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@engineeringoyster62433 ай бұрын
Amen. I’ve read that in America, in excess of 80% of criminal convictions are the result of self incrimination. It is a compelling evidence that criminals are idiots that they subject themselves to police interrogation rather then invoking their civil rights to protect themselves from these techniques.
@ChiIeboy3 ай бұрын
_Mr. Hughes, I would dearly love to answer your questions-and please believe me, I DO want to answer your questions-however, I'm simply not allowed to do that in the absence of my attorney. With that in mind, do I need to go ahead and contact him?_ (End of interrogation.)
@lynneperry74543 ай бұрын
That instance of asking what punishment should be applied to a guilty party is right out of Shakespeare’s “Richard III”. Who said he wasn’t relevant today? 😂
@carmichaelmoritz86623 ай бұрын
I have social anxiety , the longer I'm questioned the more nervous I become. The longer I'm out in public the more anxiety I feel!
@vladracul402 ай бұрын
The DUDE JUST LIE FEW TIMES
@kevinsmith72873 ай бұрын
True story. When my daughter was about 5, she cut her name into our coffee table. When I asked her about it, she said our cat id it! I said, that's great! Imagine how much we can get for a cat that can spell and carve wood. She immediately panicked and confessed because she loved our cat.
@michaelingram80563 ай бұрын
You total bastard
@incorrigiblycuriousD613 ай бұрын
! Brilliant !
@Zerpersande3 ай бұрын
My sister did something similar. She took a hammer and hit it against the porcelain sink in the bathroom. These were cast-iron covered with porcelain so it just chipped off the porcelain in a few places. Mom and dad ask both myself and my two sisters if they knew anything that had happened. Me and my older sister just said no. My youngest sister was probably about the same age, somewhere around five, and she “Pal do it”. Actually Bal do it.” Pal was our dog.. My parents started saying how that’s too bad because they really like how this looks and I guess they won’t be able to get Pal to do it again. After a little bit of conversation like this, my sister suddenly waddled off over to the cabinet in the bathroom, grabbed a hammer, and came waddling back saying”Bal not do it. I do it. I do more.”
@Rock_Girl_Daze3 ай бұрын
😮😂. Interesting that a mishap here was blamed on a kitty too. Child was about 5 as well. Gotta love ‘em!
@angelinahunter1823 ай бұрын
That is "laughing out loud" hysterical. I don't have kids of my own but from 1966 to 1971 I did childcare for millionaire families in Manhattan the night the regular Nanny was off and I can just imagine one of these kids reacting like that.
@wayneshingler96643 ай бұрын
Just like every interrogation instructor who thinks he's got it figured out, he's biased in interpreting stress as guilt. If the suspect doesn't trust you, or if you're interrogating them very harshly, you're going to see "Desdemona's fear." They know they didn't do it, but they're scared that they can't convince YOU that they didn't do it. They fear that they're going to be punished for something they didn't do. That can produce real terror that's every bit as stressful as guilt, and that will look like guilt if all you're looking for is signs of stress and calling it evasiveness.
@arlanstrong14242 ай бұрын
And this sounds like a very insecure person.
@FigaroHey2 ай бұрын
Good point. I used to do entrance exam interviews for a college in Europe (23 years, thousands of candidates) as well as did thousands of oral exams for classes. I saw candidates trembling with stress. They were afraid of making mistakes and failing. Sometimes a rumor went around that all the places had been filled and we were just going through the motions of interviews and candidates were angry and defensive and stressed. Once someone started the rumor that a certain number of students had already failed the written part of the college's final leaving exam and taking the oral exams would be pointless for them. This was not true. Nobody had failed the written exam. But as the day went on and more and more students passed, the waiting students thought that they must be in the pool of students who had failed. We had students who were refusing to be interviewed because they were sure they had failed. The stress levels were going through the roof as the day went on and we interviewed more people. We had no idea why the students were increasingly insisting, "I know I've failed; just tell me." They were so anxious that they did much worse on the exam than if they had not heard the false rumor that "seven people failed." It's so true that innocent people can be terrified of a police interview. I've watched enough documentaries about the falsely convicted that I fear falling into the hands of the police and being questioned.
@xzonia12 ай бұрын
You've missed the point. If someone is afraid immediately that they'll be punished regardless, that fear will be there from the beginning and be their baseline response to the questions. In applying stress, he's looking for changes in behavior. If the person continues to be afraid at the same level, they're probably innocent. If the questions he's asking causes behavior changes, that's when he starts to think they might be guilty. Someone who is innocent and afraid of getting punished regardless won't change their behavior because they're going to have that same fear throughout. Someone who is afraid because they are guilty will get more nervous when stress is applied because they think the other person has evidence. An innocent person isn't going to think they have real evidence because there is none; their fear is irrational and so doesn't change in any observable way.
@lyleseward86382 ай бұрын
@@xzonia1 I think you have missed the point. People's reactions don't fit in a neat little box like you describe and can't be accurately read by an outside observer.
@roxanne_george2 ай бұрын
Absolutely true! Someone insecure can behave waaaaay more guilty than the one who did it.
@jakrispy34183 ай бұрын
If you're being interrogated , say these simple words , "I want a lawyer" then don't talk
@CrowdContr0l3 ай бұрын
If you’re being interviewed you probably wouldn’t know it. That’s how it works.
@patrickmorris37212 ай бұрын
Talk way to them all day long👮♂️. 😃 Just make sure you don’t sign anything. ☹️👮♂️
@MissJessss2 ай бұрын
Facts.
@Alosipher2 ай бұрын
@@patrickmorris3721 No, remember "what you say can and will be used against you".
@patrickmorris37212 ай бұрын
@@Alosipher Not sure what the exact law is in your country but I’m in EU Ireland you need to sign the witness statement. If unsigned it’s not a (statement) i judge will prosecute the police for wasting his time. 😂
@Chickenfriedstek3 ай бұрын
Working in mental health tells me just some of those questions will make anxious and paranoid people react very differently even when innocent. However, when talking to employees or kids this advice is generally spot on.
