What he says about confessing to crimes you haven’t done, is absolutely correct. I was called in for something a friend of mine supposedly did, which I knew for a fact he didn’t do, and ended up thinking I may had actually done something by the end. The interrogator was so nice, and understanding, I thought he was genuinely looking for the truth, and he then started manipulating what I told him. What they say about never talking without a lawyer? Absolutely correct.
@@richardgray9284 Yeah man, never expected to find myself in that position. They’re very manipulative and great actors, “everything you say can and will be used against you” is a perfect description of what happens, even if you’re telling them the truth verbatim.
Exactly. In those situations, the police are not your friends. No matter how much they might try to act like it. You don't owe them anything without a lawyer present.
If he was head of the department for interrogating the people who ended up in Gitmo, he would be right. The violence and torture should be delivered with a flat face and a heartless demeanor. That makes it, apparently, professional and acceptable. Like the age-rating rules in the US: it's completely fine to genocide a thousand people, or murder someone gruesomly - as long as you don't see any blood, and the bad guy looks foreign.
well when u accusing somebody isnt easy to tell the truth to somebody u dont know you are more cooperative with people u know so if anybody did something they gonna lie cause thats human nature nobody seeks the truth everybody tell something to redeem themselves or give the blame
@@badcornflakes6374 be more explicit. I guarentee some cop will argue in court that he didn't realize you wanted to see your lawyer, but that you were merely curious as to your lawyers whereabouts, and some courts will accept that bs. The Louisiana Supreme Court did basically that to Warren Demesme.
I applaud him for calling out in no uncertain terms how immoral, heinous, and ineffective are abusive interrogation and torture. The MKUltra project was so horrible, look it up if you haven't heard of it before.
And if you're REALLY interested read "The Men Who Stare at Goats." They made a movie with Ewen McGregor, George Cloony, Jeff, Bridges, and Kevin Spacey that's more of a dark comedy but still tells the events with 90% accurate. Both are masterpieces but the book is my recommendation. The tone of the narrative is 100% serious and truly go into a much depth as possible. 0
@TBM Applaud? Most of you vote for supporters and proponents of torture. 4:25 - Yeah, cops are definitely called to account for abusing prisoners. Sure they are. Who is this clown??
11:00 I'm so glad he directly addressed the pseudoscience of analyzing micro-expressions. It's frustrating seeing people doing so well on UA-cam irresponsibly peddling that nonsense.
Except it's held up in peer-reviewed studies? Just because most lay people can't tell when a person is lying or hiding something doesn't mean that the whole field is in fact bunk, it's quite the opposite. Edit: I'm not allowed to post replies, you can simply Google peer-reviewed research micro expressions and find plenty of sources. It's not some sort of magic lie detector as some people think it is, but properly trained automated systems and properly trained people do significantly better than random chance or untrained people.
@@MCXL1140 Could you cite any sources...? All of the studies I've seen have indicated otherwise, even where the practitioners are professionals? (Pretty disappointing actually - we'd all like to think we can judge other people's behaviour accurately, if only as a basic matter of survival! 😕)
To be fair, the whole point of the "interrogation" in the Dark Knight is that the Joker is in control the whole time, not Batman. The Joker is the one doing all the things he describes, trying to get batman on his side, ultimately getting him to do exactly what he wants.
Nah the point of that scene was to show how Batman's process of extracting information - through intimidation and violence - was useless against a man with no fear who enjoys pain. He could've tried to use reverse psychology, but he was too emotionally attached to the outcome, and too used to resorting to violence, to see through the red haze and do it the right way.
it also shows the 'ticking bomb' scenario often used to justify torture is probably the situation where it's least effective. torture works best when it breaks down someone's hope and resolve over a long period. all the joker had to do was hold out until the bombs went off. of course, in the end he told batman where to find them (but not really) just too late for batman and the cops to rescue both of them, because it was all part of the plan.
It’s not crap, but reading about it doesn’t make you good at it. People who have been trained do become much better at detecting micro expressions. But imagine reading a book and thinking you could be proficient at shooting targets because you read about it. It takes training and practice.
@@robpolaris7272 Still crap. And it isn't because of lack of training, but problems with interpretation. There is too many factors that can cause micro expression, which have no connection to the ongoing interrogation. Medical causes, unrelated memories, reaction to the environment, etc. The body language is just too unspecific to identify the exact cause. It's mostly shows "stress or no stress". People are too often overconfident because of their subjective experiences.
@@Terovi I think maybe the people that can be more trustworthy in this area know these things and seek out nuances. (Like medical conditions and outside circumstances) I think most people on UA-cam that do body language analysis are hacks, but I’ve found a couple channels that seem reliable. But, the two channels I watch do mention (often) all the things you stated. You should check out The Behavior Panel.
It's not crap altogether, but it is crap for interrogations. In order for you to be able to utilize any kind of kinetic response, you need to understand the individuals baseline. If you don't already know the person well enough, you'll never know what expressions go against their normal behavior.
i am so glad they covered "When They See Us" and the story behind that. This helps us dispel the myth that our law enforcement systems are rooted in infallible justice. Also great of Mr Fallon to acknowledge the erroneous belief of "an innocent person will never confess"
Feel free to call out coercion to “false confessions,” just pick a better case to hang your hat on. They went after those boys so hard because they had the witnesses and physical evidence that made it incontrovertible they had committed the crime of beating a woman to a bloody pulp. I know it’s trendy to say all accusations are just because of racism and they were unjustly profiled and railroaded. But this case was always real simple until the media and opportunistic scumbags used it to advance their own agendas and pad their own pockets; truth be damned.
