Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. What is a Confession. The Law relating to Confession is to be found from Section 162 to 164 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1974 and Sections 24 to 30 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872. The term "Confession" appears in Sec 24 of Part I of Chapter II of the Indian Evidence Act. Sec 24 comes under the heading of "Admission" thereby making it clear ...

  2. confession”. Confession is an important concept. Indian legal system does not accord any legitimate status to those “confessions” that are made to police officials due to several reasons. The concept of “confession” was discussed in great detail in the case of Aghnoo

    • 272KB
    • 10
  3. Section 24 - 29 of the Indian Evidence Act talks about confession. The Act says that if a confession is extracted by inducement, threat or promise by a person in authority then such confession will be irrelevant and also a confession given to a police officer shall not to be proved against the accused.

  4. The interrogator might say something like, "See, that's good, you're telling me you would never plan this, that it was out of your control. You care about women like your sister -- it was just a one-time mistake, not a recurring thing." If the detective does his job right, an objection ends up looking more like an admission of guilt.

  5. The video showing the interrogation of convicted sex killer Russel Williams is a window into the way skilletd investigators use psychology to extract confessions, experts say. A condensed video of the 10-hour interrogation that pried loose a confession from the formed CFB Trenton commander was shown in a Belleville, Ontario court this week.

  6. Nov 16, 2016 · Eliciting a narrative account of the crime. Making questions short and brief. Phrasing questions in such a way that will allow the suspect to initially give brief answers. Avoiding legal or descriptive terminology. Follow the below guidelines while obtaining corroborating information from the suspect after the admission of committing the crime.

  7. People also ask

  8. Jul 7, 2023 · Only confessions made freely and voluntarily by a suspect are admissible as evidence of guilt. If police tactics induced a confession by coercion, threats, or fear, the confession is involuntary and the judge must exclude it from the case. Coercion, threats, and intimidation tactics used by police violate the suspect's constitutional rights.