Shuy, Roger W,

The language of confession, interrogation and deception / [print] Roger W. Shuy. - Thousand Oaks : Sage Publications, (c)1998. - viii, 205 pages ; 24 cm.



The confession event -- Language of the police interrogation -- Interrogating versus interviewing -- Case study of the interrogations of Steve Allen -- Was Chris Jerue lying? -- Did Donald Goltz believe what he confessed? -- Some problems with police interrogation -- Language and constitutional rights -- Miranda rights in the DWI arrest -- Were the rights of Jesse Moffet abused? -- Were the rights of Charles Lorraine violated? -- Language of truthfulness and deception -- Was Robert Alben lying? -- Was Jessie Moffett lying? -- Language of written confessions -- Michael Carter's written statement -- The written statement as a clue to deception -- Language of the implicational confession -- Surrogate confession of DeWayne Hill -- Language of the interrogator as therapist -- Persuasion of Beverly Monroe -- Inferred confession -- Case study of Shiv Panini -- Unvalidated confession -- Why did Kevin Rogers confess? -- An effective interrogation and a valid confession -- Case study of Pamela Gardner -- Some basic principles of interrogation, confession and deceptive language -- Be conversational -- Ask clear and explicit questions -- Do not mix interview types -- Look for inconsistencies before trying to detect deception -- Tape record all contacts.



97033752

GB98-27762


Police questioning--United States--Case studies.
Confession (Law)--United States--Case studies.
Right to counsel--United States--Case studies.

HV8073.S562.L364 1998