If you look at the interrogation of Chris Watts, the man who killed his whole family a couple of years ago in Colorado, that was very true to what this expert is saying: build a rapport, you’ll get them to talk eventually.
@@kingcole55 it's less of Landa playing with his food and more of standard normal gestapo intimidation and brute force back in the day. Nowadays is just US army torturing and waterboarding any suspect in their oil wars
This is one of the best interviews you guys have done. He really teaches something important that needs to be acknowledged by the world. Movies and shows need to stop depicting interrogations and more like casual conversations.
I agree, but it takes a better screen writer to script an entertaining quiet conversation and quality actors to deliver that scene in an interesting way than a writer who just slaps some violence and aggressive behavior in there with crappy actors and jump cuts, so not likely we'll see much of it.
Law & Order SVU has got to be the worst prepatrator of this. Every. Single. Episode. Is them badgering someone until they make an emotional confession.
No one in a position of authority is your friend. They all have an agenda and a bias and they will do whatever it takes. Also always ask for a lawyer. Don't say anything other than I would like a lawyer. Don't ever talk to the authorities of any jurisdiction without a lawyer. When it is just you, they can play it any way they want. When a lawyer is present they are a legal witness, they know the system and lawyer/client confidentiality is a thing. Take advantage of your rights in that situation because they are rights for a reason. Also if you are arrested pay attention to whether the authorities read you your rights or not. Convey that information to your lawyer.
@Javion MI. Well, not really. This is just standard procedure for what you should do to protect yourself. You have the right to an attorney, so you should use it. I personally would never speak to police about a case without a lawyer even if I was innocent.
I think "no one in a position of authority is your friend," is a blanket statement and an assumption but I totally agree with everything else you say for sure.
The interrogation methods used in Mindhunter are quiet specific, he will need to watch the whole series in order to understand why they’re using such methods.
There's nothing preventing an interrogation to be both an authentic representation of the event AND to be conducted by fictional entities (such as superheroes). I feel like the series Lucifer is a decent example. People are supernaturally compelled to "like" the titular devil and he can further focus his mojo on them to have them talk about what they "truly desire". Answering that question generally results in the target of the interrogation to just start answering all the other ones as well.
It’s sad to hear younger people are confessing to crimes they didn’t commit like he’s right that method of scaring and pressuring or lying makes sense why it happens
Which is why so many of the government's cases when they finally got a trial were thrown out. Those people could've really been terrorists who were guilty of horrendous acts of violence, but they had to be let go. Which makes our torturing of them all the more heinous and disgraceful. Not only does it give the Insurgency/Al qaeda/ISIS more propaganda for recruiting, but it does a disservice to all of their victims.
I am more hopeful of our judicial system having guys like him around. I adore forensic files and simular shows. It breaks my heart learning about false confessions. People are set to mental torture until you do what investigators want. It's immoral
The tragedy is that a lot of people, even in government and law enforcement, still belive that torture is viable, acceptable or even necessary. Even antonin scalia, a supreme Court justice, used "24 hours", a garbage show, to justify torture.
14:26 the asterisk* here is that the point of this methodology was to get a conviction, not to ascertain culpability or guilt I like how he stresses cooperation over control
Some very good information and I like how he is so up to date with modern interrogation techniques and what is fact vs fiction. There is a lot of ideas out there STILL that people think are true when we know now they're false.
It's because they think of it differently. This guy correctly says that it means 1/4 to 1/3 of confessions are false. The way they look at it is that means 2/3 to 3/4 of confessions are true.
This guy knows interrogation. I was an interrogator for 32 years. It's refreshing to see a UA-cam video with so much truth. I conducted interrogations with several agencies. It is not surprising that the CIA developed water boarding and other Enhanced Interrogation Techniques. They were generally the most incompetent interrogators with whom I worked.
But that's the thing with USA - they are not even trying to hide their war crimes - they just say "Yeah, it is... and what are you going to do about it?". The amount of US war crimes in the last 70 years all around the globe is off the charts - yet you have never seen anyone suffering any penalty for it. But they WILL make up a war crime or WMD to invade you... and cause a few dozen war crimes.
I hope this guy is genuine in what he's saying about better police interrogation methods. I have a hard time trusting police and I'm a decent person with no criminal history.
At the end of the day, the police are people just like us. Unfortunately, they're always gonna have bias and lock onto finding solutions rather than being empathetic.
@@Yoko4797 I think this can be helped with certain kinds of training and education. Police need a new perspective, to see the good in people and not just the worst
He touches on one of the issues at the end. Too many police still rely on “gut” and long debunked practices to try to close cases instead of following the facts. At the end of the day, their job is to close cases and too many people take shortcuts but shortcuts here have devastating consequences.
The science of interrogation have gotten a lot better. The methods of unveiling the truth (not just get a confession by coercion or manipulation), has beeen studied, they have evolved greatly and books and courses are easily available. Now, do all police over the world have the truth as their goal for the interrogation, or do they simply want to close a case as fast as possible? Sadly, this varies.
@@cain666 most police still act like the worst examples in this video, especially with poorer people and people of color. What police need are CONSEQUENCES, hard and swift consequences for abusive behavior.
Would be really interesting to have this guy back to review naval investigations - NCIS has the most, obviously, but they crop up occasionally elsewhere.
My friend, who is a police officer, told me that if I am ever called in for questioning, for any reason, is to never talk without a lawyer present. You say "I want a lawyer. Put me in a cell."
