Every Interrogation Technique Explained in 8 Minutes

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  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2024
  • Every famous interrogation technique gets explained in 8 minutes!
    Join my Discord to discuss this video:
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    💼 Business Mail: operamp4@gmail.com
    Shoutout to MF__Ed from Discord for the idea and for helping to create the video!
    - TIMESTAMPS -
    0:00 Mr. Big
    1:00 Good Cop, Bad Cop
    1:34 REID Technique
    3:32 Minimization/Maximization
    4:01 Informal Questioning
    4:32 Pause Technique
    4:47 PEACE Technique
    6:20 Rapid Fire
    6:39 Pride-and-Ego Down
    7:00 Repetition
    7:13 Loaded Questions
    7:26 Establish your Identity
    - SOURCES -
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reid_te...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_co...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PEACE_m...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FM_2-22...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Big...)
    - DISCLAIMER -
    Do not use this video as your only source of information. This video is for entertainment/edutainment purposes, and some information could be too oversimplified or incorrect. This channel's goal is to spark your curiosity and let you do your own research on these topics.

Комментарии • 884

  • @kadabR_
    @kadabR_ 15 дней назад +6545

    Remember, you can avoid all of these by not talking.

    • @justenoughrandomness8989
      @justenoughrandomness8989 15 дней назад +421

      you have to talk, "i invoke the fifth" is enough tho

    • @David280GG
      @David280GG 15 дней назад +53

      ​@@justenoughrandomness8989informal questioning

    • @justenoughrandomness8989
      @justenoughrandomness8989 15 дней назад +43

      @@David280GG just notice it

    • @therealelement75
      @therealelement75 15 дней назад +165

      Invoke the 5th, then don't invoke the 6th, and then leave because you can leave any interrogation if you don't have a lawyer present. (Only works if you were interrogated by police but not in jail (by not being in it or bail paid). Anywhere else, good luck. You'll need it.)

    • @Cobra97917
      @Cobra97917 15 дней назад +20

      I mean, TPE did upload one on torture methods a while back…

  • @the-pink-hacker
    @the-pink-hacker 15 дней назад +4095

    Don't speak until you have consulted a lawyer. Don't speak until you have consulted lawyer. Don't speak until you have consulted a lawyer.

    • @Vytirix_RBX
      @Vytirix_RBX 15 дней назад +224

      Hey did we mention you shouldn’t speak until you have a lawyer?

    • @cerealmuffin465
      @cerealmuffin465 15 дней назад +125

      Make sure you don't speak until you have a lawyer

    • @YourLocalNobody420
      @YourLocalNobody420 15 дней назад +93

      (Side note: don’t speak until you have a lawyer)

    • @dwarian5252
      @dwarian5252 15 дней назад +79

      To all of the people that might have thought about speaking before having a lawyer: Don't speak until you have a lawyer.

    • @RealLocami
      @RealLocami 15 дней назад +19

      I spoke before having a lyre

  • @FurryNonsense
    @FurryNonsense 15 дней назад +4939

    The Mr. Big technique just sounds like a 10 year waste of tax payer dollars to catch 1 little misdemeanor criminal

    • @originalcharacterplznostea2749
      @originalcharacterplznostea2749 15 дней назад +826

      No wonder it's so popular in Canada lmao

    • @Vytirix_RBX
      @Vytirix_RBX 15 дней назад +344

      Yeah that takes so much time you could film a literal documentary about it.

    • @jplveiga
      @jplveiga 15 дней назад +171

      its like making team rocket irl but giovanni is just a battle of wits lol

    • @wahoo2384
      @wahoo2384 15 дней назад +668

      Legitimately sounds like you're catching a criminal that you made, which is so fucked up

    • @me.viitoria
      @me.viitoria 15 дней назад +92

      Canadian cops are bored, let them be

  • @ExplainedOnPaint
    @ExplainedOnPaint 15 дней назад +2853

    The first one could be a whole movie

    • @jimmykedge6650
      @jimmykedge6650 15 дней назад +52

      I would so watch a movie with that as the premise

    • @Voltrix.3
      @Voltrix.3 15 дней назад +21

      It would have a name like "The Spys"

    • @Ramkatt
      @Ramkatt 15 дней назад +115

      No, it would probably have a name like "Mr. Big"

    • @BostYT
      @BostYT 15 дней назад +21

      @@Ramkatt yeah obviously, idk why voltrix said that

    • @QuixoticCowboy
      @QuixoticCowboy 15 дней назад +30

      @@Ramkatt or a name like 'entrapment' because that is what this is

  • @alchemilk
    @alchemilk 15 дней назад +1654

    I had no clue my country was pulling off hilarious shit like Mr. Big lol

    • @firstsurvivor
      @firstsurvivor 15 дней назад +237

      I wish it was hilarious but it's been used to make criminals out of honest people who were in need of money or help. There is a well documented case where they made terrorists out of a couple who had no actual want for that (they were found guilty by jury, but no verdict was entered as judge found it was entrapment, case was appealed and the stay was upheld as the case was a "travesty of justice" according to one of the unanimous appeal judges.

