Fifth Amendment: Confessions

 

Cassell, Paul G. 1996. "Miranda’s Social Costs: An Empirical Reassessment." Northwestern

University Law Review 90:387-

 

Cassell, Paul G. 1996. "All Benefits, No Costs: The Grand Illusion of Miranda’s Defenders."

Northwestern University Law Review 90:1084-1124.

 

Cassell, Paul G. 1996. "Miranda’s Social Costs: An Empirical Reassessment." Northwestern

University Law Review 90:387-499.

 

Leo, Richard A. 1994. "Police Interrogation and Social Control." Social and Legal Studies 3:93-

120.

 

Leo, Richard A. 1995. "Trial and Tribulations: Courts, Ethnography, and the Need for an

Evidentiary Privilege for Academic Researchers." American Sociologist 30:113-134.

 

Leo, Richard A. 1996. "The Impact of Miranda Revisited." Journal of Criminal Law and

Criminology 86:621-692.

 

Leo, Richard A. 1996. "Inside the Interrogation Room." Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

86:266-303.

 

Leo, Richard A. 1996. "Miranda’s Revenge: Police Interrogation as a Confidence Game." Law

and Society Review 30:259-288.

 

Levy, Leonard W. 1986 [1968]. Origins of the Fifth Amendment. Second edition. New York:

Macmillan.

 

Ofshe, Richard and Ethan Watters. 1994. Making Monsters: False Memories, Psychotherapy, and

Sexual Hysteria. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Chapter 8 recounts the Paul

Ingram case]

 

Ofshe, Richard J. and Richard A. Leo. 1997. "The Social Psychology of Police Interrogation: The

Theory and Classification of True and False Confessions." Studies in Law, Politics and

Society 16:189-251.

 

Schulhofer, Stephen J. 1996. Miranda’s Practical Effect: Substantial Benefits and Vanishingly

Small Social Costs." Northwestern University Law Review 90:788-862.

 

Simon, David. 1991. Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets. Pp. 193-207. New York: Ballantine.