Good listener? Party bore? Unsure of the difference?
07.07.09
Guy at party said upon learning a
detective was in the group: "I always wanted to be an investigator
-- I can talk to anyone!" The problem is not talking to anyone; the
skill is getting others to talk to you in a genuine way. Reid offers some tips on listening skills:
1. Avoid assumptions before actually doing the interview. Listen fully to answers.
2. Recognize the difference between a personal judgment and a factual statement.
3. Do not assume every verbal slip-up is an admission of guilt. Develop context and follow up with specific questions in the area of concern.
1. Avoid assumptions before actually doing the interview. Listen fully to answers.
2. Recognize the difference between a personal judgment and a factual statement.
3. Do not assume every verbal slip-up is an admission of guilt. Develop context and follow up with specific questions in the area of concern.
Lie detecting: focus on what people say, not how they act.
05.14.09
New York Times reports some researchers are focusing on
speech content instead of body language as a better indicator of
when someone is lying.
Detecting a liar - the punishment question
04.03.09
Last week, traveled to Argentina with
the Boston Braves Football Club, and played against retired veteran
from legendary clubs Boca Juniors and River Plate, as well as
others. We did OK (no scores please), but the rat-a-tat-passing and
superior ball skills of the Argentines was impressive . With help
from my amigos, I witnessed an interesting incident at a Buenos
Aires shop whereby an owner grilled an employee over suspected
theft (in the open-- a slight departure from USA custom). Owner
asked, "What do you think I should do to the person who stole the .
. .?" This was interesting: many US interview courses teach this as
a key component during the interview process. Called the punishment
question by some (Reid), truthful suspects are open to some degree of
appropriate punishment.
