The full-text of the following article is available at SSRN. It's over ten years old, but may nevertheless interest some readers:
Studies in Law, Politics, and Society, Vol. 16, 1997RICHARD A. LEO, University of San Francisco - School of Law
RICHARD J. OFSHE, University of California, Berkeley - Department of Sociology
This article (1) develops a social psychological decision-making model that describes the methods of influence through which interrogation proceeds and identifies the factors leading the guilty and the innocent to decide to confess; (2) Specifies the sequence and effects of the tactical moves through which interrogators influence suspects decisions; (3) Describes the variety of types of confessions and their differentiating characteristics; and (4) Develops and illustrates through case materials of a classification system for categorizing types of statements made in response to interrogation. Together, the decision-making model and the expanded classification system provide a framework for explaining the process of police interrogation as it is practiced in the United States.
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