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name of the video we watched
the torture question
- produced by michael kirk
Abu Ghraib
U.S.-run prison in Iraq infamous for abuse committed against Iraqi war detainees
"after 9/11, the gloves come off"
Cofer Black
Camp X-Ray
Prison in Guantanamo Bay where the U.S. held unlawful enemy combatants from the Taliban and al-Qaeda,
Bybee Memo
advised the CIA, DoD, and the President on the use of torment and coercion
janis karpinski
first female general to take command in a combat zone
the hardsite
"prison within the prison"
- between cell blocks 1A and 1B
what was the "name" of the detainee kept at the hardsite
Detainee 07
who wrote the bybee memo
John Yoo: Drafted the memos.
Jay S. Bybee: Signed the memos.
"Can't become your _________ in the name of defeating your ___________"
Can't become your enemy in the name of defeating your enemy"
REID (interrogation models)
most widely used model
- questions and a checklist to norm the individual
- relies heavily on their fear of punishment / sanctions
action based (interrogation models)
look at what the individual does and focus on it
- if they had motivation to do it, you can get them to talk about it if you play it right
SCAN (interrogation models)
scientific content analysis
- attempt to use investigative content analysis as the sole form of interrogation
confrontational (interrogation models)
get aggressive and intentionally agitate the individual
- works well with hostile individuals
few good men quote
"you want the truth? you can't handle the truth"
soft (interrogation modes)
traditional question and answers without unusual stress / pressure
- can use traps and incentives
interrogation
pressure exerted above the standard level or means
hard (interrogation modes)
employment of a measurable amount of psychological, physical, situational, or emotional pressure above the normal questioning process
least reliable pressure in hard interrogations
physical pressure
instrumental - enhanced (interrogation types)
trying to use pressure to get the truth or information
- pressure is a means to an end to get a specific piece of info.
expressive - torture (interrogation types)
maximizing pain for emotional reasons or motivation to get information
FISA courts
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
- authorizes surveillance and when people want to go outside the kubark manual
torture warrants
allows certain means as interrogation methods, but you have to go through FISA courts
CIA blacksite
secret location thats off the grid
outsmart them (5 ways to get protected information)
trying to get ahead of the individual, and beat them to where they're going
- know just as much as they know
menace II society quote
"you know you done f*cked up"
trap them (5 ways to get protected information)
try to get the individual to paint themselves into a corner with their own words
ex: menace II society
trick them (5 ways to get protected information)
faking evidence, making up evidence, flat out lying
- easier on diminished capacity, or younger
flip them (5 ways to get protected information)
get them to change sides
- give them an out and make someone else the villain
most criminals are _______ by nature
transactional
the supreme court allows investigators to ________ during interrogations
lie
- "an innocent person, when presented with false evidence, would not bend and admit to a crime they did not commit"
wear them down (5 ways to get protected information)
outlasting the individual
ex: sleep
monstering
keeping an individual awake for 8-12 hours and drinking monsters to stay up
what was the video barnes used in interrogations
Boobah!
- people cant create lies and think straight
reckless direction (misconduct and negligence types)
giving someone, or someone is given bad / problematic orders
ex "get the info no matter what"
negligent direction (misconduct and negligence types)
not giving someone clear, detailed, or sufficient orders
negligent supervision (misconduct and negligence types)
no oversight and no one is watching what they're doing
- not accountable to anybody
anchor in supervision
individual who is dispassionate to the situation
- not emotionally tied into it
negligent retention (misconduct and negligence types)
keeping people who you should've fired, let go of, or had transferred
- should not keep them since they've shown indication they're not up to the task
situational hypothesis (misconduct and negligence types)
acting naturally, or fitting into a role of how they think they should act
plausible deniability (misconduct and negligence types)
looking the other way, and going out of your way to LEGALLY say you don't know, even though you know
deprivation (5 forms of hard (enhanced) interrogation)
keeping something from the individual
- food, sleep, water, ability to focus
discomfort / pain (5 forms of hard (enhanced) interrogation)
stress positions, uncomfortable chairs, physically problematic things
fear - psychological (5 forms of hard (enhanced) interrogation)
something the individual is afraid of having power over them
ex: dogs, or threatened to be sent back
dune quote
fear is the mind killer
shame - emotional (5 forms of hard (enhanced) interrogation)
how people may view them, violated code, disappointment, afterlife and such
sexual issues (5 forms of hard (enhanced) interrogation)
sexualized methods
ex: being around opposite sex, stripping
degree (5 forms of hard (enhanced) interrogation)
how serious it is
distance (5 forms of hard (enhanced) interrogation)
how long you're doing it for
who are they / what are they / what have they done (5+2 questions you ask yourself)
are they who we think they are
- look for behavioral consistency
- you are interrogating the persona of what they engaged in
- what is the basic criminal need they're trying to satisfy
will they talk? (5+2 questions you ask yourself)
not always yes or no (but more often yes)
- are they revealing / sharing important information
- some talk from the start to get it off their chest
why will they or why won't they talk (5+2 questions you ask yourself)
you have to determine where they are in their process & make them believe it's in their best interest to talk so they want to talk
why will incentives = what are they getting out of it
won't they incentives = what are the barriers
- still in the long process w/ ongoing elements = likely clam up
- over / complete task = likely talk
how do we get to the truth? (5+2 questions you ask yourself)
use themes and strategies to get em to talk
- may be holding out info or give up something different
spy game movie
2001 action thriller film starring Robert Redford and Brad Pitt.