So true. I was with a bunch of friends at a pub and an all out brawl happened. I didn't understand why at the time I got picked up but I just asked can I have a smoke. The officer obliged and asked what pocket my cigarette pack was in and lit it. Literally all I asked. Lawyer said what you say will be repeated even in obscurity and when the prosecutor read my case he included that brief albeit unimportant info to the court. I didn't say a word but the docket said he opted to have a cigarette while being detained.
"Put me in a cell" is spot on. Better to spend three days in jail than three months or three years. Amazing that cops can lie to people. They'll tell you you don't need a lawyer, that's not necessary, we're just having a chat ... friend. Or a lawyer won't be available for a month while you sit in jail. Don't fall for it. Tell the police you want a lawyer and shut up.
Yeah another thing about interrogations is your tone of voice and how you connect with the person your speaking with. Communication communication communication come off as a friend not as a hostile I would definitely take this guy breakfast and have a great conversation
I really liked this officer, he is one that seems to understand that not everyone is guilty and "appears" to be good, I put that in quotes because you never really know.
A healthy distrust isn’t a bad thing. Guilt should be decided by a court…and investigators job should be to seek out the truth (facts) for informed decisions to be made. Thank you for watching and for kinda liking me! :-)
It sucks, having been through it and the pressure he talks about is real. They try to get you to contradict yourself on small things and then use it against you. They got me to write a letter to the spouse in the car crash that died saying they'd give it to her. They never did and my lawyer that I attained later informed me they hoped I'd confess to some wrong doing in it and they'd have used it against me.
You don’t have to commit a crime to get interrogated. Those people are good, you’ll walk in innocent and will get out thinking you may have actually done something, through the information you give up. In case it happens, always remember, no matter how nice they look, they don’t have your best interest at heart, nor do they care for truth and justice. Never talk without a lawyer if you find yourself in such a situation
That was one of the most fascinating of these expert reaction videos. I actually learnt something. I was also thinking of his personality. You can imagine him remaining apparently calm in just about any interview situation, and always getting what he wants.
I inadvertently found myself paying really close attention to the language he used. Honestly it's a relief to hear someone of his profession and experience call abuse out like that. More law enforcement having a mindset like that would be wonderful
Having conducted internal reviews with multiple corporations, I can say that this guy must have played a role in training the company that trained me. He says ,verbatim , things I was taught not all that long ago. I am very thankful he is out there speaking on how some of the negatives on past interrogations have started to change. A lot of modern media still portrays outdated methods and that discredits the changes made. It also helps cause distrust with police and other investigators.
I'd love to see this guy analyse interrogations in some of the British cop dramas. "Midsomer Murders" with Tom Barnaby sitting on someone's sofa having a quiet chat over a cup of tea. "Line of Duty" with the barrage of tiny details and hard evidence on the projector and cop-vs-cop interrogations. "Shetland" and the difficulty of questioning people you have a personal connection with in a small community.
3:15 wouldn’t making the person uncomfortable cause them to focus on the irritant instead of the questions. This is why interrogators do not wear cologne or anything clothes that are flashy. You also don’t want an interrogator to have a speech impediment or someone who is overly handsome.
The part with Brooklyn Nine-Nine and the idea that making a person uncomfortable primes them for interrogation. What it misses is how many people would just be distracted, not necessarily uncomfortable. The uneven chair or the sticky table are easy sources of distraction and fidgeting, and an inattentive interviewee seems counterproductive. If I walked into a police interrogation and it looked like a shitshow that didn't have itself together, I probably wouldn't take it or them seriously, lawyer up, and walk out.
He needs to be a head of interrogation programs I DON’T KNOW 99.9% OF ALL POLICE DEPARTMENTS ANYWHERE? HE GAIN MY FULL TRUST AND I JUST CONFESSED!!!!👏🏻
This guy doesn't even know the difference between psychotic with psychopathic. Joker is not having a "psychotic episode," he's in complete control. Pretty basic psych mistake there.
The warm drink warm feelings thing is new to me, but any drink handed to a suspect during interrogation gets you fingerprints and DNA without a court order.
@@mechanomics2649 it's indeed true, police officers can take your fingerprints by force if you're under arrest or if you're a 'reasonable suspect'. When you're just being interrogated in the police station you have to give written permission. *Obviously that's not valid for every country out there.
Such a good channel, it's just a shame they haven't uploaded in a while... there is a 2nd jcs channel ( only has about 4 vids) but it hasn't uploaded any content for about two months either
there is a reason when reading your miranda rights they say "anything you say can and will be used AGAINST you in the court of law... they dont care what you say as long as it gets them closer to a conviction but if you say something that helps your case all of a sudden they haveshort term memory
Notice there is virtually nothing you can say to a cop that can and will be used to SUPPORT you in a court of law. Tell the police you want a lawyer, and shut up.
This matches well with the detective training I've been part of (as a role player). We teach them how important rapport is. I love his warm mug technique. Clever. Also, photocopiers are just as accurate as polygraphs as lie detectors. There is no such thing as a technology for detecting lies.
Well, Batman himself is a highly illegal entity. But he’s also an expert in that stuff, he should’ve known all sorts of tricks and techniques in an interrogation room.
@@alexman378 I think he was losing control. That's the whole point of the scene, is that Batman was never in control, and that he finally met a man he can't physically beat.
This guy makes me want to tell him everything I know (ik sarcasm doesn't come thru as well in writing but what I just sad had a lot of it) I'd actually like to ask him some questions.
"You want to make the interviewee feel calm and relaxed, to help get more information." Batman: *slams Joker's face against the glass* "WHERE ARE THEY?!"
What he says about confessing to crimes you haven’t done, is absolutely correct. I was called in for something a friend of mine supposedly did, which I knew for a fact he didn’t do, and ended up thinking I may had actually done something by the end. The interrogator was so nice, and understanding, I thought he was genuinely looking for the truth, and he then started manipulating what I told him. What they say about never talking without a lawyer? Absolutely correct.
