Pubdate: Mon, 02 Nov 2009 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Timothy E. Moore, Professor of Psychology, Glendon College, York University. THE TROUBLE WITH 'MR. BIG' The Kind Of Police Tactics Used On Kyle Unger Can Easily Produce False Confessions -- And Immerse Subjects Into A New Life Of Crime The recent acquittal of Kyle Unger has attracted some much needed attention to the RCMP tactic that was used to elicit the apparently false confession that contributed to his original conviction. "Mr. Big" sting operations entail the creation of a fictitious criminal organization that the suspect is inveigled into joining. The police devote considerable time, money, and energy into seducing the target to join their criminal gang. They develop a personal relationship with the target and slowly involve him in staged illegal activities on behalf of the organization. Various ruses and threats are used to show the target that there are benefits to joining the gang and negative consequences should he fall out of favour. The scheme usually terminates in an encounter with "the boss" (Mr. Big), an undercover operative posing as a senior member of the organization. He employs a range of inducements in an attempt to elicit a confession to the specific offence being investigated (usually murder). The degree of control exercised by the police over the target is considerable. The tactics are invasive and persistent, usually lasting for several months. In one instance, the sting involved 50 operatives. Sometimes the Mr. Big technique produces probative evidence of a suspect's guilt. For example, when a confession leads to the discovery of new evidence, its probative value is significantly enhanced. In one case, after apparently being rattled during the early stages of a Mr. Big investigation, the suspect spontaneously went to a police station, voluntarily confessed and subsequently pled guilty to a 20-year-old homicide. However, in light of the invasiveness of the technique, its coercive nature and the strong inducements held out to elicit confessions, there is a real concern that the technique may cause innocent people to falsely confess, giving rise to a risk of wrongful convictions. The fictional circumstances surrounding the confession have the effect of minimizing or eliminating the perceived risk of negative consequences to the target from claiming responsibility for the offence. The risk of wrongful convictions may be particularly pronounced in cases where there is little or no evidence to support the confession and where the facts of the confession do not fit the known circumstances surrounding the offence. Lying about a murder to a gang of criminals could be a gamble that the suspect is prepared to take, compared to upsetting them, inviting their wrath, and squandering a connection to the criminal organization. The establishment of "authority" and power is a fundamental feature of the Mr. Big scheme. The operatives typically project personae who formulate elaborate criminal plots. They let the target know that the gang has a long reach, that they can find people and frame them, that they have insiders in the police department, and that, if necessary, they will beat and torture people. Moreover, the operatives establish a personal connection with the target. They purposefully infiltrate the suspect's life. If the target has no friends, they provide some. If he has low self-esteem, they bolster his feelings of self worth. If he has no money, they supply it. If he has no long-term prospects, they hold out the expectation of steady work. If he is an alcoholic, they give him liquor. If he is naive and uncomfortable around women, an appreciative female friend is made available. In effect, a new enhanced and promising social world is created for the suspect, with tentacles that affect much of his behaviour even when he is not in direct contact with his newfound companions. An important feature of this contrived social dynamic is that the suspect is manipulated by his new friends to perceive them as skilled, knowledgeable, powerful, well-connected and successful. They are also the key to his continued social and financial vitality. As such, they are influential social agents. Their overtures are flattering and seductive. His new friends let him know that he is valued and trusted, and that they themselves are principled and loyal, albeit crooks. During the undercover operation used on Kyle Unger, he was told by one of his new "friends" that if he had killed somebody that was fine. Indeed it was excellent. "... I know that I'm dealing with somebody... that I can trust. That's the kind of person I'm looking for." In addition to these many positive inducements, there is the added and critical dimension of fear. Much effort is devoted by the undercover operatives to the creation of an atmosphere of apprehension. Should the target fall into disfavour with his controllers, brutal force will be swiftly dispensed. Staged retaliations against fictitious transgressors make it clear to the target that his physical well being, if not his life, are at risk if his loyalty to the group is seen to waver. For example in one case the undercover operators staged an assault upon a woman. The target watched her (covered in what he believed to be blood) being thrown into the trunk of a car. During the simulated beating, the operative threatened to kill the woman, her spouse, and their two-year-old child. Other tactics are introduced depending on the specific situation. In another case, the undercover officers determined that the suspect's fiancee was so controlling that she was interfering with their operation, so they introduced a second female undercover agent who feigned interest in the target. In a Mr. Big operation, the target is essentially socialized into a life of crime. The state rigs situations where criminal acts are encouraged and reinforced. Outcomes are lucrative, with little or no risk to the target. The target learns to be a criminal. Many suspects had not, heretofore, engaged in any criminality, but the routine reinforcement and systematic cultivation of illegal activities may well affect the target's self image and psychological makeup. Throughout the Mr. Big operation, the target is innocent in the eyes of the law. The sting may go on for many months. Regardless of whether charges are ultimately laid, let alone whether there are convictions, the degree of intrusion is unprecedented. Is it acceptable for the state to surreptitiously set in motion a covert intervention that may permanently redirect the suspect's life trajectory, all in the service of extracting a "confession" to a crime that the suspect may (or may not) have committed? Kyle Unger confessed to a murder he had not committed. How many others have done so, and have been convicted because of it? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr