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Full-Text Articles in Criminal Law
Fraudulently Induced Confessions, Michael J. Zydney Mannheimer
Fraudulently Induced Confessions, Michael J. Zydney Mannheimer
Notre Dame Law Review
The jurisprudence on the use of police deception during interrogations is singularly unhelpful. Police may deceive in order to induce a suspect to confess, the courts tell us, unless they go too far. Police are permitted, for example, to feign sympathy for the suspect, lie about the existence of incriminating evidence, and falsely downplay the seriousness of the offense under investigation. But when police engage in other forms of deception, such as by offering false promises of leniency or misrepresenting the suspect’s Miranda rights, courts will balk and declare the resulting confession coerced. Yet neither courts nor commentators have successfully …