Yup, its your right, you gotta use all you got
Dam bro. Heavy stuff.
@@richardgray9284 Yeah man, never expected to find myself in that position. They’re very manipulative and great actors, “everything you say can and will be used against you” is a perfect description of what happens, even if you’re telling them the truth verbatim.
Exactly. In those situations, the police are not your friends. No matter how much they might try to act like it. You don't owe them anything without a lawyer present.
Cops are dickbags, but you could also be a liar.
Batman : *Slams the Joker's head into the glass*
Professional interrogator : "Yeah, that's poor management of behavior"
Lol Just thought the same thing.
If he was head of the department for interrogating the people who ended up in Gitmo, he would be right. The violence and torture should be delivered with a flat face and a heartless demeanor. That makes it, apparently, professional and acceptable. Like the age-rating rules in the US: it's completely fine to genocide a thousand people, or murder someone gruesomly - as long as you don't see any blood, and the bad guy looks foreign.
@@kabalder there’s little doubt that this guy has overseen war crimes, needless violence
Yeah, honestly I feel we really don't need a new Batman movie. I'd rather have Batman go to therapy.
@@kholi9441 years of.
“You have 2 ears and one mouth. You should be doing twice as much listening as talking.” So well put. I might have to use that one myself.
It's an incredibly common phrase. You see it a lot in glurge.
Maybe that's why deaf people are constantly talking.
I've heard that for 30 years, it's been around since humans could speak and hear
I thought my boss created the phrase when he told it to me one day that I thought I knew everything.
If everyone did that then we would all be listening to half as much. Actually it would keep being cut by half until nobody is talking anymore.
I’m so happy to hear him talk about false confessions and why law enforcement needs to change how they operate.
well when u accusing somebody isnt easy to tell the truth to somebody u dont know
you are more cooperative with people u know so if anybody did something they gonna lie cause thats human nature nobody seeks the truth everybody tell something to redeem themselves or give the blame
Three words "where's my lawyer?"
There are a lot of law enforcement officials that only care about their careers and not about finding THE TRUTH!
@@badcornflakes6374 be more explicit. I guarentee some cop will argue in court that he didn't realize you wanted to see your lawyer, but that you were merely curious as to your lawyers whereabouts, and some courts will accept that bs. The Louisiana Supreme Court did basically that to Warren Demesme.
@Ман ван данн You first
I applaud him for calling out in no uncertain terms how immoral, heinous, and ineffective are abusive interrogation and torture. The MKUltra project was so horrible, look it up if you haven't heard of it before.
And if you're REALLY interested read "The Men Who Stare at Goats." They made a movie with Ewen McGregor, George Cloony, Jeff, Bridges, and Kevin Spacey that's more of a dark comedy but still tells the events with 90% accurate. Both are masterpieces but the book is my recommendation. The tone of the narrative is 100% serious and truly go into a much depth as possible. 0
@@MrSomeRedditor lol, seriously? I thought that movie was supposed to be satirical comedy.
And yet Guantanamo Bay still exists, still doing illegal acts, and still not held accountable by anyone in any meaningful way.
I am sure when he was overseeing interrogation of Al-Qaeda operatives they wasn't just talking to them.
@TBM Applaud? Most of you vote for supporters and proponents of torture. 4:25 - Yeah, cops are definitely called to account for abusing prisoners. Sure they are. Who is this clown??
11:00 I'm so glad he directly addressed the pseudoscience of analyzing micro-expressions.
It's frustrating seeing people doing so well on UA-cam irresponsibly peddling that nonsense.
Except it's held up in peer-reviewed studies? Just because most lay people can't tell when a person is lying or hiding something doesn't mean that the whole field is in fact bunk, it's quite the opposite.
Edit: I'm not allowed to post replies, you can simply Google peer-reviewed research micro expressions and find plenty of sources. It's not some sort of magic lie detector as some people think it is, but properly trained automated systems and properly trained people do significantly better than random chance or untrained people.
@@MCXL1140 Could you cite any sources...? All of the studies I've seen have indicated otherwise, even where the practitioners are professionals? (Pretty disappointing actually - we'd all like to think we can judge other people's behaviour accurately, if only as a basic matter of survival! 😕)
@@MCXL1140 source?
I actually believed it until i saw this! All that science they used to support micro expressions really pushed the believability
I'm autistic and I suffered *so* much in my life because of this microexpressions bs. I feel vindicated.
To be fair, the whole point of the "interrogation" in the Dark Knight is that the Joker is in control the whole time, not Batman. The Joker is the one doing all the things he describes, trying to get batman on his side, ultimately getting him to do exactly what he wants.
Yeah he is a very good cop but doesn't understand script writing.
@@AnthonyMazzarella to be fair to him he’s never had to deal with a Joker level super villain
Nah the point of that scene was to show how Batman's process of extracting information - through intimidation and violence - was useless against a man with no fear who enjoys pain. He could've tried to use reverse psychology, but he was too emotionally attached to the outcome, and too used to resorting to violence, to see through the red haze and do it the right way.
it also shows the 'ticking bomb' scenario often used to justify torture is probably the situation where it's least effective. torture works best when it breaks down someone's hope and resolve over a long period. all the joker had to do was hold out until the bombs went off. of course, in the end he told batman where to find them (but not really) just too late for batman and the cops to rescue both of them, because it was all part of the plan.
You said it all perfectly here.
I'm so glad he called out the micro-expression body language crap.
Exactly!