    • @HunterHerbst
      @HunterHerbst 15 дней назад +166

      @@firstsurvivor yeah, for real. After hearing the whole explanation, my only thought was "is this not just complicated entrapment?"

    • @Eagle3302PL
      @Eagle3302PL 15 дней назад

      @@HunterHerbst Not only is it entrapment but thinking logically, almost everyone involved apart from the suspect is a criminal because they willingly have to run a criminal organization for the entrapment to work.

    • @alchemilk
      @alchemilk 14 дней назад +43

      @@firstsurvivor I should clarify that I find it hilarious for its complicated nature and dress-up time but also because of its obvious entrapment. There are numerous ways this could go wrong, be a waste of time, or be genuinely harmful. I just found the absurdity of the whole thing to be funny.

    • @jamesrosewell9081
      @jamesrosewell9081 14 дней назад

      ​@@firstsurvivor Mr. Big is a technique meant to get people to confess to major crimes they did PRIOR to the police getting involved. The police don't charge for crimes they made them do.

  • @D34thTh30ry
    @D34thTh30ry 15 дней назад +1153

    Remember kids, in an interrogation, the police are not your friends and they'll try to get a confession in whichever way is possible. Remain silent and get your lawyer involved.
    If they tell you that you'd be suspicious to ask that and no innocent person would do it, that's when you know they are not your friends.

    • @SH-kz4fl
      @SH-kz4fl 13 дней назад +45

      If a cop ever says anything derogatory or implies anything regarding speaking with an attorney, their case is toast so that it almost wouldn’t matter, as that is a clearly established fifth amendment violation.
      Also, it’s important that people try to grasp when Miranda actually applies and the difference between detention and arrest. There is also a litany of established Supreme Court rulings involving providing certain demographic information (think asking for a license during a traffic stop).
      Though in the majority of cases you should ask for a lawyer, in some cases refusing to speak without a lawyer leads to far more headaches (ask any sovereign citizen wanna be). No reason to turn a petty ticket into a trip to jail or have the police smashing your car, because you thought (wrongly) you had a legal right to ignore them.
      The biggest tip generally is don’t break the law and you’ll never need to have all the ins and outs memorized.

    • @artemis-arrow3098
      @artemis-arrow3098 13 дней назад +9

      try and stay silent when they use the 13th interrogation technique, the one no one admits to using

    • @SuperBozz
      @SuperBozz 13 дней назад +8

      There are a lot of videos showing what not to do
      The trouble is most people will involuntary admit things
      Example
      Cop: so where you at the shop all night
      Person: no I swear I wasn't
      Cop: ok
      Person: yeah I was with Bobby and Lee on fifth having coffee
      Cop: I see .... *Writes down this information ( later on if it comes up and the person says something that contradicts this like.. oh yeah nah I forgot it wasnt Bobby it was Jake.. the person will look very bad in court for almost lying.. if the person has a good lawyer the lawyer will say it's circumstantial ... It could have been anyone at the coffee place it doesnt matter anyone who was involved was at the shop....but the damage is done for the persons credibility

    • @Graknorke
      @Graknorke 12 дней назад +23

      ​@@SH-kz4fl "if you've got nothing to hide you've got nothing to fear" could only come from someone who's never been at the pointy end of the police. Did you not notice how half of the methods in this very video had the caveat that they could easily scare the victim into false confessions.

  • @michellemcintyre1997
    @michellemcintyre1997 14 дней назад +628

    I like how in the Mr. Big technique you're basically making them the criminal then arrest them

    • @Hydraxia96
      @Hydraxia96 13 дней назад

      Among of all the techniques I find this quite immoral. You're creating opportunities for people to turn into criminals, and maybe if it wasn't for this fake organisation, you would not have done anything illegal

    • @Third_4
      @Third_4 13 дней назад +63

      They target people who already committed crimes. They're not making them into anything.

    • @nedia8259
      @nedia8259 13 дней назад +25

      Look up the definition of entrapment, this isn’t that

    • @denisekyles4299
      @denisekyles4299 13 дней назад +57

      @@Third_4 unless they are wrong

    • @eyeseer1
      @eyeseer1 13 дней назад +44

      It’s literally entrapment and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

  • @ball730178
    @ball730178 15 дней назад +1441

    I like how PEACE is immediately followed by rapid fire
    long and elaborate process to more humanely try to fully understand the entire event and the perspective of the suspect
    vs
    DISCOMBOBULATE

    • @jeezuhskriste5759
      @jeezuhskriste5759 15 дней назад +97

      Distract target
      Discombobulate
      He’ll attempt wild deflection
      Discombobulate

    • @Klick404
      @Klick404 14 дней назад

      ​@@jeezuhskriste5759
      He'll attempt haymaker
      Discombobulate

    • @UltimaDoombotMK1
      @UltimaDoombotMK1 11 дней назад

      In summary, discombobulate.​@@jeezuhskriste5759

  • @darthxerxes5468
    @darthxerxes5468 15 дней назад +846

    DONT TALK TO COPS WITHOUT A LAWYER

  • @the.abhiram.r
    @the.abhiram.r 14 дней назад +309

    if the police informally interview you, ask if you are under arrest.
    if the police formally interview you, ask for a lawyer.

