Quote:
Originally posted by kappaloo
Torturing is all fine until you're in the chair and confessing to crimes you never committed.
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But I'm talking specifically about two instances where the person who kidnapped the victim was identified due to overwhelming evidence (blood on a knife owned by the suspect that that was DNA tested to belong to the victim in one case and surveillance video in the other) but once the suspect was in custody he refused to tell the whereabouts of the victim.
At that point, it's not about getting someone to confess to something he didn't do. It's to give some peace of mind to the families of the victims.