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  2. Eyewitness memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyewitness_memory

    Children's testimony refers to when children are required to testify in court after witnessing or being involved in a crime. In situations where a child is the main witness of a crime, the result of the hearing is dependent on the child's memory of the event. And there are several important issues associated with eyewitness memory of children ...

  3. Eyewitness identification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyewitness_identification

    If the ability of a witness to make a positive visual identification is likely to be an issue, one of the formal identification procedures in Pace Code D, para 3.5–3.10 is normally used, unless it would serve no useful purpose (e.g. because the suspect was known to the witnesses or if there was no reasonable possibility that a witness could ...

  4. Eyewitness testimony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyewitness_testimony

    If a witness identification of the source of their retrieved memory turns out to be mistaken, then the witness will be considered unreliable. While some witnesses see the entirety of a crime happen in front of them, others only witness part of a crime. These latter witnesses are more likely to experience confirmation bias. Witness expectations ...

  5. Witness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witness

    In law, a witness is someone who, either voluntarily or under compulsion, provides testimonial evidence, either oral or written, of what they know or claim to know.. A witness might be compelled to provide testimony in court, before a grand jury, before an administrative tribunal, before a deposition officer, or in a variety of other legal proceedings.

  6. New Orleans attacker believed to have acted alone - FBI - AOL

    www.aol.com/scene-just-horrific-witnesses-tell...

    The suspect in the New Orleans attack that killed 14 people on New Year's Day is believed to have acted alone in a "premeditated and evil act," the FBI has said. The latest information is counter ...

  7. Witness immunity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witness_immunity

    However, if the prosecutor acquires evidence substantiating the crime independently of the witness's testimony, the witness may then be prosecuted. Prosecutors at the state level may offer a witness either transactional or use and derivative use immunity, but at the federal level, use and derivative use immunity is much more common. [citation ...

  8. Tilda Swinton, Steve Coogan and Miriam Margolyes among 2,000 ...

    www.aol.com/tilda-swinton-steve-coogan-miriam...

    The full letter reads:“We are witnessing a crime and a catastrophe. Israel has reduced much of Gaza to rubble, and cut off the supply of water, power, food and medicine to 2.3 million Palestinians.

  9. Eyewitness memory (child testimony) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyewitness_memory_(child...

    Source monitoring refers to understanding the origin of one's memories. Source misattributions are issues in retrieval in which the subject struggles to separate two or more sources of memory; it is not an issue necessarily with the memory itself. In other words, source misattributions are errors in source monitoring.