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Incorrigible Dicta
Platitudes and Diatribes from the Best Defense Money Can’t Buy

GVR, Baby!

(GVR: Grant, Vacate, and Remand — a disposition that is the US Supreme Court’s way of telling a lower court “don’t waste our time; go do what we told you to do.”  The court grants certiorari–agreeing to take the case; vacates the judgment below; and remands the case–sends it back to the lower court with instructions to get it right next time).

And that, friends is what happened today in Briscoe v. Virginia–the case that was widely feared (or hoped) to limit the reach of this summer’s decision in Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts.  That’s right, folks–you really really have to put the analyst on the witness stand!

And for the record, that is exactly what I predicted they were going to do when they granted cert in this case.


Posted by AndyCowan on January 25th, 2010 :: Filed under A Day in the Life
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Sage Advice from Idaho

On his Twitter Feed, “Skelly Wright” of Arbitrary and Capricious offers a bit of practical advice:

To teen in court: if you want to beat a [urinalysis] for marijuana, make sure the friend’s urine you’re substituting won’t be positive for opiates.

Oops.


Posted by AndyCowan on May 21st, 2009 :: Filed under A Day in the Life, Client Service, Law for the Layman
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How (purported) Confessions Taint Other Evidence

Social science confirms what defense lawyers have long known: when an eyewitness thinks a particular individual has confessed to the crime, they are more likely to identify that person as the criminal, and to be more certain about it, than if they did not have information about the confession.   People who previously identified nobody will identify the person who confessed once they hear about the confession, and say that they now recognize the perpetrator–they claim that they are not merely relying on the fact of the confession.

The problem is that they are.

Lisa Hasel of Iowa State University and Saul Kassin of the John Jay College of Criminal Justice did a study in which college students witnessed the staged theft of a laptop.  They were then shown a lineup of suspects and asked to identify the perpetrator.  Two days later, they were given information that somebody in the lineup had confessed.  There were a bunch of variations, but here’s the smoking gun:

Among people who had identified somebody in the first lineup, 61% changed their mind when told that a different person had confessed. 100% of those who changed their mind picked the person who allegedly confessed.

Among people who had identified nobody, 50% picked the person who they were told confessed.  Again, none changed their minds but picked a non-confessor.

Why is this a problem?  Because people confess falsely.  How’s this for a scary scenario: an innocent person is arrested and the eywitness says “i’m not sure, I think it might be him.”  The police tell the innocent person that the jig is up, the eyewitness IDd them.  They tell the innocent person that things will go easier for them if they confess.  So they sign the confession that the police have already written out for them.  Then the police go back and tell the eyewitness that they got a confession.  Now the eyewitness is prepared to go to court and testify to the identification with complete certainty.  Any doubt has been erased by the confession.

It’s not just eyewitnesses, either.  Hasel and Kassin cite a 2006 study in which 17% of fingerprint experts change their previous (correct) conclusions when told (falsely) that the suspect had confessed (suggesting that the prints should match) or that the suspect was locked up at the time of the offense (suggesting that the prints should not match).

The take-home message from these results: attorneys and courts should be suspicious of all evidence in cases with confessions–not just the confession itself.

You can read the full article at
http://www.psychologicalscience.org/journals/ps/20_1_inpress/Hasel.pdf


Posted by AndyCowan on December 23rd, 2008 :: Filed under In the News
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