Interrogations and Confessions
Competency
Lie Detection
Juries
100

When an innocent person confesses to a crime they didn't commit

What is a False confession?

100

The deliberate feigning or gross exaggeration of physical or psychological symptoms

What is malingering?

100

The two types of lies

What are commision and omission

100

The process by which most criminal cases are decided

What is plea bargaining?

200

The tendency to attribute other people's behavior to dispositional causes rather than situational pressures

The fundamental attribution error

200

The length of time a defendant deemed incompetent may be held against their will

What is restoration to competency in the "foreseeable" future?


200

Two misconceptions about lying/lie detection

What is the liars stereotype, accuracy of polygraph exam, etc

200

The standards used to determine a verdict for civil and criminal court


What is clear and convincing and reasonable doubt?
300

The four names for removing or adding a positive or negative stimulus

What are...

Positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, positive punishment, negative punishment

EXTRA POINTS: Give example of each

300

3 factors that contribute to competency to stand trial

What is...

IQ/intellectual disability, Age, mental illness, amnesia*, medication status

300

Three things that a polygraph might measure

What are signs of high arousal?

(heart rate, pupil dialiation, sweat, etc)


300

Three reasons why a juror may be deselected

What is...

non-english speaking, law enforcement, "undue hardship or extreme inconvenience," no-showing, challenge-for-cause, peremptory challenge

400

The four types of evidence used at trial

What are...

physical, testimonial, documentary, and confessions

EXTRA POINTS: give an example of each

400

The types of abilities/competencies needed to participate effectively in all stages of the legal process, e.i. adjunctive competence

What is foundational competence and decisional competence?

+100 points for description/definition

400

Two types of questioning procedure methods

What are the Relevant-Irrelevant Test, Control Question Test, Postive control test, Guilty knowlede test, polygraph?

400

Four variables that may influence a juror's decision

What are...

locus of control, belief in a just world, authoritarianism, race, gender, attitude towards the legal system (see PJAQ), similarity-leniency, pretrial publicity

500

Four interrogation techniques

What are...

Maximization, minimization, the Reid Technique, deflecting blame, reframing the issue, misleading questions, conditioning, etc

500

The % of defendants deemed incompetent to stand trial

What are 2% of defendants?


HALF POINTS: What is 20% of defendants?

(20% of defendants out of the 10% who are evaluated for IST are deemed incompetent)

500

Four problems with questioning procedure tests

What is...

Strong innocent reactions to questions, little standardization (examiner, scoring), those taking a polygraph have to believe it works, some people are not emotionally reactive, using countermeasures

500

Three steps in the trail procedure process

What are opening statements, direct examination, cross-examination, redirect examination, recross examination, closing argument (summation)?