It’s not crap, but reading about it doesn’t make you good at it. People who have been trained do become much better at detecting micro expressions.
But imagine reading a book and thinking you could be proficient at shooting targets because you read about it. It takes training and practice.
@@robpolaris7272 Still crap. And it isn't because of lack of training, but problems with interpretation. There is too many factors that can cause micro expression, which have no connection to the ongoing interrogation. Medical causes, unrelated memories, reaction to the environment, etc. The body language is just too unspecific to identify the exact cause. It's mostly shows "stress or no stress". People are too often overconfident because of their subjective experiences.
@@Terovi I think maybe the people that can be more trustworthy in this area know these things and seek out nuances. (Like medical conditions and outside circumstances) I think most people on UA-cam that do body language analysis are hacks, but I’ve found a couple channels that seem reliable. But, the two channels I watch do mention (often) all the things you stated. You should check out The Behavior Panel.
It's not crap altogether, but it is crap for interrogations. In order for you to be able to utilize any kind of kinetic response, you need to understand the individuals baseline. If you don't already know the person well enough, you'll never know what expressions go against their normal behavior.
i am so glad they covered "When They See Us" and the story behind that. This helps us dispel the myth that our law enforcement systems are rooted in infallible justice. Also great of Mr Fallon to acknowledge the erroneous belief of "an innocent person will never confess"
Feel free to call out coercion to “false confessions,” just pick a better case to hang your hat on. They went after those boys so hard because they had the witnesses and physical evidence that made it incontrovertible they had committed the crime of beating a woman to a bloody pulp. I know it’s trendy to say all accusations are just because of racism and they were unjustly profiled and railroaded. But this case was always real simple until the media and opportunistic scumbags used it to advance their own agendas and pad their own pockets; truth be damned.
It's still so terrible, I can't bear to watch it
Lol Batman slams the Joker against a window.
“What we have here is ineffectual management of behavior.”
Fair.
Always always always remain silent until you get a lawyer. Especially with non-feds, they care more about a confession than the truth.
Halfway through listening to this guy I confessed to every crime I've ever committed.
@Anonymus X lol. I have no crime.
So did I. And after confessing to your crimes, I even confessed to my own crimes too!
If you look at the interrogation of Chris Watts, the man who killed his whole family a couple of years ago in Colorado, that was very true to what this expert is saying: build a rapport, you’ll get them to talk eventually.
Part II: the opening scene in Inglourious Basterds, when SS-Standartenführer Hans Landa interrogates French farmer Perrier LaPadite.
Yes! He's absolutely terrifying.
Omg, one of the best interrogation themed scenes. How was this missed?
Good scene but it's less of an interrogation and more Landa playing with his food
@@kingcole55 it's less of Landa playing with his food and more of standard normal gestapo intimidation and brute force back in the day.
Nowadays is just US army torturing and waterboarding any suspect in their oil wars
Using torture to get information is like using a axe to open a Snickers bar.... You won't get much cause most of it will be useless.
"My lawyer told me not to answer any questions and I'd like to return to my cell". To. Every. Question. Even innocuous ones.
Then congratulations about teaching serial killers to escape justice
Better to sit in a cell for a week than sit in a cell for a decade.
Especially in Canada 🇨🇦 where LE can continue questioning you even after you've asked for a lawyer.
This is one of the best interviews you guys have done. He really teaches something important that needs to be acknowledged by the world. Movies and shows need to stop depicting interrogations and more like casual conversations.
He also offers in-depth criticism with strong arguments about how these systems are carried out in real life.
But casual conversations are boring to watch hhhhh Its called entertainement for a reason
Thank you!
I agree, but it takes a better screen writer to script an entertaining quiet conversation and quality actors to deliver that scene in an interesting way than a writer who just slaps some violence and aggressive behavior in there with crappy actors and jump cuts, so not likely we'll see much of it.
Law & Order SVU has got to be the worst prepatrator of this.
Every. Single. Episode. Is them badgering someone until they make an emotional confession.
No one in a position of authority is your friend. They all have an agenda and a bias and they will do whatever it takes. Also always ask for a lawyer. Don't say anything other than I would like a lawyer. Don't ever talk to the authorities of any jurisdiction without a lawyer. When it is just you, they can play it any way they want. When a lawyer is present they are a legal witness, they know the system and lawyer/client confidentiality is a thing. Take advantage of your rights in that situation because they are rights for a reason. Also if you are arrested pay attention to whether the authorities read you your rights or not. Convey that information to your lawyer.
Things you should say to the police: Nothing, or “I want a lawyer.”
@Javion MI. Well, not really. This is just standard procedure for what you should do to protect yourself. You have the right to an attorney, so you should use it. I personally would never speak to police about a case without a lawyer even if I was innocent.
I think "no one in a position of authority is your friend," is a blanket statement and an assumption but I totally agree with everything else you say for sure.
@@josie9306 A better statement might be "Never assume an authority figure is acting in your best interests."
I wish more people would watch the UA-cam video of the lawyer giving this same advise to a class.
I wish he'd review an interrogation of mindhunter
The interrogation methods used in Mindhunter are quiet specific, he will need to watch the whole series in order to understand why they’re using such methods.
@@WaLeeD-ug2tk I watched like 2 episodes of Mindhunter, and gave up. Its unbearable.
@@fynkozari9271 no hate, but because of people like you we don’t get third season. People attention span is too short nowadays
The interviews are almost word for word of the real life interviews you know
@@Bergen98 I watched a 4 hour Justice League straight non stop, I dont think its attention span, its the difference between good and bad contents.
