Perry v. New Hampshire Ruling Ignored Eyewitness Misidentification Stats
01.19.12
First, more than 2,000
studies
into the mechanics and psychology of eyewitness identifications, all published since the court’s 1977 decision, have found a wide range of variables that produce inaccurate eyewitness identifications. They include the presence of a weapon, consumption of alcohol or drugs, how long a witness watched what was happening, how long after a crime an identification is made and the race and age of an alleged perpetrator. They go well beyond suggestive conditions set up by police.
Second, despite the often-shaky reliability of eyewitness identifications and the opportunity of defense lawyers to expose flaws through cross-examination in court, juries place disproportionate faith in the IDs anyway.
Watch a video
about eyewitness misidentification.
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