Why Innocent Men Make False Confessions

Mike Segar / Reuters

Demonstrators outside a New York City courthouse on Dec. 5, 2002, call for justice in the case of five youths convicted in the 1989 rape of a female jogger in Central Park

Correction Appended: Feb. 12, 2013

In 1995, Daniel Taylor was convicted of a double murder in Chicago in what seemed to be a clear-cut case: he gave police a signed confession. But now his supporters — including Northwestern University’s Center on Wrongful Convictions and a Chicago Tribune columnist — are insisting he is innocent. They are asking that Taylor, who is serving life in prison without parole, be freed.

They have a compelling argument: there is strong evidence that Taylor was actually in police custody when the 1992 murders took place. He had been picked up on a disorderly conduct charge, it seems, and was being held in a North Side jail — and he was only released on bond two hours after the killings.

But what about his confession? Why would an innocent man sign a statement saying he had committed murder? As it turns out, Taylor’s case is a fairly typical story: a frightened young person manipulated by police into making statements whose significance he did not understand. If the past few years have taught us anything it’s that false confessions are not only possible, but they also happen more often than anyone would think.

(VIDEO: Barry Scheck, Justice Seeker)

False confessions play a major role in two recent documentaries about wrongful convictions. West of Memphis examines the case of three young Arkansas men who were locked up for the horrific 1993 murders of three 8-year-old boys. Perhaps the most powerful piece of the prosecution’s case was a confession by Jessie Misskelley describing in graphic detail how he and his two co-defendants beat, raped and mutilated the boys. The documentary, however, showed how the police could — after hours of intense interrogation, heavy with leading questions — manipulate and extract a false story from Misskelley, an unsophisticated young man with a low IQ.

The Central Park Five explores the notorious 1989 case in which five black and Hispanic teenagers were convicted of raping and beating a 28-year-old white jogger in Central Park. The men were found guilty of what New York’s mayor called “the crime of the century” and served as much as 13 years in prison. But all five of those convictions were overturned in 2002, after a murderer and serial rapist confessed to the attack.

The Central Park Five documentary begins with the voice of the actual attacker, Matias Reyes, saying over footage of the crime scene – ‘I’m the one that did this.’  But Reyes was not originally convicted – five innocent men were, after four of them made videotaped confessions.  The Central Park Five shows just how difficult it can be to get beyond a defendant’s self-incriminating words. An expert in false confessions, Saul Kassin, notes: “Once the confession is taken, it trumps everything else, it trumps DNA evidence, its effects cannot be reversed.”

(MORE: Q&A: The Wrongly Convicted Central Park Five on Their Documentary)

But false confessions aren’t just a strange anomaly — they’re a phenomenon that’s beginning to get attention by criminal-justice experts and legal academics. In his book Convicting the Innocent: Where Criminal Prosecutions Go Wrong, Brandon L. Garrett, a law professor at the University of Virginia, looked at 250 cases in which innocent people were cleared by DNA evidence, including 40 in which there were false confessions. Garrett found that in many of the cases the defendants were young or mentally disabled. In none were the interrogations recorded, making it difficult to know what manipulative and coercive measures the police used.

Despite the increased awareness, it’s still extremely difficult to reverse a conviction once the defendant has confessed. In most instances, it comes down to relitigating the whole case, fighting once again over the testimony and circumstantial evidence used to convict. Cook County prosecutors are currently reviewing Daniel Taylor’s case. Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn has been crusading for Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez to undo what he calls Taylor’s “highly corrupted” conviction and set him free. As his advocates note, there is strong evidence of innocence beyond the fact that Taylor appears to have been in jail during the crime. Among other things, a co-defendant and other key witnesses have also come forward to say he was not involved. As for the confession, Taylor now alleges that the police used dishonest and coercive techniques.

In the past couple of decades, the rise of DNA evidence has shown the public in unmistakable terms that the criminal-justice system makes mistakes and that the wrong people are sometimes convicted. False confessions can be the toughest subset of these cases, but people are coming to recognize that sometimes defendants admit to crimes they did not commit. With increased awareness should come greater caution about how confessions are used at trial — and a greater willingness to overturn convictions when it becomes clear that a confession was untrue.

MORE: Top 10 Notorious Fugitives

The original version of this article stated that Matias Reyes was one of the wrongly convicted men in the Central Park jogger case. Reyes actually was the one who committed the attack.

