Cognition and incentives in plea decisions: Categorical differences in outcomes as the tipping point for innocent defendants
Helm, R
Date: 2 September 2021
Article
Journal
Psychology, Public Policy, and Law
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Existing research suggests that incentives to plead guilty may influence guilty and innocent
defendants differently. This study examines that possibility through testing theoreticallyinformed predictions relating to the interaction between different types of plea discount
(sentence length and sentence type), guilt, and probability ...
Existing research suggests that incentives to plead guilty may influence guilty and innocent
defendants differently. This study examines that possibility through testing theoreticallyinformed predictions relating to the interaction between different types of plea discount
(sentence length and sentence type), guilt, and probability of conviction in predicting plea
decisions, with a focus on the discounts in England and Wales. Participants (N=3,375) made
plea decisions in vignettes that varied discount type offered, probability of conviction, and
guilt between-subjects. Participants also answered questions about considerations that were
important to them when making plea decisions. Results provide support for predictions,
specifically at higher levels of probability of conviction, by showing that a discount resulting
in a categorically different sentence type (probation rather than custody) encouraged both
‘guilty’ and ‘innocent’ participants to plead guilty, but that a discount resulting only in a
shorter sentence of the same type (a 1/3 reduction in sentence-length) only encouraged
‘guilty’ participants to plead guilty. Participant reports of the considerations important to
them when pleading suggest that the categorical discount reduced the importance of factual
guilt or innocence in the decision-making of innocent defendants. Findings suggest that
utilising plea discounts that vary sentences quantitatively but not categorically is important in
maximising the extent to which plea discounts appeal to guilty but not innocent defendants.
Law School
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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