@morgantnelson3 ай бұрын
absolutely! Do this bait then you will definitely find the culprit
@allybruce43233 ай бұрын
Your totally spot on about people with anxiety,a things associated with that ,but me rage can effect a answer from me. Example ,if I'm full of rage but still trying to be polite but then get asked a very serious set of questions from the 1st answer to the 2nd and 3rd can become very diffrent. So if I get asked a serious (or not ) question and I respond ten the person jokingly questions my integrity I'm likely to blow my cool. And it's the same if the person's asking me say they've had money stolen from them ill probably answer (depending on who it is) twice before my temper gets the better ogmf me. Then the money could be fine ,then there's other questions in "this convoy " but I'm still full of rage the same thing will happen. So people don't think for 1 second that this is 100% set in stone the way to look for a liar because if that was true I'd be a liar 75% of the time
@ProudCanadian-vv6bk3 ай бұрын
I agree completely
@acharich3 ай бұрын
🙇🏾♂️🙇🏾♂️🙇🏾♂️
@lyrebird97493 ай бұрын
@@morgantnelson I think you missed curtisbottoms' point. If people are naturally anxious, the 'bait' question will make them give an anxious answer, even if they are innocent. That's not a way of finding a culprit. There are countless examples of people sentenced for crimes they didn't commit just because they seemed nervous, or didn't respond in an expected way to questioning, and later were proved to be innocent.
@lyleseward86382 ай бұрын
My dad used these methods on us when we were kids. Since I was there when the crime was committed, I know he was only getting it right 2 out of 3 times. The rest of the time my dad got it wrong and the wrong person got blamed and was pushed into a confession for a lighter sentence. I was always nervous when being questioned because (just like the police) my dad can make a mistake and I will have to pay for that mistake. This guy says there is no reason for the innocent to be nervous but that just isn't true.
@brlyjo3 ай бұрын
You'll catch half of the guilty people and all of the mentally unstable. What a system we have.
@mmoro1432 ай бұрын
And 10% of good people who were framed and lied about and the "investigation experts" blindly supported them and added to the mess🙈
@carmichaelmoritz86623 ай бұрын
I have social anxiety , the longer I'm questioned the more nervous I become. The longer I'm out in public the more anxiety I feel!
@VeronicaVeroVero3 ай бұрын
😂 No worries. Context and clusters. Trained "professionals" will most likely be able to pick up the "clusters" of indicators that expose you as an anxious type as opposed to a person being intentionally deceptive.
@GRice9992 ай бұрын
@@VeronicaVeroVero Sure they will, lol. Never underestimate the arrogance of someone who thinks they know what they're doing.
@inkey22 ай бұрын
I have the exact same problem
@katie98612 ай бұрын
Me , too! I get extremely anxious alot but almost always around strangers and big crowds but i probably look so outta placem it sucks
@rolandhawken66282 ай бұрын
Well clearly you are lying lol
@deluge713 ай бұрын
It's great that he is dispelling the myths. Anyone who says, " I can spot a liar," is probably a liar themselves.
@AnonYmous-mc5zx3 ай бұрын
If someone tells me they're "good at spotting lies" I'm never telling that person the truth ever again. Even about the weather.
@robertfreestone4142 ай бұрын
However, it's a sure way of getting out of jury duty!
@annapedersen73712 ай бұрын
Have you looked into this guys credentials ….. takes one to know one?
@samwallaceart2882 ай бұрын
Deadass, a guy pinpoint-attacked my sexual insecurities "as a joke" and when I got upset about it, he them lectured me about how I have unresolved anger issues, which I do, and how he knows this because he knows people and can read the signs of their behavior. So I was like "So you didn't accidentally piss me off--- You were triggering me on purpose." Deadass he was like "Hey, uh, I didn't know like that, that-- that's not the point" Should've punched him.
@arlanstrong14242 ай бұрын
@@annapedersen7371Of course. It takes a liar to spot a liar. The same way the best scammer buster can spot scammers.
@baldy5173 ай бұрын
"If you are innocent, that won't cause you any stress." I've been falsely accused, hard to recall anything more stressful than having no idea about what you are being accused of. This is abusive tactics, and the stuff police are trained to say to convince juries it isn't coercive. There is no condition where an innocent being interrogated isn't stressful. There is no circumstance one should voluntarily sit for an interrogation or interview with law enforcement, and instead one should rely on rights against self incrimination while refusing to participate without council. The deck is stacked, and his lie about "causing no stress to the innocent" is all the proof necessary to show it.
@GallowayJesse2 ай бұрын
when I was falsely accused & questioned I was a nervous wreck the whole time. literally shaking at times.
@wellscliff19 күн бұрын
The only type of person who doesn't is typically labelled a sociopath or psychopath. Gotta love the binary reductionism that fails to account for the vast differences between people and their experiences. I rarely give credence to people who believe you can use subtle behaviors to discern internal state. It's about as reliable as voodoo. In a police interrogation, there's likely other evidence pointing to the person's guilt, otherwise they wouldn't be there in the first place, so if the interrogator feels they are lying, there's built-in confirmation bias at play; if they confess you were right, if they don't, they are a sociopath. Win-win.
@worldofrandometry69123 ай бұрын
Of course people will react differently when the questions get harder. Also, being accused of something you didn't do makes you become angry and/or nervous.
@starrystarrynight62813 ай бұрын
You obviously don’t have to deal with a psychopath like so do all the time.
@worldofrandometry69123 ай бұрын
@@starrystarrynight6281 What? lol
@eltorocal3 ай бұрын
Mmm-hmm... and case law has proven that K-9 hits are 86% Inaccurate. As in "False".
@garth2173 ай бұрын
People don't like to be accused of something they didn't do..and they get angry..that's expected..it's when you don't get angry when falsely accused that is the tell
@jumpinjohnnyruss3 ай бұрын
Yeah, guys like the interviewee just want some solid conclusion they can take to their bosses. Hierarchies don't care much about truth.
@benjaminsmith7183 ай бұрын
Innocent people do get nervous when you question them about murder.
@eveshqat55442 ай бұрын
Some cops like to act like you're murderer and trying to make you nervous stressed to the highest lvl to say something they could use it against you to write report that you're murderer to close case and get prizes from it, not like they wanna find real murderer. Us cops ate well known for acting like that. Acting like they wanna destroy you do you will sign papers to not being bullied by them longer.
@silverechohawk53153 ай бұрын
This is some bs to say someone is lying when their behavior changes when questions get harder. It’s natural for everyone to get nervous when an absolute stranger and someone who has the power to destroy their life starts asking hard questions.
@dancarter4822 ай бұрын
There was a fella that used to turn up and inspect our sites when I was working years ago. Nice guy, well mannered etc. but he would ask a question and then just watch you. I would always end up babbling to try and fill the empty space he was leaving. When I'd ran out of waffle he would just hold a steady gaze as if waiting for the rest. I'd end up feeling guilty for crimes I'd not even thought of! Guy would make a _brilliant_ interrogator. Once you start getting self conscious and second guessing your behavior it all starts to snowball out of your control - even if you aren't actually being deceptive. So if you are, you really have to be somewhere on the psycho spectrum to hide it effectively.
@larrywiniarski17463 ай бұрын
One form of lying is telling people you can tell if they are lying.
@Novastar.SaberCombat3 ай бұрын
It's a method of manipulation. Works sometimes, too. Especially if you sneak in some actual tricks which cause them to reveal information that they otherwise shouldn't have.
@tammypeterson96213 ай бұрын
Or they will use ancient war time interrogation tactics... Depravation of sleep. Constant badgering, telling you false facts related to case to get you to tell your side of the story. They're allowed by law and expected to lie to solve the crime . YOU ARE NOT AND IT WILL BE USED AGAINST YOU IN A COURT OF LAW. Simple solution to situation... Say NOTHING. .Your lawyer wil thank you!!! Say NOTHING TO NO ONE Until you see in person a lawyer. Cops are trained to take any one sentence you may say and twist the words around to say the opposite of what was meant. They are not your friend.. And say false promises (ex: plea deals/set people up in exchange for reduced or dropping your charges). You are not paid to do a cops job.
@InfoArtistJK3 ай бұрын
That's only amateurs like you.
@kirstinline3 ай бұрын
not as good as lying about how people cant tell if someones lying or not.
@InfoArtistJK3 ай бұрын
@@kirstinline Truth!
@SlavicGirl.2 ай бұрын
If a nosy, rude narc interrogating me, asking intrusive, bs questions, there’s going to be a “ big pile of changes” in my behavior. These days, I just walk away, instead of trying to explain to a narc anything. Smh, I fed up with those experts
@KennyMonoxide2 ай бұрын
Chase Hughes' Ellipsis Manual and Behavioral Field Guide have made me a very successful poker player.
@ruffletonferdlockiii43523 ай бұрын
Never, ever talk to law enforcement without an attorney. Even then, let the attorney do the talking. Police can lie with no accountability.
@Nonybusinessxxxxxx3 ай бұрын
Not true esp nowadays. Stop drinking the koolaid
@joekeegan-yc4nm2 ай бұрын
💯%
@christopher78242 ай бұрын
Or you can avoid the entire interaction by keeping your hands to yourself.
@MaviLeb2 ай бұрын
@@christopher7824Sure, or don't be Tom Perez and call the police because you are worried about your father.
@robertgelley64542 ай бұрын
Corolary to this.... How can you tell a cop is lying? When he approaches you.
@Deleteriously3 ай бұрын
This guy is wrong thinking that if you're innocent that you won't be nervous about being questioned, I damn near have a heart attack just seeing police cars/lights or store alarms go off.
@Rock_Girl_Daze3 ай бұрын
True 😂. Same with border control. 😬
@chasehughesofficial3 ай бұрын
I don't think I said that in here.
@eltorocal3 ай бұрын
Mmm-hmm... and case law has proven that K-9 hits are 86% Inaccurate. As in "False".
@jimdietrick16813 ай бұрын
You misunderstood the context of what he was saying.
@britishrocklovingyank34913 ай бұрын
@@chasehughesofficial You practice pseudoscience and wishful thinking. What you are good at is finding what you want to find.
@JuliaHowells2 ай бұрын
Well talking about observation, what I observed is the time on Chase’s watch doesn’t change the whole way through!
@sagatuppercut29603 ай бұрын
This is why defense lawyers tell their clients to STFU.
@brianpark87583 ай бұрын
Even if they`re innocent.
@Paladin18733 ай бұрын
@@brianpark8758 Yes, because cops can misjudge people, particularly if they've already made up their minds you are guilty.
@ruffletonferdlockiii43523 ай бұрын
Especially if they are innocent!
@sscbkr482 ай бұрын
Kid being questioned by parent.. I want my lawyer! Parent.. That would be me.
@marlow7693 ай бұрын
These guys that think they know how everybody would act or handle being questioned is either a pure egotist or a malignant narcissist.
@RafaelStrangiato3 ай бұрын
What? Why malignant? So you can tell by this short clip that he's a narcissist, huh? You must have a large ego yourself to make such a bold claim based on hardly any evidence. Practice what you preach.
@sixten84933 ай бұрын
@@RafaelStrangiato Marlow the Malignant projecting and blame shifting right there, surely he's hiding something.
@jumpinjohnnyruss3 ай бұрын
They want their job to be streamlined. They want clear answers to take back to their bosses, true or not. After a long enough time, they probably lose sight of what's obvious to us.
@annham41363 ай бұрын
Actually, I'm of the opinion that a narcissist could ace the interview. Psychologists say they reinvent themselves and in their mind they didn't do it. They can also pass lie detector tests (not that those are considered dependable).
@Al_is_XXX3 ай бұрын
@@annham4136you don't have to be a narcissist to believe your own lies (AFAIK) some ordinary liars also believe their own lies
@captainred4413 ай бұрын
The fact that you suspect my being guilty of a crime by the manner in which you are questioning me, would make me very nervous and would probably make me start fidgeting or breathing faster although i'm innocent. I once failed a polygraph test because of this, and got blamed for something I would never do.
