Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: ethics and police ethics
- Part I Professional ethics
- Part II Personal ethics
- 4 Institutional culture and individual character
- 5 Police discretion
- 6 The use of force
- 7 The use of deception
- 8 Entrapment
- 9 Gratuities and corruption
- 10 Public roles and private lives
- Part III Organizational ethics
- Notes
- Index of authors
- Index of subjects
7 - The use of deception
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: ethics and police ethics
- Part I Professional ethics
- Part II Personal ethics
- 4 Institutional culture and individual character
- 5 Police discretion
- 6 The use of force
- 7 The use of deception
- 8 Entrapment
- 9 Gratuities and corruption
- 10 Public roles and private lives
- Part III Organizational ethics
- Notes
- Index of authors
- Index of subjects
Summary
To tell the truth is a duty: but it is a duty only in respect to one who has a right to the truth.
Benjamin ConstantLying is the throwing away and, as it were, the obliteration of one's dignity as a human being.
Immanuel KantAlthough the capacity to use force still remains central to police law enforcement activities, its importance has been increasingly rivaled by the use of deception. There have been several reasons for that. For one thing, it is no longer permissible to use third-degree tactics to elicit information and confessions from criminal suspects, and the measures adopted in many jurisdictions to ensure that coercion is not used have made it much harder to employ surreptitiously. Although verbal statements and confessions are still, and will surely remain, admissible as evidence, there is little doubt that the courts have put increasing pressure on prosecutors to supplement their cases with “hard” material or physical evidence. In many cases that is not easy to do: The offenses do not involve “witnesses” (as is the case with much white-collar crime) or the witnesses are not complainants (as is the case with vice). So, over the past forty years police investigators have placed an ever greater reliance on deception as a means of accessing both material and verbal evidence.
At first the deployment of deceptive tactics occasioned some misgivings.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Ethics of Policing , pp. 123 - 150Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996