    • @LumaSloth
      @LumaSloth 13 дней назад +3

      Why?

    • @KAngel32
      @KAngel32 12 дней назад +30

      ​@LumaSloth
      well in the first one they cant really continue effectively or at all
      and in the 2nd one well lawyers are way better at this stuff then you or me and can shut them down effectively
      (Someone fact check me please just incase)

    • @nura1627
      @nura1627 11 дней назад +6

      "Am I free to leave?"

    • @nura1627
      @nura1627 11 дней назад +7

      ​@@LumaSlothThe more words you volunteer in questioning, the more voluntary statements they get to use against you.

    • @rosestar1324
      @rosestar1324 6 дней назад +1

      I would add to your first point to ask "am I under arrest and am I free to leave?" Cuz in my state at least there can be situations were you're not under arrest but you're not allowed to leave the scene without consequences. So make sure you're you're talking to cops, you hear them tell you that yes you are free to leave before you do so.

  • @xc8487
    @xc8487 14 дней назад +366

    Mr. Big sounds 100% like entrapment.

    • @jacobp.2024
      @jacobp.2024 14 дней назад +90

      That's because Mr. Big is entrapment. It's just entrapment. There's no distinction; this would be illegal in the US.

    • @TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga
      @TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga 13 дней назад +18

      -sounds 100% like- is just

    • @Post_Stall_Maneuver
      @Post_Stall_Maneuver 13 дней назад +20

      Thats because it literally IS entrapment.

    • @GuiSmith
      @GuiSmith 13 дней назад +4

      @@jacobp.2024Hasn’t stopped at least a handful of people being led on by CIA profiling operations that got some susceptible people who towed the line of interest about potential crimes into nearly committing those crimes, which was considered an effective admission of guilt as they were doing something harmful but in a situation where everyone involved couldn’t be hurt because they anticipated what was happening. Still entrapment, though.

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 13 дней назад +14

      No, it is not. Entrapment is police telling someone to commit a crime, then charging them for that crime. This is police telling someone to commit a crime to eventually get a confession to a previous, unrelated crime.

  • @TajinQ
    @TajinQ 12 дней назад +55

    The PEACE technique just looks like how a normal human being would try to figure out what happened while treating the suspect like a human being

    • @agent_sus3273
      @agent_sus3273 11 дней назад +2

      Yeah, that’s what I was thinking. Sounds more like a technique for getting info from witnesses than actual confessions.

  • @danielrobinson7872
    @danielrobinson7872 12 дней назад +73

    The Mr. Big technique sounds like a good excuse for a lawyer to claim entrapment.

    • @moron0000
      @moron0000 11 дней назад +2

      Except that entrapment laws have defined bars so difficult to reach to conclusively show entrapment that using it as a defense fails almost every time.
      I'd say this law in particular is there to appear that the system is fair, "cause you CAN claim entrapment, you see", without actually running the risk of making the system fair.

    • @danielrobinson7872
      @danielrobinson7872 10 дней назад

      @@moron0000 Makes sense.

    • @benhingley9523
      @benhingley9523 6 дней назад

      That is exactly one of the downfalls and a reason for contraversy. Its why not many other countries use it. To be honest I'm surprissed Canada still uses it at all. Or it may be one of those things cops used to do but now only say they still do to keep criminals on their toes and worried about joining organised crimes. I believe it is more preventative then actually used. However that is my assumption if anyone knows more they can feel free to correct me 😊

  • @thehuricane0
    @thehuricane0 12 дней назад +37

    At first I thought Mr big was gonna just be bringing in the largest police officer to do the questioning and just be vaguely threatening lmao

    • @Riciliz
      @Riciliz 4 дня назад +3

      caseoh walks into the interrogation room and threatens to eat the dude

  • @reference_ravezach7791
    @reference_ravezach7791 14 дней назад +123

    The PEACE technique is basically most ace attorney cases.
    Instead of the interrogation room, it takes place in the court

  • @hamarticdownfall9919
    @hamarticdownfall9919 13 дней назад +113

    Most of these can be mitigated by two things
    1. Answer slowly or conceisely- for example with the technique that cuts you off and asks another question as you answer, simply stop talking as they ask the second question and when they stop asking then continue with your answer to the first question, only when YOU are finished do you move on
    2. Get a lawyer, and just shut up, only speaking when your laweyer tells you to and saying exactly what you you need too and nothing more

    • @michaelleblanc6070
      @michaelleblanc6070 10 дней назад +7

      #2 should be what you do first, regardless of how guilty you are. It allows you the ability to avoid a majority of these techniques because a good lawyer won't let them badger you, and they are there to keep you from incriminating yourself, whether true or false as to you actually commiting a crime.

    • @rosestar1324
      @rosestar1324 6 дней назад

      Yes but skip #1 and go to #2. Even if you are 100% innocent, tell them you can't answer police questions without your lawyer present.

