Dr Jarrod Gilbert Sociologist
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Making Murderers: Why people confess to terrible crimes they didn't commit.

26/1/2016

2 Comments

 
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Few things are more baffling and self-defeating than confessing to a crime you didn't commit. Yet it's remarkably common. It's also intriguing and disturbing how they come about. 
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Read my latest New Zealand Herald column here

2 Comments
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24/3/2019 03:12:37 am

I believe that we should all read an article like this because we can experience this anytime. We can be a subject for public scrunity and we will be forced to admit for something that we didn't do. Of course, who would want to experience such thing isn't it? A basic knowledge in regards with this serious matter would be enough, that's why we need to make an effort for that. By the way, I want to thank you for posting this article, I have learned a lot!

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30/7/2019 11:10:30 pm

What a very interesting topic you have just discussed in this article! I have to say that I do love watching documentaries that feature people who are committing crimes whether they are really the ones who did it or not. You see, I do love being able to understand other people's minds because I find them really amazing. As a matter of fact, I just finished watching a documentary today about an Asian teenager who actually killed her parents because she can no longer take their strictness when it comes to her life. It was indeed a horrifying event and I do feel pity for her parents simply because I think that they do not deserve what happened to them.

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