Investigator Tips
Current Investigator Tip
The Biggest Mistake We Make When Interviewing Job Applicants
Nov 22, 2021
In today's environment we are all experiencing some difficulty in finding people to staff the open employment positions in our organization. In fact, just recently the Wall Street Journal published an article...
Previous Tips
The Use of Evidence During an Interrogation: Part II
Sep 01, 2003
In the earlier web tip a fundamental principle of interrogation was presented: A guilty suspect may be persuaded to tell the truth if he is convinced that the investigator is...
The Use of Evidence During an Interrogation: Part I
Aug 01, 2003
Types of Evidence
Evidence represents information used to help establish a fact. It may be inculpatory (supporting guilt) or exculpatory (supporting innocence). There are four broad categories of criminal evidence, each with...
Contaminating a Subject's Behavior
Jul 01, 2003
When inferring deception from a suspect's behavior, investigators must remember that a subject's outward behaviors during questioning are not direct signs of lying. Rather, when a person lies behavior symptoms...
The Role Of Consequences in Detecting Deception
Jun 01, 2003
The motivation behind every lie is the avoid the consequences of telling the truth. When my wife came home with bags of merchandise from a K-Mart store that was...
Neurolinguistic Evaluation
May 01, 2003
Neurolinguistic Evaluation
Principles
The outer cortex of the human brain is divided into left and right hemispheres. When performing different activities, one hemisphere dominates over...
The Importance of Corroboration Within a Confession
Apr 01, 2003
Within the last year numerous inmates have been released from prison and had their convictions overturned as the result of post-trial exculpatory evidence. Many of...
The Use of the Restitution Question During an Interrogation
Mar 01, 2003
During training in the Reid Nine Steps of Interrogation, we teach that when a suspect appears to be ready to confess the investigator should ask an alternative question. As an example the...
Background Investigations Conducted Over the Telephone: Part II
Feb 01, 2003
Phrasing Interview Questions
In the January web tip suggestions were offered for initiating a telephone interview. At the outset of a telephone interview, the investigator's goals are to (1) elicit a...
Background Investigations Conducted Over the Telephone:Part I
Jan 01, 2003
Starting the Interview
Recently I was interviewed by telephone concerning the suitability of an acquaintance applying for a job involving national security. The interviewer started out saying...
Handling The Angry Suspect
Dec 01, 2002
Every investigator has encountered a subject who exhibits symptoms of anger. Of all possible emotions, anger presents the greatest impairment of an investigator's ability to detect deception and persuade...
The Importance of the Transition Statement in an Interrogation
Nov 01, 2002
The purpose for conducting an interrogation is to legally persuade a suspect to tell the truth about his believed involvement in a crime. Very little persuasion, of course...
The Significance of a Suspect who Accepts Personal Responsibility for an Investigation
Oct 01, 2002
During our seminars we teach that suspects who make admissions against self-interest during an interview are often innocent of the crime. An exception to this rule is the suspect whose admission, in...
The Role of Anxiety During Interrogation
Sep 01, 2002
The Role of Anxiety During Interrogation
A psychological model has been developed that describes the relationship between perceived consequences and anxiety during an interrogation.(1) The model states that the interrogator's goal...
The Importance of a Written Statement
Aug 01, 2002
An employee has been interviewed and interrogated concerning the issue of falsifying time card entries. At the conclusion of the interrogation the investigator brings in a witness who is told that the...
Going Directly from an Interview Into an Interrogation
Jul 01, 2002
In the Reid Technique a clear distinction is made between interviewing and interrogation. The interview is non-accusatory, question and answer process that is designed to elicit information. An interrogation is accusatory in...
Conducting An Exit Interview
Jun 01, 2002
When an employee gives his two week notice to leave a company, the typical response centers around how to find a replacement for that person. What is often overlooked is that the...
Considerations With Respect to the Use of Evidence During an Interrogation
May 01, 2002
Considerations with Respect to the Use of Evidence During an Investigation
The Reid Technique represents a structured investigative approach to solve cases involving little or no evidence. The first step...
Evaluating the Truthfulness of a Reported Sexual Assault
Apr 01, 2002
Wisconsin recently introduced legislation that would prohibit a sexual assault victim from being asked to take a polygraph examination. Many states have already passed such a law. Clearly doubting the veracity of...
The Computerized Voice Stress Analyzer (CVSA)
Mar 01, 2002
Throughout history man has tried to identify a single, unique physiological responses that would only be present when a person lied. In the 1970's a phenomenon known as a vocal micro tremor...
The Role of Motivation in the Interpretation of a Subject's Behavior
Feb 01, 2002
In psychology, a person's motivation generally relates to the strength of their desire to accomplish a specific goal, which is also referred to as their drive. On the other hand, the concept...