@christopherandrews92322 ай бұрын
Lawyer, lawyer, lawyer!! Whether you are guilty or innocent. These investigators are not your friends they are not trying to help you. Your cooperation will not reduce your sentence. Get a lawyer immediately!!
@Pammellam2 ай бұрын
I watched a video probably still on KZbin now where a lawyer talks about this kind of situation exactly. And he says exactly what you are saying, don’t say anything, get a lawyer immediately. Specially if you’re innocent. He gave one example where an acquaintance of a murdered person was brought into the police station. The man was innocent and talked freely to the police and during that conversation he said just one negative thing, that he didn’t like him sometimes. Eventually this man was arrested for the murder and during the trial the policeman who talked about the interview mentioned that one sentence only that he didn’t like him sometimes. And the rest of the one hour interview where the man was saying good things about this person who was killed was not mentioned at all.
@KiddyNotterudАй бұрын
Very well said ! I absolutely agree with you!
@arttoegemannАй бұрын
@@christopherandrews9232 What if you don't have a lawyer?
@christopherandrews9232Ай бұрын
@ stay quite until one is provided. “You have the right to remain silent,” use it!
@amararoot68612 ай бұрын
Who else is watching this solely for their young children😂. Thank you, this is gold!
@paulmitchell29163 ай бұрын
Exactly why you invoke the 5th and 6th immediately, and don't answer ANY questions.. Maybe you'll blink twice instead of once and this guy decides you're lying.
@johndrake34723 ай бұрын
Absolutely. My wife and I made a deal to never speak with authorities for any reason. I guarantee this clown has coached his kids to never talk.
@Vincent673373 ай бұрын
Just use your 2A rights instead.
@AttackLineConsultingLLC3 ай бұрын
@@johndrake3472I’m not sure you are aware of who this clown is
@johndrake34723 ай бұрын
@@AttackLineConsultingLLC I couldn’t care less.
@QuotidianStupidity3 ай бұрын
@@johndrake3472 You commented on a video he was in talking about how he interrogates people, and yet you claim to not care.... yeh maybe you should say nothing online also
@Mike-uh2gw2 ай бұрын
And that is why, guilty or not, you never talk to law enforcement without your lawyer present.
@hoi-polloi18632 ай бұрын
No no, I *want* the guilty people to confess right away!
@mavenowa2 ай бұрын
@@hoi-polloi1863 aaaaaaaah we all would !
@glenloader6393 ай бұрын
There are many people who just get nervous around police, immigration or custom officers, though are not hiding anything.
@minwade54363 ай бұрын
Especially if there’s a language barrier. Have a fabulous morning, afternoon or evening 👋🏻🦘🐨🇦🇺
@lindaprout5423 ай бұрын
My husband was police and if I got stopped by an officer. I literally shook …pure panic…😂😂😂
@guitarlessonswith44803 ай бұрын
What a crock of crap. There are so many holes in these tactics. No wonder we have innocent people sitting in prison and killers roaming free.
@mentalitydesignvideo3 ай бұрын
no one gets convicted for being nervous. All he's doing is ascertaining if it's worth investigating a person or they can be safely removed from a list of suspects. And if there's overwhelming evidence of guilt that surfaces in the interrogation, they might press for confessions, a slam dunk for them and for the court, or at least know where to focus resources to get material evidence and witnesses.
@williammackie67013 ай бұрын
I’m a retired federal agent and have had extensive training and experience in interrogations. I learned both of those lines of questioning more than 40 years ago. I can assure you they work.
@guitarlessonswith44803 ай бұрын
@williammackie6701 Bud, if your plan to succeed is to manipulate people, I have some really bad news for you.
@guitarlessonswith44803 ай бұрын
I'll say it again to you two because it was deleted. Which, by the way, supports my point. If your plan to be successful is to manipulate others, I have some really bad news for you.
@AnonYmous-mc5zx3 ай бұрын
@@williammackie6701 You always knew when you got it wrong, yes? 100% success rate at self correction?
@lovenottheworld57233 ай бұрын
This won't work with people who make false confessions as a result of getting an earful of abuse every day of their life since the day they were born. They're just going to take punishment after punishment that they don't deserve because everything was always their fault.
@tr53983 ай бұрын
I've been a professional investigator and interviewer for over 30 years. I've never allowed anyone to falsely confess to something they didn't do. One of the best ways to establish that the confession is true-is to have the suspect walk me through what they did, how they did it, when, how many times, dollar amounts, specific items taken, etc. I also don't accept responses like;, 'If you said I did it, then I guess I did it'.
@ellenritt55643 ай бұрын
Three words. Central Park Five.
@tr53983 ай бұрын
@@ellenritt5564 Those teens were interrogated for 7 hours. The interrogations were not videotaped, only their confessions, so very suspect as to how the detectives were able to elicit these confessions.
@barbarakauppi99152 ай бұрын
@@ellenritt5564 There are at least a million far better examples than that media circus. Don't be such a weak link on this topic.
@KernowekTim28 күн бұрын
Excellent. I have watched and listened to Chase previously, on another channel working in conjunction with three other professionals, and found him easy to equate with. End of the day, in my opinion, if you have committed a wrong-doing and are caught bang to rights, it is always best to "man-up" and go "hands-up". I lied to my Mother in 1965. I was five years old. I thought I'd conviced Mum with my lie and dodged the cane behind the kitchen door when Dad got home from work: wrong. Mum craftily set the punishment up. Cutting it short, a Dettol soaked and lightly squeeze rag leaves a particularly foul taste; for hours. Short sharp shock. No more lies from Timmy boy. I have subscribed to your channel with pleasure. Thank you both.
@Ghostdog43 ай бұрын
Due to people I hung around with I have been interrogated more than a few times. Every time I was completely in the dark about what they were asking me about. Not a clue, no idea at all. Regardless the various Interrogators were 100% certain I was guilty, involved or knew something. Ridiculous waste of time. Not impressed!
@mikuspalmis3 ай бұрын
Hopefully you have a lawyer now.
