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- <text id=91TT0465>
- <title>
- Mar. 04, 1991: Why Children Lie In Court
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 04, 1991 Into Kuwait!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 76
- Why Children Lie in Court
- </hdr><body>
- <p>New research shows how the power of suggestion can lead
- youngsters to say things that send innocent adults to jail
- </p>
- <p>By Jerome Cramer/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The poignant scene is played out time and again in America's
- courtrooms. A small, bewildered child sits in a witness chair,
- being led by an attorney through shocking testimony. The
- youngster speaks haltingly of unspeakable things done to him
- or her by a stranger, a baby-sitter or even a parent. Could
- such an innocent soul possibly be telling anything but the
- truth?
- </p>
- <p> Most legal experts, child psychiatrists--and juries--have long thought that children rarely lie about sex-abuse
- crimes on the witness stand. On the strength of that
- assumption, many adults have been sent to jail for sexual abuse
- or other charges, professing all the way that they are not
- guilty. But evidence is mounting that children, particularly
- those who have been extensively coached, give inaccurate
- testimony far more often than previously imagined. Both research
- studies and courtroom experience are causing many
- psychiatrists to question their views of the reliability of
- what comes from the mouths of babes.
- </p>
- <p> A stunning piece of evidence came late last year when a
- California appeals court overturned the convictions of three
- men and four women for molesting 10 children. The adults had
- maintained their innocence but were sentenced to a combined
- total of 2,619 years in prison. The case fell apart, and the
- adults were freed when three of the children later recanted
- their testimony and the state attorney general's office
- criticized the way prosecutors had allegedly manipulated the
- children's testimony.
- </p>
- <p> Recent research has shown how easy it is for youngsters to
- stray unwittingly from the truth. Psychologists Karen Saywitz
- of Harbor-UCLA Medical Center and Gail Goodman of the State
- University of New York at Buffalo interviewed 72 girls, ages
- 5 and 7, about routine medical procedures they had received.
- Half were given full examinations, including anal and vaginal
- checks, and the rest were given just general physicals. When
- the first group was asked a broad question about what had
- happened, only eight mentioned the vaginal examinations, and
- when the children were shown anatomically correct dolls, six
- pointed to the vaginal area. But of the girls who received only
- a general checkup, three claimed they had also had vaginal or
- anal exams. One child even reported that "the doctor did it
- with a stick."
- </p>
- <p> Child-custody disputes are often the trigger for youngsters'
- unwitting lies. Suspicions can cause parents to launch what
- legal scholar Douglas Besharov of Washington's American
- Enterprise Institute calls "the atomic bomb of child-custody
- fights, the charge of sex abuse." In these stressful
- situations, children quickly discover what adults want to hear
- and can offer lies or distortions in order to please an anxious
- parent or social worker. A study conducted by the American
- Academy of Child Psychiatry found that in custody disputes
- involving charges of sex abuse, as many as 36% of the
- allegations were later proved to be untrue.
- </p>
- <p> Research by psychologist Alison Clarke-Stewart of the
- University of California at Irvine illustrates how easily
- adults can sway children's perceptions. In that study 75 five-
- and six-year-old children were asked to watch a man clean up
- a room. During that time, he picked up and cleaned a doll.
- Later an interviewer told the children she thought the man had
- been playing with the doll. When first questioned, 25% of the
- kids said the man had played with the doll, and the rest said
- he had cleaned it. The interviewer then told the children she
- was certain that the man had been playing with, not cleaning,
- the doll. In the end, all but two children accepted the
- interviewer's story as the truth.
- </p>
- <p> Misleading questions by adults can cause children not just
- to lie but also to believe their falsehoods. Besharov cites the
- case of a three-year-old who told a social worker a story about
- a piece of candy being dropped into her underpants. After
- interviews by various child-protection workers, the story
- evolved into a tale that a candle had been inserted into the
- child's vagina. It took months of further interviews to
- discover that the original story had been correct.
- </p>
- <p> The current methods for obtaining evidence in sex-abuse
- cases--direct questioning and the use of dolls with sex
- organs--are under fire. "Kids can be fed ideas they quickly
- come to believe are true, and these dolls are highly
- suggestive," says Lenore Terr, a professor of psychology at the
- University of California at San Francisco. For example, some
- of the dolls lack hands and have only painted eyes, yet they
- have highly explicit genital areas. Terr stresses that normally
- inquisitive children who play with these dolls can mistakenly
- be suspected of having been abused.
- </p>
- <p> The controversy is sure to escalate this spring, when the
- American Psychological Association publishes a book called The
- Suggestibility of Children's Recollections, in which several
- experts question the truthfulness of kids' testimony. The
- A.P.A. will not allow outsiders an advance look, but a
- psychologist involved in the project says the book shows that
- "there are definite limits to our knowledge about whether
- children are telling the truth."
- </p>
- <p> What these researchers and others are finding is that truth
- for a child can be blurred, especially in periods of stress,
- such as during a trial. To protect children from sex crimes--and adults from unfounded accusations--child-welfare workers
- and prosecutors will have to take special care when searching
- for the truth.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-