7.10.2018

Lindsay Malloy : Why teens confess to crimes they didn't commit


Lindsay Malloy at TEDxFIU
Why teens confess to crimes they didn't commit  (transcript)
Summary
I think that this trouble won't be solved by only this story, of course,  this can't happen, though.

The speaker picks up a recent sad trouble that some teens who didn't commit confessed to committing by police severe interpretation probably.

In interrogations in the US, police are allowed to interrogate juveniles just like adults. Police who lies to suspect isn't banned, even with intellectually impaired teens. And then juveniles can't ask their parents or can't be with them.

In the UN, lying to suspect is banned.

And then in Japan, a problem is that a punishment is too light for juveniles. Even if they kill some people, they can normally live after some years in jail.

The teens confess must show your country. People think that policemen should be strong, citizens have to have a responsibility to live, and a relationship between parents and child have faith and love.

Words in this story
interrogate /verb/ interrogation /noun/  questioning
incarcerate /verb/ imprison or confine.
debrief /verb/ cross-examine, interview, interrogate, question

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