Quote from: 5A554F52163B0 on Aug 05, 2010, 09:09 PMYes, it does. Once the suspect in custody invokes his right to counsel all questioning must cease and officers are prohibited from doing or saying anything reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response. It's called the Edwards Rule, since it was based on the ruling in Edwards v. Arizona.QuoteOnce a suspect in custody invokes his right to have an attorney present during question all questioning must stop (see Edwards v. Arizona).
That doesn't mean that officers won't try to get the suspect to say something that can later be used to hang him in court.
Quote from: 5A554F52163B0 on Aug 05, 2010, 09:09 PMYes, according to the ruling (not law) in the case of Edwards v. Arizona. Once a suspect in custody has invoked his right to counsel, police cannot initiate further questioning under the assumption that, if the suspect answers further questions, he has decided to waive the right to counsel he invoked earlier. Instead, once the suspect invokes his right to counsel, police officers must cease all questioning and must also refrain from any words or actions that are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response.QuoteIn addition, officers are not allowed to do or say things are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response.
According to what law? Not according to Edwards v. Arizona
Quote from: 5A554F52163B0 on Aug 05, 2010, 09:09 PMSince the scenario being discussed is, specifically, what happens if a suspect in custody invokes his right to counsel, it is true that there are no games or torture, however you prefer to define it. Once the suspect invokes his right to counsel there are no further questions (other than questions regarding the collection of booking and biographical data), no games, and no torture.QuoteThere are no games or torture.The part about no games is likely not true. The part about torture depends on your definition of that word. After all, according to former president George W. Bush no one was "tortured" at Guantanamo, even though most liberals disagreed. Perhaps "distress" is a better word?
Quote from: 5A554F52163B0 on Aug 05, 2010, 09:09 PMOf course you don't. But whether you have a full confession, partial confession, or pertinent information obtained via the interview, if it was not properly obtained it is worse than worthless. Any such information obtained in violation of the suspect's rights will be excluded, therefore police not only have no motivation to go after such information, but are in fact actively discouraged by the courts from doing so.QuoteOne of the things I wrote was that a properly obtained confession is difficult to beat in court. A confession obtained after I ignore the suspect's invocation of his sixth amendment rights and after I play psychological games to inflict torture is not "properly obtained" and is therefore worthless. I am not going to spend my time hunting worthless confessions.
You don't need a full-fledged confession to hang someone in court.
Quote from: 5A554F52163B0 on Aug 05, 2010, 09:09 PMThere are, unfortunately, unethical police officers just like there are unethical members of every other profession. That is not an implication; it is a fact.QuoteRegarding your question, I and every other ethical police officer will definitely, absolutely leave the suspect alone (as in no longer conducting an interrogation, although booking and biographical data may still be obtained) once he indicates that he plans to remain silent until he gets an attorney.
The qualifier "ethical" in front of the words "police officer" implies that not all police officers are ethical. If all police officers were ethical then using the word "ethical" to refer to them would be redundant. As far as the distinction between "ethical" and "not ethical" is concerned, it depends on the subjective opinion of the person making that judgment. For example, what if the police officer reasons that a little deviousness on his part is the ethical thing to do since it serves the higher purpose of getting a "criminal" off the streets?
Quote from: Sergeant1107 on Aug 05, 2010, 03:25 PMI don't know how you read what I wrote and came to the conclusion that I play psychological games until the exhausted, desperate suspect tells me what I want to hear simply to end the mental torture I am inflicting.
QuoteOnce a suspect in custody invokes his right to have an attorney present during question all questioning must stop (see Edwards v. Arizona).
QuoteIn addition, officers are not allowed to do or say things are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response.
QuoteThere are no games or torture.
QuoteOne of the things I wrote was that a properly obtained confession is difficult to beat in court. A confession obtained after I ignore the suspect's invocation of his sixth amendment rights and after I play psychological games to inflict torture is not "properly obtained" and is therefore worthless. I am not going to spend my time hunting worthless confessions.
QuoteRegarding your question, I and every other ethical police officer will definitely, absolutely leave the suspect alone (as in no longer conducting an interrogation, although booking and biographical data may still be obtained) once he indicates that he plans to remain silent until he gets an attorney.