@Novastar.SaberCombat3 ай бұрын
If a person with coin, connections, crews, clout, corrupt cronies, and other shady jabronies wants to make you seem guilty, brother... there is NOTHING you can do. You'd be goin' down like The Hurricane. No legit evidence required; they'd just cook it up, baby. 😂
@dieterschonefeld74282 ай бұрын
No - what pumps people up is the possibility of being punished no matter what. This guy is just good at selling himself to whoever thinks he has found a sensation.
@DM_Curtis3 ай бұрын
"That's my secret, Cap -- I'm always nervous."
@jpdst293 ай бұрын
“Just remember, it’s not a lie if YOU believe it” - George Costanza
@kyzor-sosay60873 ай бұрын
😂😂exactly
@JohnnyArtPavlou2 ай бұрын
Big Orange🤬
@arttoegemann2 ай бұрын
Lying is only one form of false language. It's willful.
@carolramsey62873 ай бұрын
When my daughter was small a glass of beer on the kitchen table was mysteriously emptied. My daughter was asked "Did you drink what was in that glass?" "No daddy" lied my daughter. "Oh thank goodness! That was poison!" "WAH! I don't wanna die!" Right.
@acharich3 ай бұрын
💀💀💀💀💀
@williamking9513 ай бұрын
They lie to catch a lie.
@jgrant52553 ай бұрын
😅
@RavenMobile18 күн бұрын
I read that as, "When my daughter was a small glass of beer" and thought you were saying she was a drunken mistake! Lol, what a difference the placement of an "a" makes.
@RavenMobile18 күн бұрын
Great story, by the way. I lie to my daughter with a straight face so she can learn to call out bullshit. Force her to analyse the words, and not blindly trust a man's convincing voice. A useful life skill, I'd say.
@tatie76043 ай бұрын
He doesn't consider behavior in people with severe social anxiety. These persons often look like they are lying when they are telling the truth.
@barbarakauppi99152 ай бұрын
It doesn't have to be severe, not at all.
@Dandroid5000Ай бұрын
I had severe social anxiety all through my twenties and into my thirties. I would blush, stammer and some times soak my shirt with sweat if I felt trapped..........the idea of sitting in an interrogation room being asked leading questions would damn near trigger a heart attack! I guess in this guy's eyes, I'd be guilty on all counts......
@jeansroses7249Ай бұрын
@@Dandroid5000 you say you "had" social anxiety; how is it now with you?
@jayneweaver869513 күн бұрын
he's a fraud.
@jeansroses724913 күн бұрын
@@jayneweaver8695 how so?
@dwsmyyth34802 ай бұрын
This guy has confirmation bias of his own abilities. People respond to stress very differently. Some people get enraged when accused of something they didn't do, like murder.
@mmoro1432 ай бұрын
Every educated and compassionate person of faith would answer the "punishment" question like that..correct behavior, help them change the behavior, to heal
@katelynwoodworth99892 ай бұрын
If someone asks me a personal question that is attached to distress or emotional pain, I do get uncomfortable and change my behavior. I can't help it. I see this in others, too. The response is due to unexpected discomfort, or just discomfort. It doesn't mean the person is about to lie every time 😕
@davidanscombe11062 ай бұрын
How many times has this expert got it wrong? Probably never in his opinion. Such confidence in his own ability. I am feeling the pain and anguish of the innocent peoples lives he has destroyed. This man feels none of this,or he does,and enjoys it. I'm sure he gets it right occasionally though
@geoffauldfield4664Ай бұрын
At 3:14: If you are not the killer that question won't cause you any stress. If you are a suspect it WILL cause you stress. Innocent people have been imprisoned for decades I know that is rare, but at the time of questioning, an innocent person is suddenly in a very unfamiliar situation where the stakes have been raised enormously.
@dathorndike4908Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this thorough and comprehensive video on how to beat a lie detector test!
@michael13 ай бұрын
Easy way to spot someone who is lying - when they sit and tell you that they can spot people lying. Here especially, imagine being asked where you live and how many brothers and sisters you have, and then later a question you immediately know means the 2 guys in the room suspect you of committing a serious crime. And you think you wouldn't change how you answer that latter question? Of course you'll change, you'll realise the cops suspect you. Whether you did the crime or not you're going to be careful what you say because you know they're filming and recording your answers and if can they can show one tiny aspect of your answer isn't true they'll be claiming that's because you're lying etc etc. That's why the smart person never talks to the police and asks for a lawyer - whether they are guilty or not - because all the police are trying to do is convict you. Whether you are guilty or not. The pressure on them is to secure a conviction for their stats and they don't care at al who that is. And this 'raising the stakes" is what ranges from mild threats to torture - and it's well established that people don't tell the truth under duress - they will confess to crimes they have not done and could not have done. All the US cops do is to have legalised duress to make it sound like it's an 'interrogation technique', sure they're not pulling out fingernails but the whole objective is to get innocent or guilty people to confess. The notion that if you didn't kill someone you'd just nonchalantly sit there while a cop subtly threatens you or implies they have evidence linking you to a murder and only the killer would get stressed is laughable nonsense. This is how you spot a liar - the guy is sitting there waving his hands spouting complete and total horseshit. You should be much more wary of the person who answers the questions the same - because that likely means they either lack emotion, and/or they've rehearsed their answer. People who tell you they know if someone is lying from observing them are lying. That's how you spot a liar. People who claim to be able to do something that you can easily demonstrate in a double-blind experiment they actually have no more ability to do above chance - in the past that used to be psychics and other charletons. Now it's people claiming to use 'body language' to detect lying - they're trying to put a scientific spin on it - but it doesn't work.
@weil952523 күн бұрын
I love these practice examples on how to detect deceptions.. so good..
@J1W5M73 ай бұрын
Sometimes I tell someone something and I feel like I'm suddenly nervous and giving indicators that I'm lying, but I'm actually not. How does that come into play?
@Kyle-nm1kh3 ай бұрын
That means you'll be questioned longer. And eventually the truth will probably reveal itself and that's when you get to go. Like Japanese Americans in ww2 held in camps then released after the war was over.
