tv Documentary RT November 19, 2018 4:30pm-5:00pm EST
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they might all be blank. but it's a show you that i have a strong investigation and i have all this evidence. so the first thing i tell you is. our investigation has proven that you are the one who committed this crime there is no god about it whatsoever we have the evidence that you did it there is nothing that you can say that will convince me otherwise all i want to know is why . could you confess to a crime that you did not commit. and interrogation technique used by the majority of police officers in the united states is causing controversy across the country. created in the sixty's by the private company john reed this method has gone on to influence most of the interrogation techniques taught in american police academies it involves nine different stages leading from confrontation to spoken confession to a final written confession this technique has allegedly compelled thousands of innocent
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people to confess to crimes that they did not commit interrogations should be conducted in a non supportive environment we want to get the person on to our territory away from his or her own surroundings the interrogation room should be quiet private free of any outside distractions or noises. so please. remember what. i don't know they tell these interrogators that you can tell whether someone is guilty by looking at them and listening to what they say that confirms their belief that the suspect is guilty and it is a recipe for disaster what are finally realized what had happened in that interrogation room it was like oh my god oh my we begin to move closer shortening the distance between the suspect and ourselves moving into their personal space does. not need. yes ok for.
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the united states to be proud of the many failures of the criminal justice system nobody saw that coming nobody could see coming that false confessions would be that prevalent in this population of wrongful conviction accusing yourself of committing a crime seems unbelievable but recently an official study from the u.s. department of justice has revealed that almost a third of the exonerated people have confessed to a crime that they did not actually commit at the beginning of the interrogation investigator enters the room stands about three or four feet away from a suspect looking down on the suspect and in a very direct and unequivocal way accuses him or of committing the crime. that's what happens when you're dealing with crooked cops. crooked people who don't
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care about other people's life so. they took an oath to help to save lives and fight for people and they did not do that and that in massachusetts case. they were comfortable it was satisfactory and they had a man and that's all they really wanted was somebody. so they took us. from twenty one years and twelve days.
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nine hundred ninety six twenty three. four m.r. way what direction i want to go out of life and everything. fun job was. kind of slow and and went on it's more of a seasonal type of thing. so i looked to supplement my income a little bit and i made a bad bad decisions and so got out fifty eight with our contacts little bit. some people my say for of the other. and. that's where i was at that time just trying to figure things out. at age forty three more months and has spent twenty one years of his life behind
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bars. in one nine hundred ninety six he's convicted of murder and sentenced to fifty years in prison at the time he's making a living by selling drugs in an apartment building in detroit. is accused of killing christina brown one of his young clients on the night of the nineteenth of january one nine hundred ninety six. however on the night of the murder lamar was far from the scene of the crime. he was at home with his six year old daughter. for a member waking up watching cartoons with my daughter saturday morning she woke me up at nine and i was like mom we were watching cartoons on the cd and i want to where my daughter said it. and. that's like i want to. you know
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i was the last day i was out. that saturday morning monson is the first to arrive at the scene he finds the apartment in a state of chaos and then he sees the young christina brown lying motionless on the floor on january twentieth one nine hundred ninety six lamar went for his afternoon shift to the apartment and he found the body of christina brown he knew her as crystal. he thought she was seventeen years old it was a young tall young woman who cried herself a seventeen after she was twelve and she was another one of the dealers who dealt out of that apartment and what he found was this horrific bloody crime scene. were. she was in a state of needed medical attention. or if it
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were. but she was a. she was away from me and trying to say my name and i was told that there were just hold on i'm going to get you know. and i'm going to go on. and frantically run and bang on the knowledge doors and that apartment for asked to call the police or call him as the police came and lamar spoke to the police and the police immediately decided that he was their suspect and so on that day very day he was arrested in fact we have a police report where the detective basically says on the same day of the killing we can close this case if we can just get him get our monson to confess. i got a phone call. telling me that my son had been arrested. for killing a young lady. i know that could never never never be possible from the
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training that he had had from the time he was born about to twenty two years when they took him away from me i was devastated i with. i couldn't eat and i couldn't sleep i walked the floor wondering what had happened why it happened and where would they choose him. kristina brown dies a few hours later in hospital. the officers of the detroit police force take more monson to the station and begin to question her. questions like she was my girlfriend and she was my girlfriend she's more like the little sister of a bunch. we live in there i never lived there in the one
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they're. just stuff like the questioning was core from witness to suspect. part of the interview process is you're supposed to use what recalls the behavioral analysis interview. and in that if you use these techniques it's like you know you're watching a person's body language or you're watching the way that they say something or the way that the answer your questions there's also a series of seventeen questions that each is that you can ask the person and you know based is that based on your answers on their answers and based on your observations you will be able to tell whether or not they're being deceptive or not they're guilty with over eighty percent accuracy. verify judgment i'm very it's like being a human lie detector test and the problem with that is really read itself the read
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people admit that is not based on any science whatsoever just based on their own observations the real science says it's baloney it doesn't work. and it when they've done experiments with it they pretty much show that the accuracy is like flipping a coin it's fifty fifty. the read into. technique makes its debut in the sixty's it is revolutionary for police stations. john reed a police officer from chicago proposes a new and less brutal approach to interrogation. i think john reed was a reformer in many ways you have to understand that when reid came to prominence. the method that was used widely throughout the united states was what's
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called the third degree police officers were feeding suspects into confessing to crimes that they did or didn't commit they were tuning them up they were using the rubber hose they were grilling them for hour after hour after hour and read to his credit knew that that was a way that was fraught with danger in that it might get false or unreliable confessions the problem is that he and weed and associates today have never come to grips with act that psychological interrogation tactics can also produce false confessions. briggs's and high drama the saga continues also the cia says it has high confidence
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they know who killed the show and position a new approach to something. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter the u.s. has over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crimes have been each dish. eighty five percent of the global wealth he longs to be culled from rich eight point six percent market saw thirty percent rise last year some with four hundred to five hundred trees per second per second and bitcoin rose to twenty thousand dollars. china's building two point one billion dollars a i industrial park but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only numbers you need to remember is one one business shows you can't afford to miss the one and only boom bust.
