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Youth Interrogation: Key Principles and Policy Rec

Posted by Manstuprator on 2024-July-7 21:02:53, Sunday
In reply to Effective Interrogation Techniques (book) [link] posted by Manstuprator on 2024-July-7 19:26:17, Sunday

"They destroy children's lives, take away their innocence, traumatize them for life, betray their trust."

Wait -- not (so-called) "pedophiles," but the prosecutors and others working for law enforcement agencies!



FAIR AND JUST PROSECUTION
Promoting justice through leadership and innovation
“…We owe it to our young people to give them what they need to become resilient, thriving,
contributing members of our community.”
— DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ATTORNEY GENERAL KARL RACINE

ISSUES AT A GLANCE

Youth Interrogation: Key Principles and Policy Recommendations

Fair and Just Prosecution (FJP) brings together recently elected district attorneys1 as part
of a network of like-minded leaders committed to change and innovation. FJP hopes to
enable a new generation of prosecutive leaders to learn from best practices, respected
experts, and innovative approaches aimed at promoting a justice system grounded in
fairness, equity, compassion, and fiscal responsibility. In furtherance of those efforts, FJP
provides district attorneys with best practices about a variety of critical and timely topics.
For these topics, FJP has additional “Issues at a Glance” briefs and “Key Principles”
available on the FJP website, as well as supporting materials, including model policies and
guidelines, key academic papers, and other research. If your office wants to learn more
about this topic, we encourage you to contact us.*

OVERVIEW
Without proper protections, interrogations2 of children can have serious and harmful ramifications.
These include, among others, Miranda waivers3 that are not truly knowing and voluntary, coerced
and false confessions, wrongful convictions, trauma to young people, and inadmissible evidence
obtained through improper interrogations.4 In addition to the inherent harm to children and
their loved ones these practices cause, these troubling outcomes also result in diminished public
confidence in the criminal legal system that, ultimately, erodes public safety and impacts the entire
community. This Statement of Key Principles and Policy Recommendations outlines relevant
research, emerging reforms, and best practices regarding the interrogation of children. The

1 The terms “district attorney,” “DA,” or “elected prosecutor” are used generally to refer to any chief local
prosecutor, including State’s Attorneys, Prosecuting Attorneys, and Attorneys General with local jurisdiction.
2 While these best practices and recommendations pertain primarily to interrogations and interviews of youth who
are suspects in an investigation, many of these principles also apply to interviews of children as witnesses.
3 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).
4 See International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) (2012), Reducing Risks: An Executive’s Guide
to Effective Juvenile Interview and Interrogation, https://www.theiacp.org/sites/default/files/all/p-r/
ReducingRisksAnExecutiveGuidetoEffectiveJuvenileInterviewandInterrogation.pdf.


accompanying Model Youth Interrogation Policy (set forth in Appendix A) provides language
for putting these principles and recommendations into practice.

BACKGROUND
A. Concerns with Youth Interrogations
The brains of young people are still developing in ways that cause them to think and behave
differently from adults.5 As the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized, these differences are
particularly relevant in the context of an interrogation6: “A lack of maturity and an underdeveloped
sense of responsibility are found in youth more often than in adults and are more understandable
among the young. These qualities often result in impetuous and ill-considered actions and
decisions.”7 Likewise, the court has noted that “juveniles are more vulnerable or susceptible to
negative influences and outside pressures….”8

Yet law enforcement officers are rarely trained in developmentally appropriate, trauma-informed,
and racially equitable approaches to interacting with youth. As a result, law enforcement often
use adult-oriented tactics to interrogate youth, including threats, coercion, deceit, and promises
of leniency for cooperation, as well as other strategies which are uniquely powerful when used
with children. Likewise, officers may fail to recognize youth with literacy issues, mental illness, or
cognitive delays, or youth in a state of shock or under the influence. Legal and policy reform is vital
to ensure fair and just outcomes for children and communities.9
The consequences of failing to implement safeguards for children are grave. For example, studies
estimate that 90% of children, often without any opportunity to consult parents or an attorney,
waive Miranda rights10 – a decision that can have severe, lasting repercussions. Indeed, many
children do not understand the meaning or import of these protections,11 a natural consequence
of the fact that the typical Miranda warning requires close to a 9th-grade reading level for full
comprehension.[...]

CONTINUE READING AT:
https://fairandjustprosecution.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/FJP-Juvenile-Interrogation-Issue-Brief.pdf


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