psychology but it also is a piece of Holocaust literature. The novel follows narrator, Michael Berg, as he retells his past in three epic parts. The novel begins in West Germany in 1958, almost 13 years after WWII. When Michael was a teenager, he had an affair with a 36 year old train conductress named Hanna. Their relationship was mostly sexual but Michael began to grow strong feelings for Hanna. Hanna was very "down to business" with Michael and very closed off about her past. One of her favorite things to do with Michael was to have him read to her after they had made love. There affair lasts several months until one day Hanna disappeared. Part II of the novel opens several years later with Michael beginning law school. As one of his assignments for law school, Michael observes a war crime trial that attempts to interrogate and punish those who committed war crimes in the Holocaust. On trial is a group of middle-aged women who were active SS officers during WWII and helped guard one of the concentration camps. Michael is shocked and surprised to find out that Hanna was amongst those who were accused.

I do not want to spoil what happens for those who wish to read this book and/or watch the movie, but Part III deals with Michael's life after the trial and what has became of him and Hanna. In Part III several questions are raised that have to do with both the legal world and psychology. One of the main questions that are raised is what are the second generation suppose to do with their Nazi past. In an interview, Schlink has said that one of his favorite professors in school had a visible swastika tattoo. How are the children of the perpetrators suppose to deal with the guilt of their parents as the events of the Holocaust become common knowledge in the 1950s and 1960s? And who can we persecute legally for those who were involved with what had happened in the Holocaust? Surely those who committed murders, but weren't those who committed the murders in fact just following the governments orders? Who can we hold responsible for their actions and where the perpetrators just victims themselves? These are all the things that the book deals with. I would strongly recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in the Holocaust, history, or international law.

 

http://www.amazon.com/Reader-Bernhard-Schlink/dp/0753801728/ref=sr_1_6?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1265914414&sr=8-6 

 

HOW THE BRAIN LIES TO YOU:
Otto Maclin, UNI associate professor of psychology, will discuss how the brain causes misperceptions, including errors in eyewitness identification. Maclin provides workshops for jurors locally and around the country. This event is from 3 to 4 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 17, in the SEC 247. The event is free and open to the public.

What Evidence?

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I was going to use this case for project #7: wrongfully convicted, but it hasn't been proven yet so I just decided to write my blog about it because I found it very interesting. Under the subject of wrongfully convicted, I found a website from Alaska that works on freeing the wrongfully convicted. I found an update on this website about a man named Gregory Marino who was convicted of murder and attempted murder in 1994 with no physical evidence supporting this conviction. The reason Marino's case was on this Alaskan website is because they are raising money to get the fingerprints found at the scene tested to prove Marino's innocence. Although Marino hasn't been proved innocent yet, I feel that he is. I found an article in the Anchorage Daily News from July 7, 1994. This article states that there is no physical evidence proving that Marino committed the crime, but that a 7 year old recalls seeing him commit the murder. I find this completely ridiculous! It really shows some of the problems with our legal system. Marino has been in jail for 16 years all due to a 7 year olds memory of a nighttime murder.

http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1828&dat=19940707&id=-c8pAAAAIBAJ&sjid=YL4EAAAAIBAJ&pg=2576,2662787

The website above is one of the articles written in 1994 about Gregory Marino and the "evidence" the proves he was guilty.

Child Witness Testimony

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In a program series called Discovering Psychology, Philip Zimbardo narrates a particular program called Applying Psychology in Life.
 In the program, Research Psychologist Stephen Ceci is interviewed about child witness testimony. He discusses how investigators can inadvertently alter a child's memory by asking leading questions. His research has also laid down groundwork for interviewing children in many jurisdictions.
 This segment was extremely interesting to me and I encourage you all to watch it. It's roughly 7 minutes long but it is filled with a lot of  useful and interesting information.

http://www.learner.org/vod/vod_window.html?pid=1521
*Please note, this video link is for the entire show. You may need to download Media Player 11 to watch it. To get to Ceci's segment, pull the video's progress bar to 12 minutes and 40 seconds into the video. Also, directly following the segment is a different segment about conflict management that begins with images from the Columbine incident (this begins around 19 minutes and 20 seconds). Please note that this segment is entirely different and strictly pertaining to conflict management among youth and not the judicial system. 

