A new study says those lineups you see on television crime dramas and often used in real-life police departments are going about it all wrong.You can view a copy of the study here (pdf) and listen to audio of a press conference releasing the study results here (5mb wav file). The sequential method in particular significantly improved accuracy. In the study, "fillers" (i.e., non-suspects) were wrongly identified 12% of the time in sequential lineups compared to 18% in photo arrays presented as a group, according to press accounts. Austin PD was one of four departments participating in the inquiry.
The study released Monday by the American Judicature Society is part of a growing body of research during the past 35 years that questions the reliability of eyewitness identifications under certain circumstances. That research has been taken more seriously in recent years with the evolution of DNA evidence clearing innocents of crimes they were convicted of committing, often based on eyewitness testimony.
The new study finds witnesses should not look at a group of people at once to pick a perpetrator. Instead, they should look at individuals one-by-one with a detective who doesn't know which is the real suspect — known as a double-blind lineup to avoid giving witnesses unintentional cues — preferably on a computer to ensure appropriate random procedures are used and to record the data.
The study found witnesses using the sequential method were less likely to pick the innocents brought in to fill out the lineup. The theory is that witnesses using the sequential lineup will compare each person to the perpetrator in their memory, instead of comparing them to one another side-by-side to see which most resembles the criminal.
"What we want the witness to do is don't decide who looks most like the perpetrator, but decide whether the perpetrator is there or not," said Gary Wells, an eyewitness identification expert at Iowa State University and the project's lead researcher.
Texas law enforcement agencies will soon have an opportunity to implement this advice. (Dallas PD was an early adopter of the improved methods.) This year the legislature finally passed a statute which will eventually lead to all Lone Star law enforcement agencies developing policies for eyewitness identifications. (A whopping 88% have no written policy, found a 2008 study.) The new law ordered the Law Enforcement Management Institute of Texas at Sam Houston State University to develop a model policy that departments could (but don't have to) follow, and LEMIT has convened a working group this Friday in Huntsville to give input to the academics charged with developing it. That model policy must be completed by the end of the year, then departments have until Sept. 1, 2012 to adopt their own.
(In the interest of full disclsure, I lobbied for the new statute on behalf of the Innocence Project of Texas as part of my day job, and will be participating in the LEMIT working group on Friday.)
In the New Jersey Supreme Court ruling, reported the New York Times:
the court strongly endorsed decades of research demonstrating that traditional eyewitness identification procedures are flawed and can send innocent people to prison. By making it easier for defendants to challenge witness evidence in criminal cases, the court for the first time attached consequences for investigators who fail to take steps to reduce the subtle pressures and influences on witnesses that can result in mistaken identifications.The notable flaw in Texas' statute is precisely that the Legislature failed to enact "consequences for investigators who fail to take steps to reduce the subtle pressures and influences on witnesses that can result in mistaken identifications." If departments don't follow their own, written policies, defense lawyers can raise the issue in court but there's no pretrial hearing required, tainted evidence would not be excluded (Governor Perry's folks had said the bill would be vetoed if the exclusionary rule applied), and thanks to (IMO bizarre) opposition by the criminal defense bar, there isn't even a jury instruction if the cops don't follow their own rules.
“No court has ever taken this topic this seriously or put in this kind of effort,” said Gary L. Wells, a professor of psychology at Iowa State University who is an expert on witness identification and has written extensively on the topic.
Even so, Texas' new statute should improve the process in most cases once local departments have adopted written policies. Police won't want to be embarrassed in court or the media for not following their own procedures, and simply training on improved practices and putting the policies in writing should cause most officers to (eventually) acquiesce and embrace the new approach. If departments do routinely flout lineup policies, there's always the option of going back to the Lege down the line to create a remedy for violations.
The big thing about that NJ decision wasn't that it mandated double blind sequential (NJ has been using sequential for years after former Republican AG John Farmer made it official policy), but because the court rejected the Manson v. Braithwait test for reliability of an identification. The science debunked the basis of the Manson factors years ago, and this is one of the first courts to catch up with the science on that.
ReplyDeleteWasn't there a definitive reform measure passed in Texas other than a requirement to adopt policies?
ReplyDeleteNope, 6:05, that's what we got on this topic. And it was an uphill, multi-year slog to get that.
ReplyDeleteSupreme Court is set on Dec 2 to consider out of court eyewitness ID question; when it is reliable and admissible. Question for the public to consider, which is more important, truth of the eyewitness or have police checked all the boxes of the policy? Just because the police didn't initiate the ID, and followed all the policy rules, is the ID reliable. Are we going to give police a pass just because they followed all the rules of ID? Should be interesting hearings. Texas isn't even close to having the boxes to check.
ReplyDeleteSomebody is going to die in Georgia over this sort of thing.
ReplyDeleteThis is a system of virtual identity parades which is used to reduce the chance of mis-identification and also improve efficiency in identification parades.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.viper.police.uk/index.html