
Contents
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The Recanting Witness: State v. Morrison The Recanting Witness: State v. Morrison
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Police and Civilian: Contradicting Witnesses Police and Civilian: Contradicting Witnesses
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Powers of Observation: State v. Lopez Powers of Observation: State v. Lopez
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A Version of the Events: State v. Lee A Version of the Events: State v. Lee
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The Cunning of Detective Work The Cunning of Detective Work
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When Police Are on Trial When Police Are on Trial
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Conclusion: The Role of Police in Sexual Assault Adjudication Conclusion: The Role of Police in Sexual Assault Adjudication
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3 The Low and the High: Presumption, Power, and Police Expertise
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Published:November 2021
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Abstract
Testimony from police officers and detectives is commonplace in trials, acting as corroboration of the victim's narrative. This chapter shows how the testimony of police officers is both the “low” police work of procedural competence and the “high” police work of asserting political goals. The political goal in this case is maintaining the authority of policing. The authority of policing is threatened when it is police who are charged with sexual assault. The chapter describes how police drift between fact witness and expert witness on the stand by testifying about specific case details and broader opinions about police work. The authority of police persists even when it becomes clear that there have been fundamental errors in police work, including substandard interviewing and report writing that conflicts with other testimony. The chapter shows how this cultural imaginary is also variably experienced, reproduced, and reconfigured during the trial.
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