Eyewitness Identification Has 50% Error Rate? How We Throw People in Prison Based on False ID
By Patricia J. Williams, The Nation
Posted on January 23, 2012, Printed on January 25, 2012
“We see what we want to see,” my grandmother used to say. This
insight visited me recently after I ran across the mall chasing a woman I
thought was my cousin. It wasn’t, as it turned out, but I didn’t
realize that until after I had puffed up behind her, bopped her amiably
on the shoulder and cried out, “Boo!”
How was it possible, I thought in retrospective embarrassment, to so
wrongly misidentify someone I know so well? Empirically my experience
was all too common. I’d been thinking about my cousin a few moments
before and saw the woman through the lens of those thoughts. We often
project our life’s associations onto the faces of strangers.
Constantly—if mostly unconsciously—we familiarize them with learned
stereotypes. If we are wise, we learn to take caution with our
assumptions. We recognize this innate fallibility, and most of the time
it doesn’t matter very much.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment