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Articles

Jury instructions and mock-juror sensitivity to confession evidence in a simulated criminal case

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Pages 946-966 | Received 31 Oct 2016, Accepted 29 Jun 2017, Published online: 18 Jul 2017
 

ABSTRACT

We investigated whether enhanced jury instructions, which added empirical findings about confession evidence to standard jury instructions, could sensitize mock jurors to the confession evidence in a criminal trial transcript. Participants (N = 314) read a detailed transcript of a simulated murder trial, followed by standard or enhanced jury instructions. The key evidence was the defendant’s recanted confession, gathered by police using either coercive (weak case) or appropriate (strong case) tactics. For example, testimony in the weak case, but not the strong case, indicated that the suspect was likely intoxicated when interviewed, and that the police likely lied about the evidence against him and hinted at leniency if he confessed. Participants in the enhanced instruction groups rated the likelihood that the defendant killed the victim as significantly higher in the strong case than the weak case, and they were also significantly more likely to find the defendant guilty in the strong case. In contrast, participants in the standard instruction groups did not differ significantly in either rated likelihood of killing or verdict for the two cases. The results demonstrate that instructions can make jurors sensitive to the strength of confession evidence, rather than merely skeptical about confession evidence.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1. This question was imprecise and probably should have been written as: “3. What did the police do after the interview to determine whether the defendant’s statement fit with other facts and evidence in the case?”

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported in part by The Catholic University of America under a Faculty-in-Aid Grant.

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