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pranking gave americans a lot of job opportunities i needed to come up here to make some money i could make twenty five thousand dollars as a teacher or i could make fifty thousand dollars a year truck so i chose to drive truck people rush to a small town in north dakota was an unemployment rate of zero percent like gold rush is very very similar to a gold rush but this beautiful story ended with pollution and devastation a lot of people have left here i don't know too many people here and just slow down so much they lost their jobs that laid off the american dream is changing that's not what it used to be. and that's a tough reality to deal. the
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first problem is they have this analysis by which they tell their trainees that you can tell when someone's lying by the tone in their voice or by their posture or whether they sit rigid in their chair or relaxed whether they look at you and give you i contact or look away or look down whether they fold their arms fold their legs look up look left look right you name it it's a cue and the retreat interrogator. has a whole list of body language behaviors and verbal behaviors of the suspects says i don't know that's considered deceptive if a suspect says oh man i swear to god i had nothing to do with this
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appeals to religiosity are considered deceptive behavior they lead their trainees to believe that they are lie detectors but they are human lie detector and once you make that judgment don't turn back move on to interrogation. when i first entered into the said vision you had a lot of officers that's what they were saying and you did it your q. who you know it was bombard me with that as i'm in a tara geisha. arcus him i was just all over the place just devastated by what i've seen what was going on and then to get here and now you're trying to suggest that i committed the crime. the more monson's can. tara geisha continues through the night as the hours go by the questions progressively turn into accusations sold rose she sold drugs for you.
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you killed her she was your girlfriend and just creating a scenario that they want it on despite what obvious attempting to relate to far as what i'm. so i would go back and forth and back and forth and the interrogation lasted maybe. four hours because if it. is important issues you seldom will find a false confession take it in an hour seldom will you find that in two hours when you look at false confession cases twelve fifteen sixteen eighteen twenty hours could be broken down at some point the average person does what an average rational person does they conclude that i need to get out of this situation desperate
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behavior here among comfortable i'm stressed and the more i deny it the more they call me a liar and i just can't get out this way so they're looking for a way out of a bad situation. tired . confused and that's funny over which. taken to. find floor lock at the time and so i'm up there there's the world can't sleep k. rest. came believe was gone oh yeah. and you just can't imagine i'm just a mind is describable. the process of interrogation is designed to put people in just that frame of mind make
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them one comfortable make them want to get out and don't take no for an answer don't accept their denials. now during most interrogations the suspect is not going to just sit there and listen to you while you develop your theme they're going to try to deny any involvement whatsoever but that should be expected many guilty people introduce their denials with permission phrases such as can i say one thing which is just listen to me but sir if i could only explain when the interrogator hears those phrases it's important to interject yourself and stop the person from continuing because you will let him talk they'll say the words i didn't do it and the more often a person says they didn't do it the more difficult it becomes for us to get a confession. if you look at any interrogation out there what you'll see is threat promise threat
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promise threat lie a lie a lie as fact to back it over and over and over and over and it's cutting the person off and like i said is narrowing your options and giving you this perception that oh my god i am facing this guy knows the things that i'm guilty he has all the evidence i know that is bogus these witnesses didn't see me but they're lying on me and he's telling me that the only way that i can get a break from this is by telling him what he wants to hear. there are so stressed and they have to do with how long they've been there may have to do with the fact that it's late at night they've been accused and called a liar they've threatened promises of the maid whatever it is. they get to a breaking point where they decide that it's in their best interest to confess at
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this moment it's in my better interest to confess them to continue denial. lamar munson sees that he is about to be caught in a trap police detective joan going places a file on the table. of the broader her office. and. she said she had apollo files on the desk and she mentioned where you noticed she was make a reference to those files being evidence begins here against me and i. ok. i don't know what that is but i haven't done anything and i don't know why i'm down here was inside of this fight. for anything . lamar monson tries to ignore her but american police officers have the right to
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lie to a suspect lying is a normal part of the process used to put suspects under pressure. i can lie. about the evidence i can kill i think i absolutely the courts allow me to live up to a point you know there's certain laws that are so outrageous that records are going to let it but i can tell you all kinds of lies i can tell you that we have three or four we have four witnesses who say that they saw you take the money and you're going to cock oftentimes it will come in with a. file folder filled with papers doesn't matter what's in that file folder it could be take out menus from a restaurant ok and oftentimes there will be clipped on the top of that aisle folder a d.v.d. ok and police officers will tell the suspect that there was a camera across the street that was filming the area where the crime occurred and
