In Depth

How to Spot a Liar: Identifying Deceptive Behavior

Spotting a liar requires a good read on visual clues, but cross-examination and critical thinking are even better

By Daintry Duffy

December 01, 2005CSO

Were used to seeing interrogation scenes on TVthe bare lightbulb, the sweaty, hostile detective, you know the drill. But how do investigations play out in the corporate world, when the questioner wears a suit rather than a gun holster, and the chilling environs of a police room are replaced by the bland layout of a corporate office? Here are four things to know about conducting interviews and interrogations that yield results.

Know What Youre Stepping Into

An interview and an interrogation serve very different purposes, so treat them differently.

In an interview, the questioner is still gathering information. The investigation is ongoing. In an interrogation (like the made-for-TV vignette above), an investigator believes he already knows what the subject did. The goal is to get a confession or a confirmation about what happened from the subject himself.

Mixing interviewing with interrogation is a common mistake even among seasoned law enforcement professionals, says Nathan Gordon, coauthor of Effective Interviewing and Interrogation Techniques, who trains police and security officers on interviewing skills as director of the Academy for Scientific Investigative Training in Philadelphia.

During an interview, the investigator asks questions but lets the subject do most of the talking. An interview should last no more than 20 or 30 minutes, the length of the average persons keen attention span. The mood should be nonaccusatory. "Once you become accusatory in an interview, you have biased everything you are collecting. And when you ask informational questions in an interrogation, youre saying that you dont know whether that person did it," says Gordon. "Youre looking at a disaster."

An interrogation on the other hand goes as long as is necessary. You do 95 percent of the talking, presenting your evidence and coaxing a confession from the subject. To be successful, you have to recognize the battle going on within a guilty subject and use it to your advantage. Subjects are torn between the desire to relieve their conscience by confessing and the fear of punishment. If you take a nonthreatening approach, you can diminish a subjects fear of punishment and increase his desire to confess. "My concept of an interrogation is that I know you did it and Im here to help you," Gordon says. "I dont believe in yelling, screaming or threatening."

Watch What They Sayand How They Say It

Its a given that most employees who are brought into an investigative interview are going to be nervous, whether or not they have done something wrong. (Remember, they have also seen the cop shows on TV, and may have expectationsor if they have something to hide, seek to avert attention from themselves.) Asking simple questions like name, address, marital status, schooling and so on gives you a chance to analyze the subjects truthful behavior in this heightened state and establish your own authority. You should also take this opportunity to create some rapport with the subject and make a little conversation. Maybe you both went to the same school or live in the same town. "People who are alike, like," says Gordon. If you can get the subject to relax early on it will make any stressful or deceptive behavior she exhibits later all the more clear.

RESOURCE CENTER
Loading...
VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
Data Center Directions Virtual Conference

Data Center VCAttend this free, 100% online event exploring tools and techniques for making your data center deliver for today and tomorrow.

» Learn more and register here

WHITE PAPER
Maximizing Site Visitor Trust Using Extended Validation SSL

VeriSignNow with Extended Validation (EV) SSL available from VeriSign, you can show your customers that they can trust your site. Learn about EV SSL benefits in the free VeriSign white paper.

» Read the Paper

Featured Sponsors
Sponsored Links

Manage your IT more effectively

Simplify your data center with Juniper Networks. View the webcast

Efficient - Flexible - Compliant

E-LOAN Maintains Reputation as a Privacy Leader with Symantec

Data Loss Prevention: Keeping Sensitive Data Out of the Wrong Hands

Prudential Financial Protects its Brand with Symantec

Envision Identity-Based Access Control for the Datacenter

Digital Identity Protection and Data Security Get Personal

Welcome to the age of Service-Oriented Security (SOS)

When Customer Relationship is Everything, Businesses Bank on SSL Solutions

Everything Today's CISO Needs to Know About Using SSO to Succeed in the Web 2.0 Era

The Case for Business Software Assurance ~ Securing Your Applications

Maximizing Site Visitor Trust Using Extended Validation SSL

Solving Online Credit Fraud Using Device Reputation

Understanding Data Location is Imperative for Data Loss Prevention

5 Steps to Secure Outsourced Application Development

CA's IT Security centralizes your identity management to turn security into a proactive, business-building tool

Secure your virtual and physical environments with the same software

Any company can promise identity protection. Only Debix can prove it

7 Requirements of Data Loss Prevention

Information Security: Data Drains and How to Prevent Loss

How Are Open Source Development Communities Embracing Security Best Practices?

IDC Defines an Identity and Access Management Submarket

Using Likewise to Comply with PCI Data Security Standard

IDC Defines an Identity and Access Management Submarket for Managing Privileged User Accounts and Meeting GRC Requirements

Enabling Compliance with Converged Mainframe Security and Storage

Managing SSL Security in Multi-Server Environments

The Latest Advancements in SSL Technology

How to Offer the Strongest SSL Encryption

Forrester Total Economic Impact (TEI) report: Save Millions in Fraud Losses.

Get in Compliance With Government Data Regulations

Taking the Botnet Threat Seriously