Secondary confessions: the influence (or lack thereof) of incentive size and scientific expert testimony on jurors' perceptions of informant testimony.

Evelyn M Maeder, Emily Pica
Author Information
  1. Evelyn M Maeder: Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice.
  2. Emily Pica: Department of Psychology.

Abstract

The goal of this research was to determine whether the size of the incentive (none, small, medium, or large, in terms of sentence reduction) a jailhouse informant receives for testifying, as well as scientific expert testimony regarding the fundamental attribution error, would influence mock juror decision-making in a criminal trial involving a secondary confession. Participants read a murder trial transcript involving informant testimony in which incentive size and expert testimony were manipulated and then provided verdict judgments, made attributions for the informant's decision to testify, and rated the informant and expert on a number of dimensions. Neither expert testimony nor size of incentive had a direct influence on verdicts. However, contrary to previous research on the influence of incentives on jurors' perceptions of secondary confessions, the presence of an incentive did influence verdict decisions, informant ratings, and attributional responses. Results imply that jury-eligible community members may be becoming aware of the issues with informant testimony as a function of incentive but that they are insensitive to the size of the incentive, and expert testimony may not sensitize them to the limitations of such testimony.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Decision Making
Expert Testimony
Female
Humans
Judgment
Male
Middle Aged
Motivation
Prisoners
Surveys and Questionnaires
Truth Disclosure
United States
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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