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Red Teaming in Action: Strengthening Investigative Thinking and Countering Confirmation Bias
Red teaming is a structured approach investigators use to challenge assumptions, counter confirmation bias, and strengthen investigative decision-making. Rather than reinforcing early conclusions, red teaming introduces disciplined skepticism, helping teams test working theories, evaluate evidence more critically, and explore alternative explanations. When applied intentionally, red teaming improves accuracy, reduces risk, and supports more defensible investigative outcomes.

Christian Cory
Aug 31, 20244 min read


Accusatorial vs. Science-Based Interviewing Techniques: Which Yields Better Results?
Science-Based Interviewing represents a decisive shift away from confession-driven interrogation toward information-driven investigations. Grounded in psychological science, SBI prioritizes higher-quality information, ethical evidence handling, and reduced investigative risk—without sacrificing confessions. As states move away from outdated accusatorial practices, science-based methods offer a more reliable, defensible, & future-ready approach for public and private sector in

C. Edward
Jul 23, 202413 min read


The Science Behind Memory Distortion: Implications for Investigators
Investigators rely on memory as evidence, yet memory is vulnerable to distortion through post-event information and poorly framed questions. Research on the misinformation effect shows how leading questions, social influence, and timing can alter recall. Science-Based Interviewing (SBI) protects memory integrity by prioritizing early interviews, witness separation, free narratives, and the strategic use of evidence to gather accurate, reliable statement evidence.

C. Edward
May 27, 20246 min read


The Evolution of Active Listening: From Carl Rogers to Science-Based Interviewing
Active listening is a core skill taught across all IXI negotiation courses and a foundational component of science-based interviewing. In crisis negotiations, it is a life-preserving tool that helps negotiators identify emotions, values, and unmet needs behind demands. By reflecting feelings and summarizing concerns, conversations shift from confrontation to problem-solving without coercion.

C. Edward
May 21, 20243 min read


The High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG): History, Research, and Lessons for Science-Based Interviewing & Interrogation
The High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG) serves as a critical interagency effort within the U.S. government, bringing together intelligence professionals, operational interrogators, and academic researchers to advance the science and practice of interrogation. Established in 2009 under the direction of Barack Obama, the HIG was created to ensure that interrogation practices are effective, ethical, and grounded in empirical research. Since its creation, the HIG has su

C. Edward
May 20, 202427 min read


The Ultimate Glossary of Interview and Interrogation Terms for Law Enforcement Professionals
Science-Based Interviewing (SBI) is an information-gathering approach to interview and interrogation based on peer-reviewed behavioral and cognitive science, including research funded through the FBI-administered High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG). SBI emphasizes accurate, reliable, and corroborated information through open-ended questioning, active listening, rapport, Strategic Use of Evidence, and cognitive interviewing.

Christian Cory
May 14, 202442 min read


How Science-Based Interviewing Strengthens Evidence and Credibility
Effective investigative interviewing is one of the strongest determinants of case success. Research shows that eyewitness and subject statements often shape whether cases are solved, making interview quality critical. Science-Based Interviewing (SBI) prioritizes information gathering over confessions or lie detection, using open-ended questions, active listening, and rapport to elicit more detailed, reliable accounts. This article explores how these evidence-based techniques

C. Edward
Jan 13, 202410 min read


The Cognitive Interview: A Cornerstone of Science-Based Interviewing in Law Enforcement
The cognitive interview is a cornerstone of Science-Based Interviewing and modern investigative practice. Grounded in cognitive psychology, it improves memory recall by using open-ended questions, context reinstatement, and multiple retrieval pathways. Research shows it produces significantly more accurate information than traditional interviews, making it essential for law enforcement interview and interrogation training focused on reliability, ethics, and bias reduction.

C. Edward
Dec 7, 20238 min read


There Is No Evidence Without Investigative Interviewing
Evidence rarely explains itself. Investigative interviewing gives physical, digital, and testimonial evidence context, meaning, and investigative value. Through open-ended questions, corroboration, strategic questioning, and careful testing of competing explanations, investigators can strengthen evidence, uncover new leads, challenge assumptions, and distinguish meaningful connections from coincidence. Evidence guides the interview—and the interview gives meaning to the evide

C. Edward
Nov 28, 20236 min read


How Science-Based Interviewing Fuels AI Success in Criminal Investigations
Interviewing is data collection. In an era where Artificial Intelligence (AI) and machine learning are revolutionizing various sectors,...

Christian Cory
Oct 28, 20236 min read


The Legacy of the Wickersham Commission: Shaping the Future of Criminal Justice Reform (1929)
History and legacy of the Wickersham Commission and how it helped change criminal justice, interviewing, and third degree interrogation.

C. Edward
Oct 13, 20239 min read


Law Enforcement, Investigation, & Police Acronyms
In law enforcement and investigative work, acronyms are more than shorthand—they shape how information is shared, interpreted, and acted upon. From incident command to interviewing and evidence handling, understanding common law enforcement acronyms helps reduce miscommunication, improve clarity, and support sound decision-making. This reference breaks down frequently used terms to help investigators, analysts, and leaders better navigate the complex language that influences

C. Edward
Oct 6, 20239 min read


False Confessions: A Look into What They Are and Their Historical Context
False confessions are not rare anomalies. They are predictable outcomes of coercive, accusatory interviewing and pseudoscientific lie-detection practices. This article examines the history, psychology, and risk factors behind false confessions and their role in wrongful convictions. It contrasts confession-driven interrogation with Science-Based Interviewing, an evidence-based approach that prioritizes reliable information, corroboration, and sound questioning to reduce inves

C. Edward
Sep 24, 20239 min read


Red Teaming Assumptions: "No one would ever confess to a crime they did not commit"
False confessions persist because flawed assumptions go unchallenged. This article uses red teaming to critically test the belief that innocent people never confess, exposing how coercive tactics, bias, and psychological vulnerability undermine investigations. Grounded in research and real-world cases, it shows how Science-Based Interviewing (SBI) and key assumption checks strengthen critical thinking, protect memory and decision-making, and produce more reliable, ethical inv

C. Edward
Aug 30, 20234 min read


When Confidence Becomes a Liability: Confirmation Bias and Science-Based Interviewing
Confirmation bias is predictable—but not unavoidable. Left unchecked, it distorts interviews, weakens investigations, and jeopardizes outcomes. Science-Based Interviewing (SBI) offers a practical path forward by using red teaming to challenge assumptions, test hypotheses, and counter confirmation bias and other cognitive errors. Through structured critical thinking, SBI strengthens objectivity, protects case integrity, and supports ethical, evidence-driven decision-making.

C. Edward
Aug 26, 20234 min read


Red Teaming: Strengthening Investigations Through Disciplined Critical Thinking
Red Teaming is critical thinking on purpose. It deliberately challenges assumptions, confidence, and early conclusions to strengthen investigations before decisions harden. While this may feel counterintuitive, it helps investigators check themselves and reduce bias before interviews, evidence interpretation, and case direction are shaped. When paired with science-based interviewing, Red Teaming improves information gathering, decision quality, and investigative integrity.

Christian Cory
Aug 21, 20234 min read


Investigative Interviewing for Investigators: The Science-Based Era
Science-based investigative interviewing is the modern standard for truth-seeking. Interviews remain the primary engine of information gathering, beginning with patrol and continuing through complex investigations. Rapport and active listening are not “soft skills” but high-stakes tools proven to increase cooperation and disclosure while reducing error. Great interviews discover evidence, expose contradictions, identify witnesses, and provide vital context. Information is the

C. Edward
Apr 29, 20235 min read
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