Trial by Cognitive Ordeal: Irrational Approaches to the Opinions of Investigators, Trial Integrity and Proof

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Gary Edmond
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article suggests that lawyers and judges may not understand the effects of their rules and procedures upon the production of evidence and its evaluation in criminal trials and appeals. Focusing on case studies involving the opinions of police officers and other investigators, as well as experts, it explains how applicable rules, procedures and safeguards did not produce, and appear incapable of producing, the effects claimed by courts. Drawing on scientific research – on cognitive bias and voice and face comparison – the article demonstrates how judges have enabled investigators to express their biased and speculative opinions, treated investigators’ opinions as expert (or special) without evidence of validity or ability, and encouraged jurors to make their own voice and face comparisons in the highly suggestive context of the accusatorial criminal trial. Courts have placed great reliance on trial safeguards, such as cross‐examination and judicial directions, trivialised the difficulty of voice and image comparisons and overlooked the likelihood that juror interpretations will be incurably biased, and that the same evidence will be unwittingly counted more than once.
认知磨难审判:对调查员意见、审判完整性与证据的非理性解读
本文表明,律师和法官可能不了解他们的规则和程序对刑事审判和上诉中证据的提供及其评价的影响。它着重于涉及警官和其他调查人员以及专家意见的个案研究,解释了适用的规则、程序和保障如何没有产生,而且似乎无法产生法院所声称的效果。通过对认知偏见和声音与面孔比较的科学研究,本文展示了法官如何允许调查人员表达他们的偏见和推测性意见,将调查人员的意见视为专家(或特殊),而没有证据证明其有效性或能力,并鼓励陪审员在指控性刑事审判的高度暗示背景下发表自己的声音和面孔比较。法院非常依赖审判保障措施,例如交叉询问和司法指示,轻视声音和图像比较的困难,忽视陪审员解释将不可避免地存在偏见的可能性,以及同一证据将在无意中被计算多次的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
61
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