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Police Lineups Aren't As Accurate As They Could Be: Study

First Posted: 09/19/11 09:19 AM ET Updated: 11/19/11 05:12 AM ET

By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- A new study says those lineups you see on television crime dramas and often used in real-life police departments are going about it all wrong.

The study released Monday by the American Judicature Society is part of a growing body of research during the past 35 years that questions the reliability of eyewitness identifications under certain circumstances. That research has been taken more seriously in recent years with the evolution of DNA evidence clearing innocents of crimes they were convicted of committing, often based on eyewitness testimony.

The new study finds witnesses should not look at a group of people at once to pick a perpetrator. Instead, they should look at individuals one-by-one with a detective who doesn't know which is the real suspect – known as a double-blind lineup to avoid giving witnesses unintentional cues – preferably on a computer to ensure appropriate random procedures are used and to record the data.

The study found witnesses using the sequential method were less likely to pick the innocents brought in to fill out the lineup. The theory is that witnesses using the sequential lineup will compare each person to the perpetrator in their memory, instead of comparing them to one another side-by-side to see which most resembles the criminal.

"What we want the witness to do is don't decide who looks most like the perpetrator, but decide whether the perpetrator is there or not," said Gary Wells, an eyewitness identification expert at Iowa State University and the project's lead researcher.

Wells said the results confirmed many other laboratory experiments that have found sequential lineups to be more accurate. But he said some police departments have been reluctant to change their practices, wondering if they would apply to real-life witnesses.

This study used actual witnesses who didn't know they were part of a study, but were randomly assigned to use either the sequential or the simultaneous method. It was conducted at the police departments in Austin, Texas; Charlotte-Mecklenburg, N.C.; San Diego and Tucson, Ariz.

The witnesses were shown mug shots of one suspect with five "fillers," or the known innocents. In the simultaneous lineups, the witnesses picked a filler 18 percent of the time, verses 12 percent for the sequential method. Witnesses picked the suspect about a quarter of the time using both methods.

Wells estimates that between 20 and 25 percent of 16,000 law enforcement agencies in the United States are using the sequential and double-blind procedures. He said those reforms have been made in the last decade, with some key departments including Denver and Dallas coming on board just this year. "There's still a long ways to go," he said. He said he hoped this study would help push reforms forward.

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phmcgrath
05:33 PM on 09/19/2011
To me, a line places the victim in a situation where they feel they MUST pick someone and then they do so by picking someone similar but not necessarily the right person.
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10:52 AM on 09/23/2011
Watch the line-up scene from The Player with Tim Robbins and Whoopie Goldberg. Classic.
ZackShorty
Just killing time until time kills me.
04:12 PM on 09/19/2011
I would hate to have my life on the line just because I had the same features as someone else, Just another reason why there are innocent people in prison, serving the guilty person's time. We are l lucky we now live in the age of DNA.
06:37 PM on 09/19/2011
agreed, however there are many judges that routinely rule against having DNA tested that could show someone to be innocent after many years of unjust incarceration. Seen such happen in a state where 4 people in one year were shown by DNA to be innocent of charges and a judge rule against having DNA tested repeatedly for others.
02:09 PM on 09/19/2011
Vietnam....taught me, how to be observant at all times. Any and everything is suspect....and that time has sure helped me throughout life. Wrong, right, good, bad, makes no difference. Line ups by the cops, a joke to be sure.
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tomjefferson2005
Obama, House, Senate 2012 for the sake of America
02:00 PM on 09/19/2011
What does this reveal about human logic in general? What does this say about how people decide on their political viewpoints? People often don"t pay as much attention as they think they do; and emotions can also cloud their judgment.
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nhfireman
01:38 PM on 09/19/2011
When I was in the military we had several classes on observation, once in a while someone would walk into the class and talk with the instructor or a student after they would leave ,Without warning our instructor would ask us questions about what the person was wearing ,what they looked like etc.etc. and we had to write it down so as not to help the other students . You would be amazed at how many differant answers would be given .
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oommma4eva
12:28 PM on 09/19/2011
Did I read this right? With either method the right person was only picked 1/4 of the time?!?!
01:15 PM on 09/19/2011
Eyewitnesses are notoriously unreliable. Study after study has shown that most people do not remember things as they were, see things that weren't there and remember people looking different than they actually do. It is pretty scary to think of how many people have gone to jail simply on eyewitness testimony and might not have done the crime.
02:09 PM on 09/19/2011
And let us not forget the "help" that the police and prosecuters give the "eye witness".
02:49 PM on 09/19/2011
Dear notalagirl, what's really scary is your assumptions based on media reports which are always unreliable. I assume you have never conducted a line-up yourself and I also assume you don't even know all the reasons why a person goes into a line-up. To me what is really scary are the violent crimes like murder, rape and robbery that you seem not to care about that occur in the US hundreds of times a day.. I literary have conducted or supervised over a thousand lineups and I have never had a mis-identification. I have never, ever saw a cop or prosecutor help the victim pick out a perp. You have to know that the victims have to testify before a Grand Jury and at times a trial and they will state exactly what happened in the lineup or they commit perjury. By the way, the example given in the video is in no way reality.(although I got it right). A cop would have to the biggest moron to screw up a line-up. Lastly, you try to come across as a knowlegable person when in reality, you don't have a clue. The real damage you do(unintended) is that there are other people as you who agree with you. Remember, am awful lot of so called criminal justice professors think they are the experts in their field with out real life experience. Can you even tell me the several ways when a lineup is conducted?
gov111w
Truth-Justice-And the American way !
11:34 AM on 09/19/2011
I agree with my progressive left thinking friends, no matter what the crime everyone should get a second chance or do over !!!!
02:01 PM on 09/19/2011
What does your comment have to do with the subject of the article?