Cambridge Face Memory Test

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This is a facial memory test that shows how well you can remember faces.  This test starts out by showing you a face and you have to guess from three faces which one was the original face.  The test then starts to get harder and harder by showing you six faces for 20 seconds and you have to pick which face was in the lineup of six.  It tn gets harder by putting colors into the faces so you cannot see the details very well.

I got a 76 percent on the test.  It said that a normal person would be able to get around 80 percent.  I think this is a good way of showing how difficult remembering faces can actually be.

http://www.faceblind.org/facetests/fgcfmt/fgcfmt_intro.php 

 

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2009/09/nj_hearings_to_resume_on_polic.html

"TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- While DNA evidence is increasingly used to exonerate prisoners across the country, defense attorneys say the way to stem wrongful convictions is to first prevent misidentifying suspects..."

This article talks about many police departments not following correct procedures when having witnesses identify possible suspects in lineups. Also, the Supreme court-ordered special inquiry is looking into new procedures to prevent false and unreliable identifications. The article mentions that more than 2/3 of the 242 DNA exonerates released were sent to prison because of false identification by witnesses. The article says that most police agencies in the nation are using a simultaneous lineup, when they should be using a sequential lineup. Many people think that a standard should be put in place to be used by police agencies across the country. I think that if a new method can be implemented to prevent future witness identifications, then it should be used. I wouldn't want to go to jail because someone mistook me for someone else in a lineup.

This link provides information on how to help make eye witness accounts better. It talks about how "wrongful convictions from eye witness accounts for almost 75% of 220 cases that were over turned afterward due to post-conviction DNA. It tells some ideas that have been implemented in a few states and how to go about making it so that the Eye Witness Lineup is a Double-Blind Lineup so that they can decrease the amount of unintentional suggestions for the detective to make Eye Witness accounts more reliable. It also has stories about people who were wrongfully convicted. I looked around the whole site and thought it was pretty good information.

http://www.innocenceproject.org/Content/165.php  - this is the link for the facts on eyewitness identification reform.

http://www.innocenceproject.org/news/Blog.php  - this is the link to the blogs of actual cases.

This is an article about a man that was falsely identified in a lineup and spent 22 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. I couldnt imagine the amount of frustration and agony that he experienced during the 22 years that he served! DNA finally exonerated him of the crime but only after he served his sentence. The article shows how not only a witness can falsely identify the perpetrators but also how the victim themselves can also be mislead or mistaken of the actual criminal. I thought this article was very interesting because of the amount of time it took to exonerate the accused and also that the victim was in a way unknowingly persuaded to pick the wrong person in the lineup. Its pretty scary to think that this actually occurs and the amount of actually innocent people in prison is higher them we probably assume.

http://www.psychology.iastate.edu/faculty/gwells/The_Misidentification_of_John_White.pdf

 

I found this article and it is about a string of rapes and murders in the mid 1970's and again in the mid 80's. It is an interesting read. I just found it but it happened back in April of 2009. A 72 year old man, John Floyd Thomas Jr., was found and tried for the murders and rape of 5 cases but is suspected to be linked to more. Although 20 victims survived they all had conflicting description of the man that raped them.

This goes back to the eye witnesses memory or the victims memory. All of his victims had no only different discriptions of their rapist but conflicting descriptions. So this threw off the investigation to finding the actual man that raped them. It wasn't until recently that he was caught and only then did he get charged because of DNA matching to him from some of the rapes and murders that he committed a few decades sooner. What is more interesting about the case is that the detectives where searching for another serial rapist at the time they went and received Thomas' DNA for being on the sexual offenders' list. They connected him a series of other rapes of older, white women, and the detectives were searching for someone who rapes young, black women. The detectives discovered one serial rapist while trying to solve another case!

