ABSTRACT
Police interviewers find the investigation of sexual crimes ‘technically difficult’ and ‘stressful’ to conduct by having to make sense of very powerful and painful emotions. In addition, such interviews often contain inappropriate as opposed to appropriate questions and interviewers often find it difficult to be ‘attentive’ to the specific needs of victims. Through the analysis of interviews with adult rape victims (N = 25) in England, we wanted to establish whether the ‘quantity’ and ‘quality’ of investigation relevant information (IRI) obtained would be impacted as a function of different question typologies (e.g. appropriate versus inappropriate), and overall interviewer attentiveness. We hypothesised that: (i) more inappropriate questions would be asked compared to appropriate questions; (ii) responses to appropriate questions would contain more items of IRI than responses to inappropriate questions; (iii) attentive interviews would contain more appropriate questions than non-attentive interviews, and; (iv) attentive interviews would contain more IRI than non-attentive interviews. Results found that interviewers asked significantly more appropriate questions that elicited significantly more items of IRI. However, there were no significant differences in the number of appropriate questions asked or the impact on the amount of IRI obtained between interviews as a function of interviewer attentiveness. Implications for practice are discussed.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to express their gratitude to the police force that agreed to collaborate on the present study. If we are to ascertain a better understanding of police practice and improve the efficacy of investigative interviewing then such collaborations are vitally important and should be encouraged not just in the UK, but worldwide.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Data Availability statement
The data that supports the findings of this study are available, upon reasonable request, from the corresponding author.
Notes
1 In England and Wales, a Sexual Offence Investigative Technique (SOIT) officer will have completed additional, advanced training in accordance with the Professionalising the Investigation Programme (PIP) level two that specifically provides the necessary knowledge and skills required to deal with victims of rape and serious sexual assault. The label provided to this training varies slightly with some forces referring to it as the Sexual Offence Liaison Officer (SOLO) course or the Specially Trained Officers Development Programme