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that their images on the d.v.d. so there's technological evidence that police officers sometimes use other times they'll claim that they've had they found for your prints or blood evidence or d.n.a. evidence imagine a suspect in an interrogation and they're there for again some period of time that is uncomfortable and the police now are lying about the evidence that's suspect may we know full well that he didn't do anything wrong but he's starting to feel trapped and overwhelmed by this present. incriminating evidence thinking i didn't do this but they're claiming they've got evidence and whether this is a set up or what i've got to find a better way out anybody who's been the victim of a high pressure sales tactics knows what this feels like anybody who says that they
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would never ever confess to a crime that they didn't do. happen been under this sort of pressure. these tactics are relentless for lamar months some time seems to stand still the police detective offers him what appears to be a way out. she was saying she believed that i did do it and this she was willing to help me but i had to help her cope. so she began to give me a scenario or self-defense. she suggested or it probably helped my situation and then. she said if i would cooperate send a statement that i would be home by that time the next day. over a series of other techniques with the interrogator does he narrow it down for the
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suspect. to choices to pass oath of them involve the suspect admitting their guilt but one paints the suspect as an evil person a monster a cold blooded remorseless killer and the other one provides an excuse for the suspect for why they committed the crime maybe it was self-defense maybe it was an impulsive act not a deliberate act not a premeditated act and over time you know with increasing. sure on this suspect. many suspects will accept the path of least resistance and accept a less heinous explanation for why they can be there to cry. during the theme we offer to the suspect psychological justification for the
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mission of the crime we don't legally justify it but we offer him a moral excuse that will minimize or justify in his own mind committing the crime and this should be done in a monologue format. it comes to the point where i'm doing this over and over and i start to see you getting to checked it and i get to the point where i think i need to come in with the final question my job my goal of the interrogation is to limit your options and to give you the at least a temporary perception that your only option is to confess to this crime. that's the best route for you to take. the whole process the words what we have a conversation we don't process literally what is said we process between the lines we process not what is said but what is implied when an interrogator says i think
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you're a good person i don't think you meant to do this i think it was an accident and by the way i would have done the same thing you're thinking oh this is no big deal i can confess and that's my easy way out here. and that's the point at which people in fast. i was out of it and they're. just ready to whatever you want to me to do made me decide i'm sinusoid it in my mind. turning that he would be able to. it was necessary distorted i was innocent and i didn't commit this crime because i didn't commit the crime. on the thirtieth of january one thousand nine hundred ninety six at six o two am after ten hours of interrogation detective a obtains a single signature from lamar monson in this document he explains that he
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involuntarily stabbed christina brown detective going and was subsequently removed from the homicide unit and later terminated from the detroit police and the reason she was removed from the homicide unit was because she was accused of fabricating confessions and other words tricking people into signing false confessions. i don't think the democrats very much moved in a go shake with the republicans or president so i think people are going to have to acknowledge that the united states over the next couple years is going to be consumed even more so by or internal our total bickering in affairs and. kind of financial survival jobs today was all about money laundering first to visit this mess in the three different. oh good this is a good start well we have our three banks all set up here maybe something in your
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something in america something overseas in the cayman islands or do we do all these banks are complicit in the kleptocracy we just have to give my phone and say hey i'm ready to do some serious money laundering ok let's see how we did well we've got a nice luxury watch for max and for stacy oh beautiful jewelry and how about. luxury on a bill again from that you know what money laundering is highly. thank you so much guys of course. my dolly is what i believe. we got here we care the music with us. we are here we were dry jeer. you are going to get rid of those who
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it's claimed in american born u.k. finance jim may have or did the fatal poisoning of his film a lawyer magnitsky as russian prosecutors shed new light on a death which didn't go but attention nearly a decade ago. also this hour censorship policies put facebook back in the spotlight after a heinous beating page sees a teenage bryant from south sudan auctioned off for cattle and cash. and a popular russian cartoonist accused of being a kremlin a propaganda tool designed to influence children's minds around the world.
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