  • @mateorios1636
    @mateorios1636 15 дней назад +360

    And to think Parents at least uses one of them to find out if their kid broke a glass

    • @smnio5619
      @smnio5619 15 дней назад +70

      usually Mr. Big (if they're cool)

    • @David280GG
      @David280GG 15 дней назад +7

      Mine use reid

    • @SuperBozz
      @SuperBozz 14 дней назад +35

      DID YOU BREAK A GLASS
      no
      *softly... If your honest it's ok
      Ok I broke a glass
      I KNEW IT. JUST FOR LYING YOU GET M-
      you said be ho-
      3 FOR INTERRUPTING

    • @charlottebarham7722
      @charlottebarham7722 14 дней назад +25

      @@SuperBozz I fell for that once... little autistic me had not yet realised people could say things and then not follow up on them :( I was so confused

    • @SuperBozz
      @SuperBozz 14 дней назад

      @@charlottebarham7722 is that the main condition affecting autistic people

  • @GamingWithNoahYT
    @GamingWithNoahYT 15 дней назад +249

    This is a useful video for getting out of potential imprisonment, whether you actually did anything illegal or not.

    • @clivah1499
      @clivah1499 14 дней назад +20

      Screw it, this is a cool video to interrogate my friends with!

    • @vincenturquhart1370
      @vincenturquhart1370 11 дней назад +3

      all you need to know is don't talk to the cops

    • @GamingWithNoahYT
      @GamingWithNoahYT 11 дней назад +3

      @@vincenturquhart1370 Every smart and sane person knows that.

  • @dream_weaver6207
    @dream_weaver6207 14 дней назад +77

    Mr big would literally be illegal in Germany, since persuading someone to commit a crime is a crime itself. I mean what's the logic behind "We're gonna punish you for the crimes that we made you do"? That just sounds like individualized discrimination with extra steps

    • @TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga
      @TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga 13 дней назад +2

      I think the same in my country, the USA, which is why Canadians can’t talk shit about our police system.

    • @tangerine_9627
      @tangerine_9627 13 дней назад +1

      @@TheRepublicOfDixionconderogaAtleast our police aren’t a holes

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 13 дней назад +1

      @@TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga Canada has basically the same entrapment laws the US has.

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 13 дней назад +7

      They aren’t punishing them for the crimes they told them to do.

    • @Graknorke
      @Graknorke 12 дней назад +3

      I assume they get around it by having the things they order not actually be crimes. E.g. transport "drugs" (that are actually mundane imitations) to a "buyer" (another undercover police officer). So the victim thinks they've committed a crime, which is enough to leverage the confession later, but no actual crime has taken place.

  • @PaintExplainerTV
    @PaintExplainerTV 15 дней назад +185

    Regarding the "Reid Technique," it's a well-established method for obtaining confessions, but its efficacy is debatable due to the potential for false confessions, especially when applied without proper safeguards. Its accusatory nature and reliance on psychological manipulation necessitate caution in its application to avoid unjust outcomes.

  • @8MinutesExplainer
    @8MinutesExplainer 15 дней назад +75

    - TIMESTAMPS -
    0:00 Mr. Big
    1:00 Good Cop, Bad Cop
    1:34 REID Technique
    3:32 Minimization/Maximization
    4:01 Informal Questioning
    4:32 Pause Technique
    4:47 PEACE Technique
    6:20 Rapid Fire
    6:39 Pride-and-Ego Down
    7:00 Repetition
    7:13 Loaded Questions
    7:26 Establish your Identity

  • @cupur
    @cupur 15 дней назад +101

    always ask for a lawyer

    • @fatsquirrel75
      @fatsquirrel75 15 дней назад +11

      I can't afford a lawyer. So all I say is "Do I have to answer these questions" on repeat. Is very effective.

    • @mrnewb4725
      @mrnewb4725 15 дней назад +24

      ​@@fatsquirrel75 ...if you can't afford a lawyer one will be given to you at no cost

    • @aminorinternet
      @aminorinternet 11 дней назад +1

      Just say I want a lawyer. The interrogation will stop.

  • @toat_
    @toat_ 15 дней назад +386

    Yo there's like a billion RUclipsrs copying you now, I hope you've noticed

    • @qwasr1278
      @qwasr1278 15 дней назад +40

      Well he wasn’t first

    • @DrowsyDanny98
      @DrowsyDanny98 15 дней назад +61

      I think The Redeemed Zoomer started it.

    • @qwasr1278
      @qwasr1278 15 дней назад +9

      @@DrowsyDanny98yes he has been doing them for over a year

    • @sliqyplayz8072
      @sliqyplayz8072 15 дней назад +22

      His idea isn’t original

    • @impact3457
      @impact3457 15 дней назад

      But this person(the paint explainer) talks about more important and various themes​@@qwasr1278

  • @BigBoris
    @BigBoris 13 дней назад +25

    I feel like one day I’ll get interviewed for a crime I was a witness to and I’d accidentally get myself arrested, I’m just that bad at talking

    • @Ashireiko_Tatsumi
      @Ashireiko_Tatsumi 12 дней назад

      Same. Especially with just how rotten the authorities in my country are. They don't care about capturing criminals, but only about setting someone to take the fall: Doesn't matter whether the one executed is the real killer or not, someone just has to die to appease the media; As long as I slip during an "interview" and they can use that as an "evidence" to incarcerate or execute me, I'll say bye-bye to this world. 😂

    • @garfreld
      @garfreld 11 дней назад +3

      Yeah, thats why you just dont talk to police lol

  • @52flyingbicycles
    @52flyingbicycles 14 дней назад +22

    wtf the Mr big technique sounds like the most blatant form of entrapment ever

    • @TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga
      @TheRepublicOfDixionconderoga 13 дней назад +5

      Yeah, why do people like Canada so much?

