"This week we bring you the second installment of Innocence Project of Florida’s (IPF) roundtable discussion on Making a Murderer.
The second episode, “Turning the Tables,” and the third episode,
“Plight of the Accused” are covered. Once again, the discussion will
first give a recap of what happened in each episode, then IPF’s
executive director, Seth Miller, and intake coordinator, Dr. Adina M.
Thompson, will discuss the episodes. " SM:The lack of blood at the scene is one factor strongly suggesting
Dassey’s confession was false and fabricated. Given the universal
agreement that Avery wasn’t very sophisticated and the general disarray
of his trailer, it is implausible that such a gruesome and violent
murder could have occurred in the trailer and no blood from the victim
would have been deposited–even with the best and most sophisticated
effort to scrub the scene of any such blood. What is so odd about
Dassey’s confession is that when someone is as limited as Dassey and so
susceptible to a false confession, the facts fed to the confessor by the
interrogators are usually at least consistent with the physical
evidence as it is known. Here, Dassey’s explanation of how the murder
occurred was wildly at odds with what the law enforcement officials were
actually seeing at the scene. Situations like this, where the confessor
is providing known false facts, is a tell-tale sign that they are
falsely confessing and simply making stuff up. Yet, the interrogators
here were very willing to accept Dassey’s amazing story probably because
their tunnel vision was squarely focused on Avery and they were
unconcerned with information that undermined their preconceived notions
about the case AT: I would venture that it isn’t only the
lack of blood that compromised Dassey’s confession. There is a set of
factors that combined to make this a dangerous situation with conditions
ripe for a false confession to happen. Some things that may increase
the likelihood of a false confession that were present in Dassey’s case
include: age, in that children may be more likely to falsely confess
than adults; mental acuity, in that people with lower IQs may be more
likely to confess than people with higher IQs; and custody, in that
children who do not have a parent, guardian or attorney present may be
more likely to make a false statement. When those factors are combined
with the fact that investigators asked Dassey leading questions (“Who
shot her in the head?”) after he failed to introduce the facts
independently, AND the fact that Dassey continued to change his story to
please his interviewers…well, it’s a dangerous situation. A false
confession is of course possible. As Seth pointed out, the story Dassey
told about slitting Halbach’s throat does not line up with the evidence
collected from the location where that supposedly happened, which only
adds to my suspicion about this confession. For more information about
false confession and admission, I suggest reading work by Dr. Saul
Kassin of John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He’s one of the people
doing cutting-edge social science research in this area. Of course, I
can’t say for certain whether Dassey falsely confessed or not. I can
only identify the risk factors. SM: While anything is possible, I’ll go out on a limb and posit that Dassey’s admission was in fact a false confession." Go to the following link for the entire 'roundtable.'
http://floridainnocence.org/content/?p=12342