@OTseven3 ай бұрын
Very nice to be given actual facts of things that help. A lot of similarly titled vids don't give tangible info to use. THANK YOU.
@ProudCanadian-vv6bk3 ай бұрын
Of course one will act differently if you ask them questions that are automatic, vs ones that require memory or thought
@chuckleberryfinn19923 ай бұрын
The truth may not be "automatic", but it's not nearly as taxing on one's memory and mental processing as deception tends to be. The questions are rather automatic, pretty standard in format and techniques. Like with anything else, more experience begets proficiency.. They ask questions and listen to answers. A lot. Calculating "right" or "believable" answers, coming up with a litany of excuses, and remembering any number of various medical/mental conditions, can be quite the chore. Yeah, if one is nervous, they may flub a couple three lines of their script. Although, it's typically not the nervous that's an issue, .
@CodyWright-pq3eq2 ай бұрын
That's why you don't ever allow people to get a baseline for your "normal" communication.
@stevecooksley2 ай бұрын
His kids need to get a lawyer and fast.
@VF81-q5j3 ай бұрын
2:49 This one really brought me back. I got called in on a Monday after some drunken college mischief. The Dean said what Chase just said pretty much word for word. Then he asked me a funny question about a minor detail of my prank and burst out laughing.
@lllMacBethlll2 ай бұрын
"and the only time you get nervous is if you where there", also if youre not guilty and get hard attacked by questions that make you guilty? thats BS
@thesmallnotesduo3 ай бұрын
Has his ability to detect lies been tested and quantified along with false positives/negatives? If so, how?
@lauramarielenius832 ай бұрын
You shouldn't have to 'bait' someone. If they're guilty of something, there's evidence of that, if there's not enough evidence, the police aren't doing their job well enough. I've always thought cops baiting suspects was very manipulative.
@missyme0012 ай бұрын
Right I agree with this…. there are multiple things to look at to determine lies and half truths etc…. How else can you determine what to ask an individual and up the stakes as stated here. ❤❤❤❤🔥🔥🔥🔥💪🏽
@feasterfamine8363 ай бұрын
Wanna see changes? Ask me my name and age, then interrogate me about either of my parents. 😂
@rodan285212 күн бұрын
The interviews with various serial killers come to mind,and how they can almost disconnect themselves from their crimes
@PeacefulAbiding2 ай бұрын
I feel guilty about everything. Indont know if this would work. Plus I'm very literal. If he asked me, "Is there any reason . . ." Ibwould immediately start thimking of reasons someonebwould say sumthin untrue and I know I would look guilty.
@jasonrodgers8803 ай бұрын
One place the "what do you think should happen to the person who is guilty?" question is answered differently is when you're speaking with someone who is a posturer. Someone who is filled with bravado and fully believes he's gotten away with his crime will often say "throw the book at the person... do your worst... make sure they never see the light of day!" There was a YT vid a while ago where a judge asked that question of a guy who killed a child. The guy started speaking in that manner ("throw away the key", "bury him in jail", etc). So the judge gave him the punishment as the guy said - put him in jail for life.
@madhuzeeuwen63763 ай бұрын
Was it PROVEN that he was guilty, or was it just ASUMED?
@jasonrodgers8803 ай бұрын
@@madhuzeeuwen6376 He was found guilty by a jury and by the judge. Look up Chris McNabb. He abused his wife, fed her meth and killed his 2 week old. Then told the judge that there was no evidence that could prove he was the one who did it. After the judge asked what sentence the real killer should get, he gave Chris what he answered: "the max sentence... life... throw away the key." He was sentenced to life without parole, plus 10 years.
@barbarakauppi99152 ай бұрын
Criminals and cheats behave that way all the time, that's a very common tactic to try to deflect suspicion.
@toi41542 ай бұрын
I'm sure he would've got the same punishment anyway, no matter what he answered to that question? At least that's how it should go
@CALBBB133 ай бұрын
don't answer questions. That is the job of the Attorney.
@thangknowa32883 ай бұрын
"Are you recording this? Please do. I do not consent to any unlawful search or seizures, and I invoke my right to remain silent until I speak with my attorney".
@garth2173 ай бұрын
Bad people say what you did
@mikuspalmis3 ай бұрын
@@garth217So do good people who know about corruption.
@brianlewis84173 ай бұрын
THIS is why you always get a lawyer and don't say anything.. 🙂
@MarkVincent-h7q3 ай бұрын
I don't trust anyone who wears red and white striped socks....
@medelsusan3 ай бұрын
Funny
@johnh65152 ай бұрын
You made me look at my feet !
@kristinawessely38882 ай бұрын
I wouldn't feel more comfortable if you told me there were cameras recording me, I would get mad and shout and cry
@LuvDogs652 ай бұрын
I disagree, some people get scared or have been accused of things even when they didn't do it and have a guilt complex. Some people get nervous and may appear to look guilty, even when they are not.
@wangobadankas40383 ай бұрын
I read a while back that statistically the people who are best at detecting liars are often the worst at believing people who are telling the truth. Oh well...
@xyaeiounn2 ай бұрын
Unless you're joking, that might be because liars use skills to appear as truth tellers, while truth tellers are merely genuine. So someone who appears truthful is either truthful or the best liar they've encountered. Detecting liars is spotting failures in the skills they use to appear truthful. It's also a small part of how liars and other broken people turn you into them, by forcing you to deal with their toxicity you end up a kind of toxic yourself.
@wangobadankas40382 ай бұрын
@@xyaeiounn There's considerable difference between habitual, chronic and pathological liars. Some lie occasionally or strategically. Some lie to manipulate, some are just scared to be honest. Many types of lies and liars.
@xyaeiounn2 ай бұрын
@@wangobadankas4038 Sure. Then there are those weird types who live in constant certainty, they have all the answers, are never wrong, and can be as lethal to you as any devious person.
@steve00alt703 ай бұрын
Well austics, people who are naturally restless or people adhd. These mental conditions makes an interrogators job next to impossible to do without getting sued compared with the average population.