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 13 дней назад +1

      It’s not entrapment at all.

    • @52flyingbicycles
      @52flyingbicycles 12 дней назад +2

      @@Loj84 found the Canadian

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 12 дней назад +3

      @@52flyingbicycles nope, American, I just know what entrapment actually means.

    • @52flyingbicycles
      @52flyingbicycles 12 дней назад +6

      @@Loj84 “Action by law enforcement personnel to lead an otherwise innocent person to commit a crime, in order to arrest and prosecute that person for the crime.”
      That precisely describes the Mr Big strategy.

  • @musearrives2am
    @musearrives2am 13 дней назад +12

    One more I'll add thst I've seen used- The Jumpscare Technique
    The interregator asks a bunch of tedious/easy answers to lure a subject into a false sense of security before asking a really hard hitting question in a demanding/aggressive way. They're counting on that when you are suprised or startled you're going to answer more truthfully.

  • @someguy7819
    @someguy7819 15 дней назад +223

    Cops dont want you to know about this simple trick. You dont have to tell them a single thing

    • @mrslinkydragon9910
      @mrslinkydragon9910 15 дней назад +26

      Shaggy do story. Tell them a really long winded and convoluted story that doesn't lead anywhere

    • @thegreatandmightyseff7214
      @thegreatandmightyseff7214 15 дней назад +4

      That will just make you look suspicious

    • @jeezuhskriste5759
      @jeezuhskriste5759 15 дней назад +57

      @@thegreatandmightyseff7214 There’s a reason they have to tell you “anything you say can and will be held against you.” Looking suspicious doesn’t hold up in court. Don’t talk to cops.

    • @babycarrotz32
      @babycarrotz32 15 дней назад +17

      Quick tip, make sure you say "I invoke the 5th", or they can use silence against you.

    • @mrslinkydragon9910
      @mrslinkydragon9910 15 дней назад +1

      @thegreatandmightyseff7214 but if you are innocent, then there's no issue. You can't be tried fir wasting police time as they brought you in

  • @justdontcare2698
    @justdontcare2698 15 дней назад +67

    crazy how much of these get represented in tv and media, deathnote, sherlock holmes and so many others have their interrogation techniques explained clearly and concisely.

  • @AstorEzequiel
    @AstorEzequiel 15 дней назад +34

    I've never known that P.E.A.C.E. was an actual interrogation method... I've used a very similar strategy when trying to assess and resolve conflicts in communities and I had the highest success rate from my team. I'll check that one out further

    • @Natalie-ez1zc
      @Natalie-ez1zc 13 дней назад +5

      what kinda communities? if it's discord related im interested in hearing about it

    • @AstorEzequiel
      @AstorEzequiel 13 дней назад +5

      @@Natalie-ez1zc Some of them have been, yeah. I had the opportunity to voluntarily moderate two servers dedicated to art.
      What do you wanna know about, exactly?

    • @Regian
      @Regian 12 дней назад

      Typical reddit/discord moderator.

    • @AstorEzequiel
      @AstorEzequiel 12 дней назад +4

      ​@@Regian So far I'm an outcast with the stereotype because I can't get to be overweight even during December's holidays :P
      (Jokes aside, I don't think I've ever used Reddit lol)

  • @someguy7819
    @someguy7819 15 дней назад +99

    Isn't the first one entrapment?

    • @frozencatcake
      @frozencatcake 15 дней назад +31

      Yea but it's canada

    • @someguy7819
      @someguy7819 15 дней назад +12

      @@frozencatcake we have entrapment laws in Canada

    • @frozencatcake
      @frozencatcake 15 дней назад +5

      @@someguy7819 òh

    • @Misa-Aname
      @Misa-Aname 15 дней назад +1

      @@someguy7819 does it work in this situation ?

    • @benjamingoodrich7520
      @benjamingoodrich7520 15 дней назад +25

      The goal is to get them to confess something else. Normally, they committed Crime A, and the actors convince them to do Crimes B, C, D, and E. That way, when they confess to Mr. Big, they confess all of the crimes they did, where they can be arrested from Crime A. The problem is that even if they did do that, it's hard to get a full confession from without feeding them information

  • @charlottebarham7722
    @charlottebarham7722 14 дней назад +14

    1:00
    DARN DARN DARN DARNY DARN
    also remember, tell the cops nothing, tell the paramedics/docs everything (they're not allowed to tell the police bc of patient privacy laws, and they can't save you from a hard drug overdose if you don't tell them you've taken/been taking that drug)

  • @deadshotairsoft7627
    @deadshotairsoft7627 12 дней назад +6

    My personal favorite is making your objective to reach optimal stress levels to extract information.

