The effects of the putative confession and evidence presentation on maltreated and non-maltreated 9- to 12-year-olds’ disclosures of a minor transgression
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Abstract
<p class="first" id="P4">The present study examined the influence of the putative
confession (in which children
are told that the suspect told them “everything that happened” and “wants [the child]
to tell the truth”) and evidence presentation on 9- to 12-year-old maltreated and
non-maltreated children’s disclosure (
<i>N</i> = 321). Half of the children played a forbidden game with an adult confederate
which
resulted in a laptop breaking (no transgression occurred for the other half of children),
followed by coaching to conceal the forbidden game and to falsely disclose the sanctioned
game. Children were then interviewed about the interaction with the confederate. Among
the 9- to 10-year-olds, the putative confession led to a higher rate of breakage disclosure
(62%) than the control condition (13%), and higher rates of leakage of incriminating
details during recall (47% compared to 9%). Older children were more likely to disclose
than younger children, and uninfluenced by the putative confession. Among all ages,
evidence presentation elicited disclosures from 63% of children who had not previously
disclosed, without eliciting any false disclosures.
</p>