Quote from: 3F302A37735E0 on Aug 03, 2010, 11:37 PMI don't know how you read what I wrote and came to the conclusion that I play psychological games until the exhausted, desperate suspect tells me what I want to hear simply to end the mental torture I am inflicting.Quote from: Sergeant1107 on Aug 01, 2010, 09:15 PMWhether their refusal to talk makes me think they are innocent or guilty is irrelevant; every suspect has the right to avoid making incriminating statements to me in an interrogation. I choose to look at a suspect's refusal to consent to an interview as nothing more than a very understandable refusal to part with one of the rights guaranteed to them by the Bill of Rights
Every suspect has the right to remain silent just like you have the right to try your best to "convince" the suspect to voluntarily give up his right to remain silent. Sure, you won't put a gun to his head and force him to talk, but you will play psychological games until the suspect, exhausted and desperate to end the mental torture, tells you what want you to hear. Isn't that true? Or will you really leave the suspect alone once he indicates that he plans to remain silent until he gets an attorney?
Quote from: Sergeant1107 on Aug 01, 2010, 09:15 PMWhether their refusal to talk makes me think they are innocent or guilty is irrelevant; every suspect has the right to avoid making incriminating statements to me in an interrogation. I choose to look at a suspect's refusal to consent to an interview as nothing more than a very understandable refusal to part with one of the rights guaranteed to them by the Bill of Rights
Quote from: 424D574A0E230 on Jul 31, 2010, 11:43 PMLet me ask you something: if I refuse to talk to the police, won't they argue (rightly or wrongly) that my refusal to talk to them amounts to a tacit confession of guilt? If I am innocent, and know that I can prove my innocence, am I not better off telling the truth and hope that someone will believe me instead of keeping quiet and falsely projecting the idea that I'm not innocent? Keeping quiet is counterintuitive and even seems counterproductive, doesn't it?A professional cop won't believe you are guilty simply because you don't wish to make a statement. If my case is hanging on getting a confession from the suspect then I don't have much to start with. It is my job to find evidence to establish probable cause to believe the suspect committed the crime, though in my area the State's Attorneys prefer the police to provide enough evidence to establish proof beyond a reasonable doubt. If I can't do that without a confession then I need to look harder, work the case from a different angle, look at old evidence in a new light, or eat the case. I might suspect someone is guilty, but what I suspect is not going to make the case.
Incidentally, do you recommend accused people in the US to waive their right to a trial by jury of their peers? Judging by the way most laypeople think, I think I would be better off being judged by a professional judge than a jury of laypeople.
Quote from: George_Maschke on Jul 30, 2010, 11:50 PM
Yes, it's precisely the same kind of thing. Polygraphy is all about interrogation. See law professor James Duane's lecture on why, even if you're telling the truth, you should avoid talking to the police:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i8z7NC5sgik
See also police interrogator George Bruch's follow-up talk:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=08fZQWjDVKEQuoteAnyway, would love responses from both sides. I've read examiners on here post about how skeptics have an agenda, but I would think BOTH would have an agenda. I just want both opinions to weigh for myself.
Thanks
See our e-book book, The Lie Behind the Lie Detector (1 mb PDF). It will help you reach an informed decision regarding polygraphy and how best to proceed in your current situation.
Quote from: cga1974 on Jul 30, 2010, 04:41 PMI have to take a polygraph next week to clear myself of some charges. I have some concerns about false positives and would like to ask for opinions from both sides of the fence.
QuoteOnce my house was broken into by the neighborhood kids. One of the neighborhood girls came to my house, confessed to driving the other kids to sell my things. I agreed that I would ask that charges not be pressed against her if she turned in the others. She refused.
I gave the police her information and they gave her a polygraph. Not only did she pass the polygraph regarding her involvement, but passed the question they asked her about having confessed to my wife and I.
QuoteAlso, another friend of mine was subjected to a polygraph in which he and his ex-wife both failed opposite questions. He said he didn't hit her, and failed. She said he did hit her, and failed.
QuoteNeedless to say, these experiences leave a bad taste in my mouth about these things, and leaves me skeptical.
I fear false positives mostly because of TV I guess. The perception is that a person will remain calm if they're telling the truth, and not if they aren't. Because of the nature of the questions I'll be asked, I will not remain calm. The subject itself causes me anxiety and physically want to be ill. Some skeptics claim the reaction to the question itself can cause a "deceptive" reaction. If that's true however, it seems that if the response is a reaction to the question, then the answer wouldn't matter. Have there been studies where one answers "yes" falsely to such a question, and truthfully answers "no" and both illicit a "deceptive" answer due to the nature of the question?
QuoteAlso, I'd be much more agreeable to having an independent polygraph done. The police want to conduct their own, and it just seems to me that the police are the "other team" and would be bias both in the way the questions are asked and the interpretation. Never talk to the police without an attorney, right? Isn't this kinda the same thing?
QuoteAnyway, would love responses from both sides. I've read examiners on here post about how skeptics have an agenda, but I would think BOTH would have an agenda. I just want both opinions to weigh for myself.
Thanks