  • @beanieb0b
    @beanieb0b 15 дней назад +19

    The first one really seems like an ass backwards way to arrest someone

  • @Rising_Pho3nix_23
    @Rising_Pho3nix_23 15 дней назад +18

    REID is fascinating to watch in real time

    • @the.abhiram.r
      @the.abhiram.r 14 дней назад +7

      it's pretty mentally exhausting to watch, especially when it's used on serial killers

  • @dogayildirim
    @dogayildirim 12 дней назад +4

    The paint explainer explains everything that a 10-year-old would understand, so when ever I'm stuck with an assignment in college the paint explainer is always my go-to for getting fast and simple info

  • @bushwookie3208
    @bushwookie3208 12 дней назад +5

    Theres an entire jhon oliver episode on how the ried technique has no scientific basis and often causes false confessions by lieing to the suspect about evidence

  • @yetiman09
    @yetiman09 15 дней назад +17

    thank you, i will be using these to figure out which one of my siblings stole my leftovers out of the fridge 😁😁

  • @_NotSoBunnyBoy_
    @_NotSoBunnyBoy_ 15 дней назад +52

    You forgot the famous “na-na na-na boo-boo” technique once executed flawlessly by Detective Stuckmann on the serial killer Steward “Griffin” Pecan. It was critical to his arrest and confession.

    • @tigerthenoob
      @tigerthenoob 13 дней назад +1

      Could you tell me more about it? I can't find info on it

    • @RealKyklops
      @RealKyklops 12 дней назад +4

      @@tigerthenoob Pretty sure it's a joke comment referring to something from SuperMega

    • @cook3d_fish280
      @cook3d_fish280 11 дней назад +2

      @@tigerthenoob the technique is to ask a suspect an important question, then make a silly insulting face at them to cause them to slip up and forget the lie they were saying

    • @swanclipper
      @swanclipper 10 дней назад

      @@cook3d_fish280 that sounds fuckin' hilarious.
      C'mon JCS... show me THAT interrogation. that or EWU.

  • @moamal9267
    @moamal9267 10 дней назад

    Keep up with the good work paint explainer!

  • @dfha797
    @dfha797 14 дней назад +7

    How long does it take you to make one of these videos? I love the frequency in which you're cranking these out ❤

  • @scurvofpcp
    @scurvofpcp 15 дней назад +19

    This is like my childhood in picture format.

  • @user-hs5hv2xo3t
    @user-hs5hv2xo3t 13 дней назад +3

    Thank you so much. These really came in handy

  • @smokedoutmotions_
    @smokedoutmotions_ 15 дней назад +5

    Love these
    Great video

  • @polarcaps8966
    @polarcaps8966 15 дней назад +18

    Hi, could you do negotiation techniques next?

  • @washno.8251
    @washno.8251 11 дней назад +1

    Thanks! I’ll be using this knowledge soon!

  • @DaniellaTousson
    @DaniellaTousson День назад +1

    I'm writing books with a few interrogation scenes so this is really helpful! Thank you!

  • @Hushakal
    @Hushakal 7 дней назад

    i always gain so much from watching your videos!

  • @RedNWhite2
    @RedNWhite2 11 дней назад +2

    The Ried Method is the most entertaining to watch, insane how people just forget they can just...not talk

  • @blehh_mae
    @blehh_mae 11 дней назад +2

    the first one just makes it sound like youre being tricked into comitting MORE crimes than you really did

  • @user-vc5vs3dt8w
    @user-vc5vs3dt8w 7 дней назад

    This is my fav vid yet

  • @killianmiller6107
    @killianmiller6107 12 дней назад +3

    Mr big made me recall a story I heard about a lady named Pauline Dakin, who’s mother would constantly and mysteriously move her around Canada as a kid, largely from influence of a pastor friend who became like a surrogate father. Later her mother told her that the reason for the weird childhood was because they were targets for a crime syndicate (her estranged father may have gotten involved in the mob and they wanted to clean loose ends) and that the government was secretly protecting them, and there were special places as part of the “weird world” where the mob is combated and targeted people are protected. Pauline later critically thought about it and engaged her mother and the pastor, and it turned out he was making it up and her mother was following along. Most likely a form of mental illness.
    Not a direct connection but I thought I’d share, it’s a very interesting story.

  • @jme1mm
    @jme1mm 12 дней назад +5

    Why do all of these boil down to "how to perform psychic mind torture to force false confessions"?

  • @andpproximately
    @andpproximately 8 дней назад

    Dude can you please make Every Moral Dilemmas (like the trolley incident). I'd legit love to see a thought provoking video like that

  • @YourFavouriteDraugr
    @YourFavouriteDraugr 15 дней назад +19

    Gaslighting 101.

    • @nuttrbuttr5
      @nuttrbuttr5 14 дней назад +6

      literaly nothing except the first one is gaslighting

  • @BastardlyDove
    @BastardlyDove 12 дней назад +1

    Thanks bro, they will never suspect me

  • @TheTransporter007
    @TheTransporter007 15 дней назад +23

    You forgot the car battery, jumper cables, and a 10" aluminum nail in each thigh technique. I'm sure you can do the math...

