How to Interview a Suspect Connecticut

The successful interrogation of a suspect is mostly about psychology and quick thinking. You shouldn't try and interrogate anyone if you lose your nerve or have a prejudice as to the innocence of the person. Be calm and try to find the truth, not to prove you're right in your suspicions.

Local Companies

Reliable Bail Bonds
860 214 6515
24 Birch Street
Manchester, CT
The Law Office of Gail Hamaty Matthews
(203) 364-0173
261 South Main Street Suite 272
Newtown, CT
Law Office of Ann E. Rose, LLC
(203)304-1332
6 Nelson Lane
Newtown, CT
Law Offices of Franklin A. Drazen
(203) 877-7511
245 Cherry St.
Milford, CT
Brown, Paindiris & Scott, LLP
(860) 659-0700
2252 Main Street
Glastonbury, CT
Law Offices of Jennifer Laviano, LLC
860-350-4757
76 Route 37 South
Sherman, CT
USLEGALVISA.com
203-373-9080
4270 Main Street
Bridgeport, CT
Beatty & Beatty, LLC
203 453-4399
25 Boston Street
Guilford, CT
John T. Dillon, Attorney at Law
203 453-9190
64 Boston Street
Guilford, CT
Law Offices of Jason DeGenaro, LLC
203-453-4101
29 Water Street
Guilford, CT

Provided By:

Steps

  1. Start the interview with a light conversation during which you will be able to establish the character of the questioned person. This may involve their occupation, musical preferences, family, etc. During this preliminary chat look for signs if the person is nervous and scared, prone to bragging, confident or not. Mark their level of intelligence and adapt to it.
  2. Switch to the subject of the questioning abruptly. This way you'll be able to notice the interviewed person's reaction. Remember that in 9 out of 10 cases the first impressions are the most correct.
  3. Let the interrogated person tell you their story without interrupting them. Look for inconsistencies. Being too detailed often shows the person has been prepared for questioning and has had the time to make their story up.
  4. Have another person enter the room shortly after the interviewed person has finished their story. Your associate must pretend to say something in your ear. Give the interviewed person a short look and excuse yourself.
  5. Return in about 20 minutes. At this time the suspect should be worried as to what has happened during your leave.
  6. Take about 5 minutes during which you may rearrange things on your desk, or scribble something on a scrap of paper. Then proceed to ask the suspect about the inconsistent points in his story.
  7. Ask for details. Some questions, like the color of a hit-and-run vehicle are easy to answer and the suspect saying they don't remember is an obvious attempt to conceal something. On the other hand, it would be strange for the interrogated person to have seen or remember the license number, so answering this question would show them having thought the whole thing over.
  8. Combine the real questioning with irrelevant questions, leading the suspect into believing you have something on your mind.
  9. Look for signs the suspect is lying. These may include crossing the hands (defensive position), sitting on the edge of the chair, too relaxed posture, tilting their head to the right, looking up as they think of the answer.
  10. Frequent use of expletives like "honestly", frankly, etc. shows that the suspect is lying. People who believe in what they say do not appeal to the listener's trust.
  11. Ask the suspect a question the answer to which you already know. This way you can see whether they're willing to answer your questions correctly.
  12. Be careful about the details. For example, if the hit-and-run has been driving on the suspect's side of the road(assuming you're in a right-side traffic country), it's strange for the suspect to say the car had a scratch on the left side. How have they seen it? These little details most often reveal a liar.
  13. Remember that everyone lies when questioned. It does not mean they're a criminal.

Tips

  • Be calm. Show of aggressiveness will only make your suspect refuse to talk to you.
  • When you find a major inconsistency in the suspect's story don't be too quick to point it out. Let them build the rest of their story on a false base.
  • A person looking down while thinking of the answer shows they're trying to remember, whereas looking up means they're just making it up at the moment.
  • Answering a question too soon means the suspect has made the story up. If they're saying the truth it should take some time for them to remember the details.

Article provided by wikiHow, a wiki how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Interview a Suspect. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

Featured Local Company

Reliable Bail Bonds

860 214 6515
24 Birch Street
Manchester, CT

Regional Articles
- How to Interview a Suspect Ansonia CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Bethel CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Bloomfield CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Branford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Bridgeport CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Bristol CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Cheshire CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Danbury CT
- How to Interview a Suspect East Hartford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect East Haven CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Enfield CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Glastonbury CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Greenwich CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Groton CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Guilford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Hamden CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Hartford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Manchester CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Meriden CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Middletown CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Milford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Naugatuck CT
- How to Interview a Suspect New Britain CT
- How to Interview a Suspect New Canaan CT
- How to Interview a Suspect New Haven CT
- How to Interview a Suspect New London CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Newington CT
- How to Interview a Suspect North Haven CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Norwalk CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Norwich CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Plainville CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Ridgefield CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Rocky Hill CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Shelton CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Simsbury CT
- How to Interview a Suspect South Windsor CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Southbury CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Southington CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Stamford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Storrs Mansfield CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Stratford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Torrington CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Trumbull CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Vernon Rockville CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Wallingford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Waterbury CT
- How to Interview a Suspect West Hartford CT
- How to Interview a Suspect West Haven CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Westport CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Wethersfield CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Willimantic CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Wilton CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Windsor CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Winsted CT
- How to Interview a Suspect Wolcott CT
Related Local Events
Welcoming Meeting for Legislative & Government Relations Committee
Dates: 10/14/2009 - 10/14/2009
Location: Chamber Office
Southington, CT
View Details

The Legislative Committe Meeting
Dates: 9/9/2009 - 9/9/2009
Location:
Milldale, CT
View Details

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History