Home > Foetal alcohol spectrum disorder and investigative interviewing: a systematic review highlighting clinical and legal implications and recommendations.

Gilbert, David J and Allely, Clare S and Mukherjee, Raja A S and Cook, Penny A (2022) Foetal alcohol spectrum disorder and investigative interviewing: a systematic review highlighting clinical and legal implications and recommendations. Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 40, (1), pp. 170-185. doi: 10.1002/bsl.2552.

External website: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/b...

Individuals with foetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) are estimated to be 19 times more likely to encounter the criminal justice system (CJS) in comparison to individuals without FASD. During encounters with the CJS, investigative interviews are employed to obtain accurate information from suspects, victims or witnesses of crime. A systematic search using PRISMA guidelines was performed to identify empirical studies published that have explored the questioning of the FASD population within the CJS and the vulnerabilities of FASD-impacted individuals during investigative interviewing. A total of 383 studies were identified from the databases searched and 7 further studies were identified from Google Scholar. After deduplication, abstract and title screening, the full text of 23 studies were assessed for inclusion and 5 were included in the narrative synthesis of results. Two papers were empirical studies focussed on the performance of FASD-impacted individuals during investigative interviewing. Whilst the first study found the FASD population susceptible to suggestions, the second (a case study), identified the ploys employed during investigative interviewing to obtain a confession. Three papers studied the wider vulnerabilities of FASD-impacted individuals and found diminished psycho-legal abilities, increased risk of recidivism and biological, psychological and social factors that render FASD-impacted individuals vulnerable to CJS encounters. Despite the greater likelihood of CJS encounters, the result of this review highlights the slim evidence base useful to establish the vulnerabilities of FASD-impacted individuals within the CJS.


Repository Staff Only: item control page