    • @SuperBozz
      @SuperBozz 14 дней назад +2

      2 + 2 is 4 -1 that's 3

    • @nuttrbuttr5
      @nuttrbuttr5 14 дней назад +4

      pliers=-teeth
      gasoline+rag= SUFFACATION DEVESTATION

    • @SuperBozz
      @SuperBozz 14 дней назад +2

      Quik math

  • @nickzardiashvili624
    @nickzardiashvili624 13 дней назад +4

    If you want a brilliant example of the pause technique, albeit in a press interview and not a police interrogation, watch Andrew Callaghan

  • @MitchCyan
    @MitchCyan 15 дней назад +77

    There’s also, bamboo under fingernails.

    • @omgdodogamer4759
      @omgdodogamer4759 14 дней назад +2

      the best method

    • @commandantcarpenter
      @commandantcarpenter 13 дней назад +2

      we're talking about interrogation not torture. yet.

    • @spud2576
      @spud2576 13 дней назад +7

      Torture is an infamously bad method of gaining information or determining the truth; people will say anything to make the torture stop. They will say exactly what they think you want to hear, regardless of whether it happened or not.

    • @gustavthomsen1538
      @gustavthomsen1538 12 дней назад +1

      ​@@spud2576but it is also an excellent way of getting a confession no matter what, which makes the whole justice system run a lot smoother. (Im not advocating toture im just pointing out why they do it)

  • @JordanPierre-Louis
    @JordanPierre-Louis 15 дней назад +4

    These videos are always interesting and explained well, how long does it take to make these types of videos?

  • @neoselket562
    @neoselket562 12 дней назад +2

    The image at 5:47 killed me
    And the guy on the left too

  • @the_jingo
    @the_jingo 15 дней назад +13

    “I pleaded the fifth”
    The end

  • @jole5468
    @jole5468 14 дней назад +4

    most of these seem like they are just there to make the interviewer get their confirmation bias validated

  • @ytown4
    @ytown4 15 дней назад +6

    Mr. Big is entrapment.

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 13 дней назад +1

      No, it isn’t.

  • @ardoo4359
    @ardoo4359 12 дней назад

    You should do different types of crime (murder,armed robbery,manslaugher etc)

  • @Insertein
    @Insertein 11 дней назад +1

    Thanks, I feel smarter already

  • @physicsdanny
    @physicsdanny 12 дней назад

    the paint explainer needs to do a 'every influential artist'

  • @flin_truth.
    @flin_truth. 15 дней назад +3

    Can you do about the quantum physics

  • @IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII819
    @IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII819 14 дней назад +4

    Canada just entrapping people

    • @SuperBozz
      @SuperBozz 14 дней назад +1

      Full trap mode with entrapment rap beat

  • @nolalb824
    @nolalb824 2 дня назад

    At this point I would call a lawyer even for a traffic stop.

  • @benjaminevenson7379
    @benjaminevenson7379 12 дней назад

    The Reid technique was used on me as a kid when I had some bad stuff happen with family that had happened

  • @ubaidaqeel386
    @ubaidaqeel386 11 дней назад

    This is pretty cool to watch while eating breakfast

  • @pianomasher6691
    @pianomasher6691 14 дней назад

    I feel like all of these would work on me apart from the Reid technique 😭 🙏

  • @Stiftoad
    @Stiftoad 11 дней назад

    Oh so big D used the PEACE technique with kevin
    Very cool

  • @zern7617
    @zern7617 12 дней назад

    3:32
    I just realized my school did this to me.
    I basically did some stuff on my computer and then they found out and was like "I think I know what happened go talk to the principal" with a very calming voice and stuff, and I said "ok" which practically admitted guilt.

  • @ryanandnojo123
    @ryanandnojo123 3 дня назад

    Mr. Big just reminds me of that episode of King of the Hill where Hank tricked Dale calling him as “Mr.Big”

  • @Nova030
    @Nova030 11 дней назад +1

    When i got arrested and they were investigating me, the guy got me with REID lmao

  • @CyrissSmith-jq4dk
    @CyrissSmith-jq4dk 10 дней назад

    Some of these seem to be entrapment and a lot of them seem to directly lead to false confessions.