@justaguy4realАй бұрын
3:05 thats BS, even when people are falsely accused and/or questioned, they still get super nervous and figidity bc of the "what if" scenario like "what if killer looks just like me" or "what if they had same car", etc. All of these points he's saying are only clues and not definitive. This guy needs some with good rebuttals and return questions to really prove his worth bc much of what he's saying is discernable.
@rogergeyer98512 ай бұрын
That's interesting re looking for changes. That sounds a bit like looking for the things a lie detector would tend to pick up on.
@billshearer39842 ай бұрын
My dad was in the military when I was little and he would try those same tactics on me. When those didn’t work, physical torture was next. I don’t trust this guy and I bet his kids don’t like him either.
@Fruitful88823 күн бұрын
A narcissist can make innocent people look like liars...
@IamBeautyBraedenКүн бұрын
2:45 3:25 Bait Question: Is there any reason someone would say they saw you .... [the more vague the more esculate fear response]
@pikeflowedАй бұрын
Asking opening " harmless " questions like what's your name where do you live and work etc is to establish a baseline of behaviour and voice-tone and to set it against the real questions about the " crime " when they are not stating facts as they did previously but are now having to lie and state " untruths " about what actually happened.
@benjaminlim39213 күн бұрын
Thank u learned soo much
@jakobs21523 ай бұрын
The cognitive overload method is excellent because it is a simple concept and once you detect mistakes you can focus on the mistakes. The problem with the skill of detecting deception is it is very easy to detect deception if you know what to look for but if you are not a detective there is not alot you can do with the information unless you want to destroy relationships to get the truth.
@johnnywlittle2 ай бұрын
Very good. True Pro - no ego. Like your style ‘subscribed’ -
@house98502 ай бұрын
this is why you never engage or speak a single word to these investigators. They are experts at the highest level and you don't stand a chance. ALWAYS have a lawyer. Period.
@tedwojtasik87812 ай бұрын
This is why you always ask for a lawyer and then invoke your right to remain silent. Or if not under arrest, simply ask, "am I being detained? Am I allowed to leave?" If the answer is yes, simply leave without saying a word. Never talk to the police.
@oldman9753 ай бұрын
Never talk to cops,not even in a social setting…they’re NEVER off duty.
@kimalonzo33632 ай бұрын
I was a nanny for a policeman of 13 years. Of course I had to talk to him. He had a camera in every room and outdoors. I worked for him for 5 years and he trusts me implicitly.
@erjbo3 ай бұрын
I’d be nervous because I don’t know who lied to you about me, and now you’re operating with the cognitive bias that I’m the perp. Investigations are basically garbage in garbage out situations.
@roadrunner386727 күн бұрын
what are the indicators if you keep your mouth shut and look straight ahead.
@keithdavies523 ай бұрын
If I spilled milk on the carpet, I'd say "lawyer". Don't care if I did it or not. This guy is a monster. Subjective observation to ruin lives is predatory, and his little "cute anecdote" with his own children shows that. Good grief. 1 in 10 of us are psychopaths.
@TrackedHiker3 ай бұрын
Yeah, your parents will hire a lawyer on the spot. Makes sense!
@ChingChangWallah.3 ай бұрын
How are lives being ruined? How are lives not being saved?
@MartinA-kp8xg2 ай бұрын
THe context of the question can promote a change. Example, how was your journey that's a nice tie where did you get it I like it. How is the weather in your part of town. What did you eat for breakfast. Then did you do the murder????. well it's obviously not going to be answered in the nonchalant manner as the other questions is it. This does not imply deception. It is going to be a very anxious question irrespective of innocence or guilt. Conclusion the question changes the mood not necessarily a deception
@StephenGangi2 ай бұрын
Looking away is a "tell"? If I'm bothered or annoyed at someone, I stare them down... because I'm (in my head) imagining what bad evil things I want to do to you. I'm not a Bad Guy, but thoughts happen. Better to think it, than to do it.
@bunjidogg3 ай бұрын
So just use a lot of eye movement and gesturing from the beginning and constantly.
@loisrossi8412 ай бұрын
Very interesting, thank you.
@Lee.WillcoxАй бұрын
Ironic that this guys crossing his legs, twitching his feet, rubbing his nose tells me he is full of bollox. A smug smile here and there too. I am only 1:16 minutes in. Lets see what else he tells me without listening to a word he says. I mute the video to see if he is being genuine.
@louismartin44463 ай бұрын
Can a honest person demonstrate these markers naturally- just from his/her personality or other factors?
@Querencia77792 ай бұрын
Rolling my eyes.
@merryhunt9153Ай бұрын
Q. Is there any reason someone would say they saw your car outside the robbed grocery store? A. Well yeah, my ex is always trying to get me in trouble. And her mother hates it that I have custody of the kids.
@wellscliff19 күн бұрын
The part about how to manipulate a child into confessing rubs me the wrong way. I've got three girls (ages 9 - 18) and I've never had any real problem with them lying, primarily because I never lie to them, and also I do my best to keep my composure when they misbehave. If they tell the truth, I explain why their behavior was disappointing to me (e.g. they've damaged something that was important to me), and I make it clear that the thing I dislike most about people is dishonesty. Further, I don't believe in punishment, but rather making amends. Everyone feels better in this scenario; they've been held responsible and this alleviates their own guilt. If they are terrified of being spanked or some other form of corporal punishment, they will lie out of fear, if they are merely ashamed or embarrassed, they will likely admit wrongdoing in order to get rid of that shame and be eager to make amends. This is assuming they even did the thing you suspect them of - let's face it , if you require a confession, then you don't know they did it, and as such there's a reasonable chance they didn't and now you've sacrificed their trust based on a hunch. In a similar vein, when my oldest entered school, she had picked up a bit of a potty-mouth (from me, of course), I sat down with her and discussed the likely consequences of what would happen if she spoke that way around other students and teachers. I told her that she could swear if she wanted to (I'm not a hypocrite), but that if she did, some teachers and students would not like her. If that was acceptable to her, then this was her choice, but that would be the likely consequence (hint: most kids want to be liked, especially in a new environment). We never heard a complaint from the school, and even her swearing at home came to a halt., so I presume that this tactic was effective. Honesty is best, and you can't teach that by being manipulative. Kids learn by example. Manipulation is a form of dishonesty. All that teaches kids is to be suspicious of being manipulated and probably to be manipulative themselves. This tactic may work once or twice, but kids learn fast. You'll soon find that tactic will no longer be effective at getting the truth, but your kid will become a much better liar in an arms race you started. As an aside, this isn't something I started with: it was something I practiced and failed at spectacularly on occasion (not the honesty part, but the tempering my response part), so I'm not judging people who haven't been taking this approach. Parenting can be hard, and you have to learn as you go, so take this as empathetic advice rather than condemnation.
