- Fri Oct 11, 2019 5:25 pm
#71063
The passage is primarily concerned with the problems associated with testimony obtained from jailhouse informants and co-conspirators, 8. So why did the author bring up confessions directly from the accused? To show us another, similar situation where juries might be influenced by psychological factors to trust evidence that might be untrustworthy. It's to draw an analogy that helps us better understand the problems with weighing testimony from those other parties who may have been coerced or have hidden motives. That's what answer C is about - the author brought up problems with weighing the truthfulness of confessions to further explain the problems with weighing the truthfulness of testimony by other criminals.
Answer D is about the relevance of how juries make decisions. It's a pretty confusing answer, but it's ultimately kind of backwards, in addition to not being the point of that paragraph. Is the author questioning (challenging, refuting) the relevance of how juries make decisions and how that might affect the way courts rely on cooperating witnesses? No, he's saying that their processes are VERY relevant to that issue! We have to be aware of the psychological factors that influence juries, so that they don't give undue weight to that type of evidence. He's not questioning the relevance (saying it's probably not relevant), but rather saying that it is actually very important.
But that's not why confession testimony is brought up. That wasn't about the relevance of how juries make decision, but was about comparing the problems with one type of testimony to the problems with another type.
Adam M. Tyson
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