This Police Method Is Used to Infer Guilt From 911 Calls, But It’s Not Backed by Science

Research shows that how you sound on a 911 call can determine whether police treat you as a victim or a perpetrator.

06.15.26 By Alyxaundria Sanford

Audio Waveform Visual on Computer Screen (Image: Envato)

Audio Waveform Visual on Computer Screen (Image: Envato)

Police departments across the country are paying up to $3,500 — funds that often come out of taxpayer money — to learn how to tell a guilty 911 caller from an innocent one. These programs promise that with just eight hours of the “right” instruction, a dispatcher, detective, or prosecutor could learn to ascertain guilt from listening to a 911 call.

ProPublica investigative journalist Brett Murphy — and guest speaker in the Innocence Project’s latest Just Data conversation: “What’s Your Emergency? When Calling For Help Makes You a Suspect” spent months documenting the adoption of these programs, which have never been backed by science.

Detailing his investigation at the live virtual conversation hosted by the Innocence Project’s Data Science & Research team on May 11, Mr. Murphy was joined by Dr. Jessica Salerno, an Associate Professor of Psychology and Associate Member of the law faculty at Cornell University, who presented her research on how police form suspicion based on the sound of someone’s voice. Their findings followed Huwe Burton’s personal account of being wrongfully convicted after calling for help.