Okay. I just wondered why it's "freakish and frankly inexcusable" to harbor suspicion toward someone who would knowingly accuse an innocent man of a heinous crime.
-Mike
Hi Mike,
Just wanted to explain that Amanda incriminated herself, as well as incriminating Lumumba in the 'confession'.
That she
knowingly accused Lumumba is precisely what's in question here. If Amanda's accounts of the interrogation are true then she was giving what Dr Saul Kassin terms a 'internalised false confession'. This is where the 'confessor' believes at the time that the statements are, or could be true.
By the time of the interrogation, they already suspected Patrick, and were questioning her about him specifically (now imagine you're being questioned as a 'witness' and you know you didn't commit the crime, and the police are focussing in on one person. Wouldn't you think they had reason to, that the person probably had something to do with it?)
According to accounts of the interrogation, the 'interpreter' and the police convinced Amanda that her memories of the night of the murder were unreliable and that she had repressed memories due to trauma. (Partly by talking to her about the phenomenon of repressed memories and partly by lying that they had solid evidence placing her at the scene).
They then asked her to imagine what she might have seen / heard if she were in the cottage, and she confabulates the Patrick 'info', with the nightmares she was no-doubt having in the wake of her housemate's brutal murder, and voila, you have a false confession / accusation.
In terms of Amanda's state of mind during the interrogation, it's a matter of record that there were 12 police involved. A senior policeman in another room says he heard her screaming during the interrogation. It was night. They denied her access to a lawyer. It's possible they denied her bathroom breaks. It's all classic coercion. Thus she did not
knowingly accuse an innocent man. Really, by definition, she could not have- she was not at the scene and therefore could not know that Patrick wasn't there.
There is no mens rea here, and therefore the slander conviction is unjust.