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CAAFlog

Suppression and Confrontation

5/25/2024

 
William Ortman, Confession and Confrontation. 113 Cal. L. Rev. __ (forthcoming 2025).
The constitutional law of confessions has a critical blind spot. In theory, it serves two interests. It protects the autonomy of suspects by stipulating that they can be questioned while in custody only with their consent. And it restrains official misconduct by forbidding interrogation methods that overbear a suspect’s will. Even if the law adequately safeguards those interests, something is missing: reliability. As false confessions emerge as a major source of wrongful convictions and as social scientists expose how standard interrogation tactics prompt innocent people to confess, the Supreme Court and conventional wisdom insist that the reliability of confessions is not a constitutional concern.

The Supreme Court and conventional wisdom are wrong. Inattention to reliability is a jurisprudential oversight, not a feature of constitutional design. The problem is that the Court and commentators have neglected the part of the Constitution that unabashedly curates prosecutorial evidence: the Confrontation Clause. For much of our constitutional history, that omission could be excused, as the Confrontation Clause was a sleepy corner of the Sixth Amendment. Twenty years ago, in Crawford v. Washington, the Supreme Court enlivened it.
​
This Article shows that a straightforward reading of Crawford, combined with a smattering of legal history, yields a simple but transformative rule: If police obtain a confession through psychologically manipulative tactics that induce “fear” or “hope,” the confession should be inadmissible unless the defendant testifies. Eighteenth-century jurists and modern social scientists agree that such tactics lead to unreliable confessions, yet they remain a staple of modern American interrogations. That would change if courts recognized the Confrontation Clause’s capacity to regulate confessions.
See also Ronald J. Rychlak, Using the Rules of Evidence to Control Criminal Confessions. 54 Tex. Tech. L. Rev. 39, 52 (2021);  Margareth Etienne & Richard McAdams, Police Deception in Interrogation as a Problem of Procedural Legitimacy. 54 Tex. Tech. L. Rev. 21 (2021).
Trial Counsel 2
5/26/2024 15:11:42

This article is ridiculous (and more so in the UCMJ context with Article 31).

Just from the excerpted piece, the law of confessions serves a third purpose - to be able to hold the criminally culpable accountable. This purpose is what has led to the walk back of the exclusionary rule. Ignoring that critical purpose of the “law of confessions” is not a serious proposal.

Donald G Rehkopf
5/27/2024 13:54:15

TC2: The ethical role of a prosecutor is to seek justice, not convictions. A conviction procured by a false (unreliable) confession is hardly justice. ICYMI, 29% of the legal exonerations in recent years in the US involved "false" and thus, unreliable confessions. https://innocenceproject.org/dna-exonerations-in-the-united-states/

The reliability issue which you appear to discount, has been extensively documented in the past 10 years or so, by social sciences. https://courses2.cit.cornell.edu/sociallaw/student_projects/FalseConfessions.html

When it comes to false or involuntary confessions, practice under the UCMJ remains in the neolithic era compared to federal practice. Part of the problem admittedly is due to untrained, inexperienced DC - but that's a separate and unrelated issue.

Trial Counsel 2
5/27/2024 17:16:35

Donald: Justice requires the ability to get convictions. A prosecutor cannot deliver justice if we have a system that makes a conviction impossible.

We could have a criminal justice system that required five separate video recordings of the crime from different people for a conviction. This would ensure that there would be no false convictions, but would hardly be justice. The criminal justice system cannot be so scared of false convictions that it eliminates the ability to convict anyone at all.

I also don't see how the military justice system is neolithic compared to federal practice. Military Justice has Article 31. Military law enforcement typically video records every interview. Military justice provides experts in false confessions if Defense shows some indicia of issues. Those are more than sufficient protections but am open to hearing what I am missing.

All players in the justice process should be on guard against false confessions. Prosecutors should be trained on the reliability issues, and assess the reliability of a confession when making a charging decision. Experts should be provided if Defense can demonstrate indicia of unreliability. But throwing out confessions as a bright-line rule is not a serious proposal, and would hurt justice.

Don Rehkopf
5/29/2024 13:26:24

TC2 - "Experts should be provided if Defense can demonstrate indicia of unreliability." I can agree with you on this, but I'll bet it's been 10 years since I've read a RoT where the government hasn't opposed a defense request for expert assistance on false confessions, usually on the false premise that Members don't need it.

In fact, social science has evolved to where there is a sub-set of "false confession" research dealing with the "why" expert assistance is scientifically necessary. I commend this article from the National Institutes of Health on this topic to everyone: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7937609/pdf/fpsyg-12-633936.pdf

Nathan Freeburg
5/28/2024 18:32:53

I find myself agreeing with TC2 that we don’t need an additional bright line rule. With that said:

1. The use by all of the military LEOs of the Reid technique is highly problematic (no they don’t officially use it but simply watch the interviews).
2. Maebane is certainly a cautionary tale and a very recent one.

Don Rehkopf
5/29/2024 13:41:00

Nathan, in the "believe it or not" category, I'm reading a RoT where the CID agent not only admits attending the Reid Course, but also that he applied its techniques during the interrogation of the accused.


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    Disclaimer: Posts are the authors' personal opinions and do not reflect the position of any organization or government agency.
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