how do we know when it's done? (5+2 questions you ask yourself)
need to know what we're trying to get the information for & know once we've gotten the information and they have nothing else to offer
hierarchy rule
if an individual commits multiple criminal acts, they only focus on the most serious act
in interrogation, you need to get to the _______ of what the offender is doing
you need to get to the heart
hustler (5 basic types of criminals - generic)
individual who is parasitic in their function and preys on / lives off others
- manipulates, cons, interacts w/ people
- they're prone to take deals if it makes sense or benefits them, but be ready to be hustled
examples of hustlers
scams
con games
pimps
prostitutes
drug dealers
thug (5 basic types of criminals - generic)
uses violence as part of the commission of the crime
- scaring them with threats may not work if they're used to fighting
- threats may work on wanna be thugs
gangster (5 basic types of criminals - generic)
individual who is good at navigating the criminal underworld
- they know how the game is played and sees it as business over emotional
thief (5 basic types of criminals - generic)
wants to take things that belong to someone else
- most see themselves as artists and take pride in their work
- not using confrontation as a main aspect in the crime
noble thief
not taking from those who are older or poor, only those who deserve it
idealist (5 basic types of criminals - generic)
a cause or belief system is driving them
- let emotions out in their crimes
- cause lives and dies w/ them or a group
master class (5 general modes of offenders)
they have anticipated every angle, drawn they focus off of themselves, and usually have a built in "out"
- the crime may not point in their direction
- may have created an alibi
alibi
someone / something that shows where you were / what you were doing at the time of the crime
criminal ingenuity fallacy
just because they got away w/ it does not make them a master criminal
professional (5 general modes of offenders)
know what they're doing & have lots of experience + they're disciplined
- carried out the act in a manner to make it harder to apprehend them
full time (5 general modes of offenders)
individual that is a serious career criminal and this is how they make their living
- consistent pattern or engaging in lower level crime w/o drawing attention to themselves
part time (5 general modes of offenders)
may have another job, and just do crimes on the side
- sloppy to a certain degree and more opportunistic / learned
juvenile (5 general modes of offenders)
young people, beginners, newer criminals
- seeing / taking things of value to themselves
ex: taking a playstation over a $10,000 watch
1st rule of zombies
always go out w/ someone slower than you
self centered (5 characteristics that criminals share)
thinking about themselves first or only
- will even throw family members under the bus
- focused on what benefits them (can use this to your advantage)
impulsive / opportunistic (5 characteristics that criminals share)
living in the moment and making decisions w/o thinking them through
- they may leave things behind
- can set bait and trap them
immediate gratification (5 characteristics that criminals share)
satisfaction in the present and no delayed gratification
- give them deals to benefit them in the short term / what sounds good as opposed to long term
realist - pragmatic (5 characteristics that criminals share)
able to judge the situation and come to terms w/ whats going on + make the best of the situation
fate (5 characteristics that criminals share)
frees the individual from living in the moment
- "if ill be dead anyway, why not ______"
- "if god made me like _______ why not do _______"
forced realism
certain noises / things strike people to the core
- they come to their realistic senses in the moment
crazy joe
arizona sheriff who made prisoners break up rocks outside
shawshank redemption quote
Get busy livin' or get busy dyin'
world war z max brooks quote
fear is the most valuable commodity in the universe
jody arias murder
Travis Alexander was found dead in Mesa, Arizona home in June 2008, having been stabbed multiple times and shot
- she claimed it was intruders / ninjas
professional (10 common themes of criminals)
business like
- approach it as a negotiation
- "ill give you _____ but you have to give _____ or the deal is off"
monty hall show
lets make a deal
proffer
deals / immunity presented to someone turning states witness
skill / artist (10 common themes of criminals)
take pride in their work and are proud of it
- investigator should play student and have them "teach you"
- play it as if they're smarter than you and have them teach you
intelligence (10 common themes of criminals)
the offenders overall ability
- investigators should use the things they have the most pride in against them
ego (10 common themes of criminals)
better to go to jail w/ their ego in tact than have it questioned
- play on their ego
power (10 common themes of criminals)
take an offenders power away if they want to be powerful
ex: small chair
- it's about control and who is in charge
- can even identify who they dislike if it has power over them
excitement (10 common themes of criminals)
can excite them to get them to want to talk or throw them off balance
justification / validation (10 common themes of criminals)
give or make a reason for them to do it
- blame someone else or the victim (don't have to believe it to use it)
ex: "yeah, id have done it too"
guilt / loyalty (10 common themes of criminals)
collateral damages and playing on their loyalty
- make them feel bad for what they did
ex: "let the parents have peace"
transaction (10 common themes of criminals)
give them an out
- "you did it because of ______" or "we got you, do ____ or you can have _____"
reputation / credibility (10 common themes of criminals)
they want to keep their reputation in tact
- some will take credit for things because of reverse social desirability
who was the polygraph guest speaker
sergeant daniel mcnielsen
polygraph
scientific instrument that measures breathing, sweat response, and pulse rate / blood VOLUME
most important measure on a polygraph
blood volume / pulse rate
somatic nervous system
responsible for voluntary movements that you consciously think about
autonomic nervous system
responsible for essential functions your body does w/o thinking
- heart beat, breathing, etc
pneumograph (equipment used in a polygraph)
measures breathing through convoluted rubber tubed placed on ones chest / abdominal area