Anyone else absolutely love these videos? I'm on a binge right now. So many interesting experts
Find it fascinating people like those shows but many also reject specialists when they tell them what to do or not
Heck yes!
I did exactly the same when I found them!
This guy is amazing, a true professional using science and ethics.
Don't forget allowing waterboarding to happen!
Appreciate it!
Batman isn’t an authentic representation of law enforcement? You don’t say
There's nothing preventing an interrogation to be both an authentic representation of the event AND to be conducted by fictional entities (such as superheroes).
I feel like the series Lucifer is a decent example. People are supernaturally compelled to "like" the titular devil and he can further focus his mojo on them to have them talk about what they "truly desire". Answering that question generally results in the target of the interrogation to just start answering all the other ones as well.
Beat up people ask questions later he definitely is an authentic representation
Exactly! That's the whole point of Batman, he can do things outside of the law, he took that clip too seriously.
Seems some cops might have gotten the opposite impression
No, but apparently the Punisher is.
It’s sad to hear younger people are confessing to crimes they didn’t commit like he’s right that method of scaring and pressuring or lying makes sense why it happens
Glad they did "when they see us"... the coercion of confession with minors in many older cases we're still sorting out is so sad.
Yeah totally, it's awful. I was also glad they reviewed that series.
The special agent: "This wasn't an interrogation, this was a beating"
*Literally every inmate of Guantanamo: "Right..."*
Which is why so many of the government's cases when they finally got a trial were thrown out. Those people could've really been terrorists who were guilty of horrendous acts of violence, but they had to be let go. Which makes our torturing of them all the more heinous and disgraceful. Not only does it give the Insurgency/Al qaeda/ISIS more propaganda for recruiting, but it does a disservice to all of their victims.
That a funny quip?
@@bbuggediffy no, just a reddit moment
Here is what I really do not get. As it is well known that "enhanced interrogation techniques" do not yield reliable information, why are they used?
And he mentioned them being tortured by the CIA and was critical of it.
I love how he could only indirectly call what the CIA did (and does) warcrimes by saying "what you saw are warcrimes".
I mean, he wrote a whole book on it: Unjustifiable Means: The Inside Story of How the CIA, Pentagon, and US Government Conspired to Torture.
@@rambam23 so he made a career out of committing war crimes, then wrote a book about how the war crimes were bad. What a hero
How do you know?
It's indirect to say war crimes are...war crimes?
@@serpicosghost He never tortured anyone
I am more hopeful of our judicial system having guys like him around. I adore forensic files and simular shows. It breaks my heart learning about false confessions. People are set to mental torture until you do what investigators want. It's immoral
I wrote a paper on false confessions when I did my criminology degree, it happens so often and for so many reasons.
There's a reason he is a fed and not a local cop. Local cops would oust him for breaking their thin blue line.
@@halfrightface prove it
@@valdie91285 Proof is a google search away, Chief. Look up department whistleblowers.
The tragedy is that a lot of people, even in government and law enforcement, still belive that torture is viable, acceptable or even necessary.
Even antonin scalia, a supreme Court justice, used "24 hours", a garbage show, to justify torture.
14:26 the asterisk* here is that the point of this methodology was to get a conviction, not to ascertain culpability or guilt
I like how he stresses cooperation over control
Some very good information and I like how he is so up to date with modern interrogation techniques and what is fact vs fiction. There is a lot of ideas out there STILL that people think are true when we know now they're false.
It's because they think of it differently. This guy correctly says that it means 1/4 to 1/3 of confessions are false. The way they look at it is that means 2/3 to 3/4 of confessions are true.
"it's not control you're looking for, it's cooperation" 💎💎💎
I like this guy a lot. True professional.
This guy knows interrogation. I was an interrogator for 32 years. It's refreshing to see a UA-cam video with so much truth. I conducted interrogations with several agencies. It is not surprising that the CIA developed water boarding and other Enhanced Interrogation Techniques. They were generally the most incompetent interrogators with whom I worked.
Thank you Scott! Appreciate it...
"What occurred here was ineffective managing of behavior."
I'm borrowing that line; too many great applications.
Half the comment here did not watch the video till the part where he condemned CIA interrogation method and called it 'war crime'.
But that's the thing with USA - they are not even trying to hide their war crimes - they just say "Yeah, it is... and what are you going to do about it?". The amount of US war crimes in the last 70 years all around the globe is off the charts - yet you have never seen anyone suffering any penalty for it.
But they WILL make up a war crime or WMD to invade you... and cause a few dozen war crimes.
I hope this guy is genuine in what he's saying about better police interrogation methods.
I have a hard time trusting police and I'm a decent person with no criminal history.
At the end of the day, the police are people just like us. Unfortunately, they're always gonna have bias and lock onto finding solutions rather than being empathetic.
@@Yoko4797 I think this can be helped with certain kinds of training and education.
Police need a new perspective, to see the good in people and not just the worst
He touches on one of the issues at the end. Too many police still rely on “gut” and long debunked practices to try to close cases instead of following the facts. At the end of the day, their job is to close cases and too many people take shortcuts but shortcuts here have devastating consequences.
The science of interrogation have gotten a lot better. The methods of unveiling the truth (not just get a confession by coercion or manipulation), has beeen studied, they have evolved greatly and books and courses are easily available. Now, do all police over the world have the truth as their goal for the interrogation, or do they simply want to close a case as fast as possible? Sadly, this varies.
@@cain666 most police still act like the worst examples in this video, especially with poorer people and people of color. What police need are CONSEQUENCES, hard and swift consequences for abusive behavior.
This is one of the best assessments of ineffective interrogation techniques I've seen.
Thank you!