16 comments
RandiJuarez
RandiJuarez

%s It DOES happen! “%s:Why Innocent Men Make False Confessions %sI%si%sorm”

famulla5
famulla5

President Obama said today he would veto any efforts to get rid of the automatic spending cuts that will be triggered by the super committee’s failure to reach a bipartisan solution to deficit reduction. “There will be no easy off-ramps on this one. We need to keep the pressure up to compromise, not turn off the pressure,” the president said this evening. “The only way these spending cuts will not take place is if Congress gets back to work and agrees on a balanced plan to reduce the deficit by at least $1.2 trillion
I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA

famulla5
famulla5

USA and China ought to trade well and keep no trade barriers in one direction. What USA has been doing is China goods are inferior at the same time imports and depends heavily on these as the public cannot afford the branded goods made in USA.  They are very expensive yet the trade barrier is set and the Chines goods are viewed always as of the not to the standard and there is no standar in USA made goos. Check this out to see and note I thank you FirozaliA.Mulla DBA

famulla5
famulla5

More unemployment and still Obama on the guns? Employments?  JPMorgan Chase & Co plans to cut 3,000 to 4,000 jobs in its consumer bank in 2013, representing about 1.5 percent of the company's overall workforce, as the bank tries to improve the profitability of its branches. The cuts will come mainly through attrition, spokeswoman Kristin Lemkau said. The bank's branches have 63,500 employees, representing about a quarter of JPMorgan Chase's total employees. JPMorgan is one of the few big U.S.banksthat is still adding branches to its network, but to boost profit it plans to scale back the tellers it has on hand for routine transactions and to add some salespeople for products and services like wealth management that can boost revenue. The net effect will be to reduce staff per branch by 20 percent through 2015, the company's head of consumer banking, Ryan McInerney, said in a presentation to investors. In JPMorgan Chase's mortgagebusiness, the company reiterated its previously announced plans to shed 13,000 to 15,000 jobs by 2014. I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA

famulla5
famulla5

Yet another story Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke strongly defended the U.S. central bank's monetary stimulus before Congress on Tuesday, easing financial market worries over a possible early retreat from bond buys. The Fed chairman also urged lawmakers to avoid sharp spending cuts set to go into effect on Friday, which he warned could combine with earlier tax increases to create a "significant headwind" for the modest economic recovery. Bernanke said Fed policymakers are cognizant of potential risks from their extraordinary support for the economy, including the possibility that it might fuel unwanted inflation or stoke asset bubbles.But, in testimony on the central bank's semi-annual report on monetary policy, he said the risks did not seem material at the moment, adding the central bank has all the tools it needs to retreat from its monetary support in a timely fashion. "To this point, we do not see the potential costs of the increased risk-taking in some financial markets as outweighing the benefits of promoting a stronger economic recovery and more rapid job creation," Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee. I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA

famulla5
famulla5

The logics of economics never fail to tell me that if you have the last $100 to spend,you would probably invest in business to get some profits and if ypur profits grows and so is your busniess which tells me again you need to hire few people to beef efficiencies.
So whatever choice you have to make ,your goal is to make your income 'worth' more than $100 you own. I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA

famulla5
famulla5

For today, and for most of 2012, investors believe that the Central Bankers' easy money trumps the "slow motion train wreck" that is Europe.  But for how long?  The CB's can't wave a magic wand and make Europe's sovereign debt and unified currency issues go away.  Sooner or later the political will to absorb the pain of austerity will buckle, and the value of the euro, and of equities (they are correlated) will decline.

famulla5
famulla5

It is impossible to live pleasurably without living prudently, honorably, and justly; or to live prudently, honorably, and justly, without living pleasurably. -Epicurus, philosopher (c. 341-270 BCE) And this goes to BC I thank you FirozaliA.Mulla DBA And where are we in 21st century? Divided . self styled living alone  or selfishly?? 

famulla5
famulla5

Printing money inevitably leads to more inflation. The key role of the Bank of England is to limit inflation to 2% - a task that the Governor rather conveniently has forgotten about. I thank you Firozali A.Mulla DBA

Hadrewsky
Hadrewsky

btw are prosecutor's whole job is to be a soulless shitbag

Hadrewsky
Hadrewsky

gee police acting like persons whose deserve to be r aped?


say it aint so

Arianna
Arianna

In some cases, like alleged child sexual abuse, there doesn't need to be any evidence other than the child's testimony. Often faced, with an uphill battle, they accused just takes a plea

IntangibleGuy
IntangibleGuy

What a pity that death penalty can't get revoked once executed. 

BorisIII
BorisIII like.author.displayName 1 Like

I think there is too much pressure on the police to hurry up and get the criminal.  So they resort to trying to get anyone they think they can make look guilty to the jury.  I would rather the cops just shoot me in interrogation than force me to spend life in jail for a horrible crime I didn't commit.  I'm guessing that when someones charges are overturned after years in jail, they don't get a big enough settlement.  But then no amount would be enough.

Magpie'sView
Magpie'sView like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

Confession is the duece of evidence, all too often mistaken for it's king. 

dpscholfield
dpscholfield like.author.displayName like.author.displayName 2 Like

A great unpacking of a complex topic.  Especially when it comes to younger individuals, the impulse of accepting a short term reward (ending the interrogation/getting to leave the room) can become almost impossible to resist.  Combine that with new research indicating that younger individuals develop in such a way so as to be unable to adequately consider future consequences (See, Graham v. Florida, 130 S.Ct. 2011 & Miller v. Alabama, 132 S.Ct. 2455), and false confessions are not surprising at all.