被害人醉酒和犯罪类型对模拟陪审团决策的影响

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q3 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Psychology Crime & Law Pub Date : 2023-02-14 DOI:10.1080/1068316x.2023.2176498
Erica Martin, Lauren A. Monds
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引用次数: 0

摘要

酒精中毒是犯罪中的一个常见特征,然而陪审员往往对酒精如何影响目击者的记忆知之甚少。此外,陪审员往往对不同罪行的偏见视而不见,这影响了他们对目击者证据的解释。因此,本研究调查了(1)受害者在犯罪过程中的醉酒状态和(2)犯罪类型对模拟陪审团决策的影响。本科生(N = 228)阅读了一份审判记录,该记录描述了一名女性在犯罪发生时处于清醒状态或轻度、中度或重度醉酒状态。他们还完成了调查问卷,评估与审判有关的判断、对女性的性别歧视态度以及酒精信仰、行为和经历。模拟陪审员错误地认为任何剂量的酒精都会损害受害者的信誉。然而,受害者的醉酒状态没有影响判决决定,这更好地由法外因素来解释。不同犯罪类型的陪审团决策没有差异。目前的研究主张需要对陪审团进行教育,以纠正关于酒精对目击者记忆影响的误解,并继续探索犯罪类型和法外因素在醉酒相关案件中的作用。
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The effect of victim intoxication and crime type on mock jury decision-making
Alcohol intoxication is a common feature in crime, yet jurors often possess little understanding of how alcohol affects eyewitness memory. Furthermore, jurors are often blind to biases about different crimes that affect their interpretation of eyewitness evidence. Accordingly, the current study investigated the impact of (1) a victim’s intoxication status during a crime and (2) the type of crime committed on mock jury decision-making. Undergraduate students (N = 228) read a trial transcript describing a rape or robbery committed against a woman who was either sober or intoxicated to a low, moderate, or severe degree when the crime occurred. They also completed questionnaires assessing trial-related judgements, sexist attitudes towards women, and alcohol beliefs, behaviours, and experiences. Mock jurors incorrectly perceived alcohol as detrimental to victim credibility at any dose. However, the victim’s intoxication status failed to influence verdict decisions, which were better accounted for by extra-legal factors. Variance in jury decision-making according to crime type was not observed. The current study asserts the need for jury education to correct misconceptions about the effects of alcohol on eyewitness memory, and continued exploration of the role of crime type and extra-legal factors in intoxication-related cases.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
7.10%
发文量
83
期刊介绍: This journal promotes the study and application of psychological approaches to crime, criminal and civil law, and the influence of law on behavior. The content includes the aetiology of criminal behavior and studies of different offender groups; crime detection, for example, interrogation and witness testimony; courtroom studies in areas such as jury behavior, decision making, divorce and custody, and expert testimony; behavior of litigants, lawyers, judges, and court officers, both in and outside the courtroom; issues of offender management including prisons, probation, and rehabilitation initiatives; and studies of public, including the victim, reactions to crime and the legal process.
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