  • @jaideng721
    @jaideng721 15 дней назад +7

    You forgot waterboarding

    • @SuperBozz
      @SuperBozz 14 дней назад

      Is that the lovely thing with ski boards and a nice oceans spray

    • @Evantize
      @Evantize 6 дней назад +1

      @@SuperBozztotally

  • @maxt4408
    @maxt4408 14 дней назад

    nice video

  • @tristonunplugged1296
    @tristonunplugged1296 13 дней назад

    PLEASE MAKE MORE PSYCHOLOGY / MARKETING VIDEOS

  • @JordanTheIDK
    @JordanTheIDK 4 дня назад

    If you didn't laugh at the 2 words, Mister Big, you're a Rogue Planet

  • @BSKnightGamer
    @BSKnightGamer 15 дней назад +1

    Topic- Every Investigation techniques from history to now

  • @JoeSmith-qy6qo
    @JoeSmith-qy6qo 15 дней назад +5

    isn’t the first entrapment

  • @sanguinedelight6464
    @sanguinedelight6464 13 дней назад +1

    This video:
    The comments:SHUT UR MOUTH,GET A LAWYER

  • @brendanlewis2344
    @brendanlewis2344 11 дней назад

    Mr Big worked in Australia to catch a serial killer who murdered a kid. The movie based off the true story is called “The Stranger”

  • @sumedhvarshney8131
    @sumedhvarshney8131 9 дней назад

    Minimization is just teachers saying "If whoever did it tells me, there would be no punishment".

  • @loganrazler1220
    @loganrazler1220 13 дней назад +2

    Me studying all of these knowing damn well I’ll probably never commit a single crime in my life

    • @adamperdue3178
      @adamperdue3178 10 дней назад

      It's still important to know, because you could still be wrongly suspected of one.

    • @contentsdiffer5958
      @contentsdiffer5958 10 дней назад

      Yes, you will. However small.

  • @adrianaslund8605
    @adrianaslund8605 14 дней назад +13

    Mr Big is literally entrapment.

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 13 дней назад +1

      No, it literally isn’t.

  • @fogaugames
    @fogaugames 11 дней назад

    Hey man, I really enjoyed your content, and I wanted to create a Portuguese version of it. Oh, and I'm not going to take your content and dub it; I'll model the format by making my own versions of the videos with my editing and voice. I would appreciate it if you could send a message approving that I do this. I'm asking because people usually get quite upset with copies, and even if I make the videos without using clips made by you, they'll still accuse me of stealing your idea or something. But if I have a message from you, it would really help. Oh, and one thing, if the text seems strange, it's because I used artificial intelligence to translate it into English since I don't master the language.

  • @lilsquiddle1964
    @lilsquiddle1964 13 дней назад +1

    Now I know what to look out for when the police finally catch up to me.

  • @Wyi-the-rogue
    @Wyi-the-rogue 15 дней назад +2

    Imagine just taking the mister big money and running.

  • @user-oe1ox8eg3p
    @user-oe1ox8eg3p 11 дней назад +1

    nobody laughing for the stickman faces? Ok, only me

  • @ABP2.0
    @ABP2.0 10 дней назад

    Don’t ever forget about enhanced interrogation techniques.

  • @Beabuzz123
    @Beabuzz123 11 дней назад +1

    3:00 me, a high school girl who’s never gotten in trouble who starts uncontrollably sobbing whenever someone confronts me for something I did or even didn’t do: 👁️👄👁️

  • @swedishlex
    @swedishlex 15 дней назад

    Dam i think im early for the first time i just realised i watched this 1min after it came out

  • @rtmesuperthegreat7412
    @rtmesuperthegreat7412 11 дней назад

    I am enlightened.

  • @ghostmaster3963
    @ghostmaster3963 14 дней назад +2

    The first one and the last one are just Entrapment

  • @JTalksNow
    @JTalksNow 15 дней назад +6

    Not Canada doing entrapment 🤣🤣

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 13 дней назад

      You’re right, not Canada, because Mr. Big is not entrapment. Entrapment is illegal in Canada.

    • @gustavthomsen1538
      @gustavthomsen1538 12 дней назад

      ​@@Loj84 Canada is running Mr Big, in Canada entrapment is illegal, therefore Mr Big isnt entrapment. Simple as. No logical fallacies here.

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 12 дней назад

      @@gustavthomsen1538 no, Mr Big is not entrapment because it very clearly isn’t entrapment if you actually know what entrapment means. Lmfao

    • @gustavthomsen1538
      @gustavthomsen1538 11 дней назад

      @@Loj84 Im very sorry, i just looked it up youre right.

    • @Loj84
      @Loj84 11 дней назад

      @@gustavthomsen1538 no worries! I respect that.

  • @person-lk5kq
    @person-lk5kq 12 дней назад

    me working at the police force, after much planning and preparation, as the fake boss of a pretend mafia that the suspect was part of, aggressively (after a fact analysis, a behaviour analysis, a period of time where i engaged with and explained to the suspect and then a period of time where i attacked their ego) interrogating them by asking for a full account of what happened (with loaded, accusatory questions that frame them as a much worse, more dangerous criminal) while making the crime they did look bad so that they'll confess for a comparatively smaller jail-time, taking long pauses between questions, and later asking follow-up questions and ensuring i understand what they said fully, while my colleague (who talks extremely quickly and will ask rapid-fire questions) acts calm and understanding (despite also being accusatory: they minimize how bad the crime seems) and uses 9 steps to make the aforementioned suspect gradually more comfortable with telling the truth when informally questioning the suspect (they'll repeat lots of my questions that i asked) (i'll evaluate this experience later)

  • @festivebonk4376
    @festivebonk4376 12 дней назад +1

    6:31
    I know this is just a visual aid, but this is not a contradiction due to the nature of private sales.