Recalibrating the risk of false confession wrongful convictions: Interrogation tactics and inverse probability
Scott M. Mourtgos , Ian T. Adams
Abstract
False confession wrongful convictions (FCWCs) are a serious failure of the criminal justice system. Although scholars have identified interrogation tactics thought to elevate this risk, existing research rarely estimates the population-level probability that legally permissible methods will produce an FCWC. Instead, inference relies on outcome-selected case series and laboratory diagnosticity ratios that ignore base rates and the far larger universe of interrogations without false confessions. This article offers a methodological recalibration. We formalize the outcome-selection problem and apply inverse probability logic to derive posterior FCWC risk integrating base rates, sensitivity, and specificity. Using Monte Carlo simulation, we synthesize available empirical evidence across a wide parameter space. Across these specifications, median posterior estimates of the probability of a false confession wrongful conviction associated with lawful interrogation tactics cluster near 1 %. We conclude by introducing an Acceptability Curve that clarifies how normative judgments about tolerable error shape policy conclusions.
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Cite this work
Scott M. Mourtgos, Ian T. Adams (2026). Recalibrating the risk of false confession wrongful convictions: Interrogation tactics and inverse probability. CrimRxiv. https://doi.org/10.21428/cb6ab371.59ff4386
@article{mourtgos2026,
title = {Recalibrating the risk of false confession wrongful convictions: Interrogation tactics and inverse probability},
author = {Scott M. Mourtgos and Ian T. Adams},
journal = {CrimRxiv},
year = {2026},
doi = {10.21428/cb6ab371.59ff4386},
url = {https://doi.org/10.21428/cb6ab371.59ff4386}
} Related publications
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