"I want a lawyer"
"I am invoking my right to remain silent"
Exactly
"I'm speaking in quotations to make me sound smart"
@@valdie91285 I'm not sure why you're telling us that, but okay.
Would be really interesting to have this guy back to review naval investigations - NCIS has the most, obviously, but they crop up occasionally elsewhere.
I love the "Expert Reviews" videos and this is definitely one of the very best of them. Very informative and eye-opening.
My friend, who is a police officer, told me that if I am ever called in for questioning, for any reason, is to never talk without a lawyer present. You say "I want a lawyer. Put me in a cell."
So true. I was with a bunch of friends at a pub and an all out brawl happened. I didn't understand why at the time I got picked up but I just asked can I have a smoke. The officer obliged and asked what pocket my cigarette pack was in and lit it. Literally all I asked. Lawyer said what you say will be repeated even in obscurity and when the prosecutor read my case he included that brief albeit unimportant info to the court. I didn't say a word but the docket said he opted to have a cigarette while being detained.
"Put me in a cell" is spot on. Better to spend three days in jail than three months or three years.
Amazing that cops can lie to people. They'll tell you you don't need a lawyer, that's not necessary, we're just having a chat ... friend. Or a lawyer won't be available for a month while you sit in jail. Don't fall for it. Tell the police you want a lawyer and shut up.
This guy is wonderful. His info is really great! Always remember “I have the right to remain silent.
Yeah another thing about interrogations is your tone of voice and how you connect with the person your speaking with. Communication communication communication come off as a friend not as a hostile I would definitely take this guy breakfast and have a great conversation
"You have two ears and one mouth; you should be listening at least twice as much as you're talking."
You are very kind…Thank you!
And yet the "lie detector" scene in The Wire is still hilarious to this day.
And it actually happened, according to David Simon's reporting in his book.
"You have 2 ears and 1 mouth; you should be listening twice as much as you're talking"
...mom? Is that you?
I really liked this officer, he is one that seems to understand that not everyone is guilty and "appears" to be good, I put that in quotes because you never really know.
A healthy distrust isn’t a bad thing. Guilt should be decided by a court…and investigators job should be to seek out the truth (facts) for informed decisions to be made. Thank you for watching and for kinda liking me! :-)
Am I the only person who has always wanted to be interrogated? I don't want to commit any crime, but like, what an experience...
It sucks, having been through it and the pressure he talks about is real. They try to get you to contradict yourself on small things and then use it against you. They got me to write a letter to the spouse in the car crash that died saying they'd give it to her. They never did and my lawyer that I attained later informed me they hoped I'd confess to some wrong doing in it and they'd have used it against me.
You don’t have to commit a crime to get interrogated. Those people are good, you’ll walk in innocent and will get out thinking you may have actually done something, through the information you give up. In case it happens, always remember, no matter how nice they look, they don’t have your best interest at heart, nor do they care for truth and justice. Never talk without a lawyer if you find yourself in such a situation
@@alexman378 You're right and all, but I think you missed the spirit of my post. No worries though, have a great day.
That was one of the most fascinating of these expert reaction videos. I actually learnt something. I was also thinking of his personality. You can imagine him remaining apparently calm in just about any interview situation, and always getting what he wants.
I inadvertently found myself paying really close attention to the language he used. Honestly it's a relief to hear someone of his profession and experience call abuse out like that. More law enforcement having a mindset like that would be wonderful
Thank you for those kind works…
Having conducted internal reviews with multiple corporations, I can say that this guy must have played a role in training the company that trained me. He says ,verbatim , things I was taught not all that long ago. I am very thankful he is out there speaking on how some of the negatives on past interrogations have started to change. A lot of modern media still portrays outdated methods and that discredits the changes made. It also helps cause distrust with police and other investigators.
That’s very good to hear. The practice need to continue to evolve…
when they see us is one of the saddest things i’ve ever watched
I'd love to see this guy analyse interrogations in some of the British cop dramas. "Midsomer Murders" with Tom Barnaby sitting on someone's sofa having a quiet chat over a cup of tea. "Line of Duty" with the barrage of tiny details and hard evidence on the projector and cop-vs-cop interrogations. "Shetland" and the difficulty of questioning people you have a personal connection with in a small community.
In Line Of Duty at least they recorded the interrogations.
Barnaby is the best.
I'm showing my age here but in the early 70s we had a cop show called Columbo with a detective who did the same thing, only without the tea.
@@icee8959 - I love that show. No car chases. No guns. Just self-effacing tenacity.
He could have done a whole episode on what went wrong during "When They See Us".
Wish he would review Rust Cohle’s interrogations in true detective
3:15 wouldn’t making the person uncomfortable cause them to focus on the irritant instead of the questions. This is why interrogators do not wear cologne or anything clothes that are flashy. You also don’t want an interrogator to have a speech impediment or someone who is overly handsome.
This guy says some really really awesome stuff. Moving forward in the right direction.
Thank you!
I am a huge fan of The Dark Night, but that interrogation scene immediately makes me think of that hilarious "WHYDOYOUWANNAKILLME?" spoof)
Honestly batman is goofy when hes interrogating joker. Also i wish joker would laugh it off.
I like the Out Of Touch skit better
The part with Brooklyn Nine-Nine and the idea that making a person uncomfortable primes them for interrogation. What it misses is how many people would just be distracted, not necessarily uncomfortable. The uneven chair or the sticky table are easy sources of distraction and fidgeting, and an inattentive interviewee seems counterproductive. If I walked into a police interrogation and it looked like a shitshow that didn't have itself together, I probably wouldn't take it or them seriously, lawyer up, and walk out.
