How downplaying or exaggerating crime severity in a confession affects perceived guilt

Psychiatr Psychol Law. 2020 Dec 14;28(4):599-611. doi: 10.1080/13218719.2020.1837027. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

This study investigates how judgments of guilt are influenced by factual errors in confessions that either amplify or downplay the severity of the crime. Participants read a confession statement and police report in which either the confession was consistent with the police report, the suspect admitted to a worse crime or the suspect admitted to a lesser crime. Mediation analyses showed that, compared to consistent confessions, both types of directional errors reduced judgments of guilt. Inconsistencies that made the suspect look better - but not those that made the suspect look worse -also increased judgments of guilt via a direct effect. Confessions that contain errors that appear to exaggerate the severity of the crime prompt no higher judgments of suspect guilt; however, errors in confessions that are perceived to downplay the severity of the crime can prompt an increased perception of suspect guilt compared to a consistent confession.

Keywords: attribution theory; false confession; inconsistencies; juror decision-making; wrongful conviction.