@xamesm2 ай бұрын
How well does this work with psychopaths, who don't feel anxiety?
@robertreynolds16062 ай бұрын
I have been questioned by the police in an interrogation room, being recorded. Every question they asked I assumed they were studying me to see if I was being deceitful. I was aware of the techniques they were using because I had been trained to evaluate body language in my career. I was formally trained by the US Army, in the art of deception as a member of the ASA and we'll leave it at that. So, during this interrogation I was stoic, unmovable and never took my eyes off the person asking the questions almost a dead stare. Most questions I turned around and restated them to the person questioning me. i.e. If I understand you correctly, you're asking ..........they stopped this about 5 questions in the questioning. The conclusion was that I had been professionally trained & dismissed me from the interrogation with a series of threats. The truth was that I was out of town during the time a crime was committed about 1000 miles from the event unbeknownst to them. Someone told them I was involved in this crime, and they were fishing, it was a family member who actually did the crime not me, but they were told I had directly contributed to the crime that went down. Needless to say, they eventually gave up and realized I was not going to cooperate and lawyered up so that ended that. My technique worked. BTW I beat a lie detector exam, as I was told by the technician as his opinion after the test. After my army career ended, 2 years after I was drafted. I went into sales and was extremely successful selling anything. I gave up on Law enforcement early on as a result of seeing how much money I could earn in professional sales with a major corporation. I eventually became a VP of sales & marketing before I retired with stock options that made me very comfortable in my retirement. BTW I did know who did the crime, but they never knew I knew
@hahahahahahahahahahahahaha77253 ай бұрын
In an interrogation scenario,knowing I-was innocent and had a solid alibi, I would give the body language and words to lead to the conclusion of guilt. Just for amusement, and to have them question their future motives and judgment. If I wasn’t completely innocent I would never submit to interrogation, stating I will present a case to courts with counsel, should I be charged with violating laws.
@Paladin18733 ай бұрын
Good tips, but no system is foolproof. There are general patterns to behavior, but not everyone fits these patterns. The techniques described here are a good starting point and useful during interrogation.
@EdelweisSusie2 ай бұрын
The easiest way to spot if a man is lying is if he answers YOUR question with a question of his own, thereby giving him valuable seconds to formulate an answer he thinks/knows will placate you (ie get you off his back). My ex did this all the time. It would go: ME: “We’ve been dating 4 years - are you still not thinking you ought to divorce your wife? HIM: “What do you mean?” ME: “It’s an easy question.” HIM: “Depends on how you look at it.” And so on. See what he did - he deflected the question so I’d have to repeat it several times (getting angrier), then he’d storm off to the pub knowing that when he returned I’d be in a huff and we’d go to bed angry (and not talking!). He was VERY clever.
@justaguy4realАй бұрын
There's no tell tale tell all. Need to really know the person well to spot fluctuations in behavior or an expert to prep a subject for the 'interview'. And it takes a pro to spot them on the fly when out in public. Am I wrong, where? tell me plz...
@homeoftheinepttulpagamerАй бұрын
Its interesting how interrogations vary between countries. For instance, in the UK the police prior to interview has to disclose any evidence of what they are saying inside the interview, if the police dont have witnesses for instances then when the question is placed it would fall apart because if someone had seen the perpetrators car then they'd have been informed about it before questioning. They could of course ask "is there any reason why someone would say they've seen your car outside the store where the money was taken" but they would know its a hyperthetical and there is no surprise witness who did. Most, if not all interviews, are simply "no comment" on every question. No suspect is left in the interview room for observation alone to simmer, they are taken to their cell and brought in when ready. Solicitors (lawyers) are nearly always present and they are entitled to private council with them.
@patriciafeehan77322 ай бұрын
The reason I do not believe people’s behavior can be assessed, while on Jury Duty there was one juror who seemed not to be listening. It bothered me, a bit but it wasn’t my place. I was the foreperson, once the Jury Room Door closed, this man remembered every word spoken in the Court. You can’t judge people’s reactions and behaviors, he really seemed not to be paying attention.
@tonistephenson997727 күн бұрын
Some people suffer with social anxiety and don't like alot of questions being asked because there private
@dfens76211 күн бұрын
This is a perfect showcase of the horrible mindset most cops have where once they finger you as their suspect, they are 100% certain that you are the guilty and there is absolutely nothing that will convince them that they could possibly be wrong. In my experience confronting liars who I know for a fact are lying and actually have undeniable evidence of it, they typically don't hesitate at all to say they didn't do it, because they know they did something wrong and already made up their mind that they would deny it if accused and have prepared their reaction to the accusation in their head... but still others might assume that responding too quickly WILL make them look guilty (whether they are guilty or not) and intentionally hesitate wanting to give the interrogator the impression that they are actually taking the time to go over events in their head to think if there is some detail they could provide to prove they are innocent. And then sometimes people are innocent do respond immediately because they're certain they didn't do it - so really anyone can react in any sort of way for a whole bunch of different reasons, while apparently the "expert" cops just assert "acting this way means you're guilty" and believe it with absolute certainly
@clik365Ай бұрын
A friend's children denied writing on the living room wall. It carried on and one day she spoke aloud while they were in the room "Mmm, i wonder who wrote this, the letter A is written so perfectly." Her daughter proudly stated "That was me." So my friend shouted "Well dont do it any more! " culprit caught.