Here are several articles I thought were interesting:

http://articles.latimes.com/2009/apr/30/local/me-serial-killer30

and

http://articles.latimes.com/2009/may/30/local/me-serial30

 

 

Awareness Test

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This is a test to see how well we actually pay attention to what is going on in front of us. Go to the YouTube clip bellow and watch the video. The first time you watch the video, follow the directions of the narrator and carefully pay attention to the number of passes the team in the white makes. 



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This video is a perfect example of how easily our minds can become distracted by outside influences and we can easily miss things that happen all around us. While eyewitness testimonies are are suppose to be very reliable, videos like this reveal a certain margin of error in what we see and what our brains actually process. 

Eyewitness Testimony on Trial

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This article is about the misconceptions of eyewitness testimony and some cases exemplifying its inaccuracy.  False eyewitness testimonies have put innocent people behind bars, but with the growth of DNA testing and its use as evidence in criminal cases, eyewitness testimony has been found to be highly inaccurate.  This article also describes a few cases and studies researching the accuracy of eyewitness testimony.  According to a study published earlier this year in the journal Law and Human Behavior, false eyewitness testimony contributed to 77 percent of the 230 wrongful convictions exposed by DNA evidence over the last decade (the number of exonerations has grown since the study was conducted). These of course are only those cases for which DNA testing was available, which are usually murder and rape cases. In crimes where investigators are more likely to rely only on eyewitnesses, robberies or muggings, for example, it's likely that the problem is even more pronounced. Studies have also found that subtle, unintentional feedback from police or prosecutors can lead to false identifications.

Psychologists suggest some ways of improving the validity of eyewitness testimony, which include making witness and photo lineups double-blind, where neither the officer conducting the lineup nor the witness knows which person is the suspect. Lineups should also include people that the police know are innocent. If a witness selects a known innocent, police and prosecutors will then know that particular witness's memory isn't reliable enough to be used as evidence.  However, it seems as though the police and prosecutors have yet to change their procedures.   

 

http://reason.com/archives/2009/04/08/eyewitness-testimony-on-trial 

 

I think this article is beneficial in increasing awareness about the inaccuracy of eyewitness testimonies.  The suggestions that were offered should be implicated to see their effect as opposed to traditional methods.  I think we have come a long way by discovering techniques to obtain DNA and use them to exonerate wrongfully convicted prisoners, however, I still feel that we have a long way to go in increasing awareness about the epidemic of putting innocent people behind bars and how to curb that trend.  

The study Loftus and Palmer did on car accident perceptions show how fragile an eyewitness testimony can be.  In their study, Loftus and Palmer conclude that depending on the way questions are asked (i.e. the use of harsh vs. mild words) eyewitnesses would have different perceptions of what they saw during the filmed car accidents.

Experiment 1:

If more harsh, destructive words such as smashed and collided are used in the questions, the faster the eyewitness "remembers" the car traveling at the time of the accident; on the other hand, the questions that contained words that were more mild such as contacted and hit resulted in the perception of the cars traveling at lower speeds at the time of the accident.

Experiment 2:

In the second experiment, Loftus and Palmer seek to determine how these words would effect the eyewitnesses recollection of seeing glass.  Not surprisingly, the group of witnesses that were questioned with destructive words reported seeing glass more often than the group asked with mild verbs and the control group which was not asked about the speed.

Here is a link to a simplistic overview of the Loftus and Palmer study for you all to check out if you are interested!

http://74.125.155.132/search?q=cache:OCFrpv0GkboJ:www.social-science.co.uk/download.php%3Fid%3D438+loftus+and+palmer+reconstruction+of+automobile+destruction&cd=14&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us


 

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