He needs to be a head of interrogation programs I DON’T KNOW 99.9% OF ALL POLICE DEPARTMENTS ANYWHERE? HE GAIN MY FULL TRUST AND I JUST CONFESSED!!!!👏🏻
🙂
Bring this guy again, PLEASE!
Thank you Jose!
@@VeritasMax Thanks. I didn't know you had a channel on YT. Subscribed there too!
Dang it. He didn't comment on Sharon Stone's leg crossing scene.
This guy doesn't even know the difference between psychotic with psychopathic. Joker is not having a "psychotic episode," he's in complete control. Pretty basic psych mistake there.
Mark Fallon is a true World Class expert, both in his experience and phycological level...........
Thank you Dante!
I can imagine him playing good cop being like: cmon you’re not that guy
When I leave a room I whish such an cool outro would be playing for me too.
God, it would suck to have him as a dad lol.
My guy worked for ncis but there was no ncis interrogations missed oppertunity
"If I defecated on the American Flag how would that make you feel?"
"Confused?"
lol I'm dead.
Lol thanks for literally describing the point of the Dark Knight interrogation scene
This guy is so good, I would easily admit to anything.
Thank you! Appreciate you tuning in…
This guy seems surprisingly progressive for his age. I'm presently surprised!
Did you mean "pleasantly surprised"?
@@michaeledmunds7266 Why not both?
Thanks for both!
glad this guy acknowledges some of the things the government does and did wrong
When he said Batman had “ineffective managing of behavior” I lost it 😂😂
😮
The warm drink warm feelings thing is new to me, but any drink handed to a suspect during interrogation gets you fingerprints and DNA without a court order.
Just because you saw that in a movie doesn't mean it's real.
@@valdie91285 Oh it's real, I just have a few friends and family on the job.
@@valdie91285 Doesn't mean it isn't either, so I have no idea what your point is.
@@mechanomics2649 it's indeed true, police officers can take your fingerprints by force if you're under arrest or if you're a 'reasonable suspect'. When you're just being interrogated in the police station you have to give written permission.
*Obviously that's not valid for every country out there.
@@mechanomics2649 sucks for you
What a gentleman.
It just goes to show…the system is corrupt, but there are a lot of good people working within-and working to change-that system.
Thank you for your kind comments…❤
I'm just gonna throw this out there, if you like this type of stuff you'll love the JCS Criminal Psychology channel
Such a good channel, it's just a shame they haven't uploaded in a while... there is a 2nd jcs channel ( only has about 4 vids) but it hasn't uploaded any content for about two months either
I love that he mentions false confessions.
It’s sad that there are so many of them. We need to improve the practice and use science to professionalize the policing.
there is a reason when reading your miranda rights they say "anything you say can and will be used AGAINST you in the court of law... they dont care what you say as long as it gets them closer to a conviction but if you say something that helps your case all of a sudden they haveshort term memory
Notice there is virtually nothing you can say to a cop that can and will be used to SUPPORT you in a court of law.
Tell the police you want a lawyer, and shut up.
Sounds like the interrogation of Luis in Ant-Man and the Wasp was pretty accurate!
I love this phrasing xD Batman beats up the joker: “Ineffective managing of behavior”
🤣
This was a wonderful guest! Loved it!
Thank you!
Not even a The Shield one. I wish he talked about the "good cop bad cop" thing that we see in every single movie/show with interrogations.
Watch JSC it does happen in real life.
This matches well with the detective training I've been part of (as a role player). We teach them how important rapport is. I love his warm mug technique. Clever.
Also, photocopiers are just as accurate as polygraphs as lie detectors. There is no such thing as a technology for detecting lies.
I get irrationally annoyed whenever people or media play up lie detectors and I'm not even involved with law enforcement or Criminology.
They aren't even admissible as evidence, that should say something...
Thanks for putting timestamps in!
cute lovely beagle
ua-cam.com/video/M-zDS_rfxRE/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/oMcSTyyV0Ek/v-deo.html \,.
THE DARK KNIGHT:
So, this is illegal….
Mind blown.
Well, Batman himself is a highly illegal entity. But he’s also an expert in that stuff, he should’ve known all sorts of tricks and techniques in an interrogation room.
@@alexman378 I think he was losing control. That's the whole point of the scene, is that Batman was never in control, and that he finally met a man he can't physically beat.
I'd love to hear his opinions on the Criminal Minds episode where Gideon interrogates a prisoner at Guantanamo.
Very cool! Articulate and informative. Thank you.
This guy makes me want to tell him everything I know (ik sarcasm doesn't come thru as well in writing but what I just sad had a lot of it) I'd actually like to ask him some questions.
Notice that he never said it was improper to for the cops to say their witness wouldn’t want a lawyer. He’s still a cop.
Slamming a head on the table is fiction but waterboarding the 911 suspects in he middle east was fair game >D
Not really, no. Suspects are innocent until proven guilty.
@@mechanomics2649 .... I'm sorry but I think you're missing the point.
You clearly aren't allowed to be honest
Definitely should've used rust cohle's interrogation scenes in true detective
Wow very professional & insightfull
Mark Fallon: I am an expert in subtle, soft ways to simply get the suspect to talk freely. Commenters on this vid: *sweats*
Great segment
Thank you!
"You want to make the interviewee feel calm and relaxed, to help get more information."
Batman: *slams Joker's face against the glass* "WHERE ARE THEY?!"
To be fair, the Joker seemed to be having a good time.
Two minutes in a room with this guy and I would tell him EVERYTHING!
Thank you for tuning into the show!
Fallon is lovely, bring him back for more.
That’s so kind…Thank you so very much!
It's impressive how he's calling out BS