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  1. B-event statements as vehicles for two interactional practices in police interactions with suspects/witnesses.Marijana Cerović - 2022 - Discourse Studies 24 (1):3-23.
    B-events are matters which are better known to listeners than to speakers. This paper studies the detectives’ use of B-event statements in two different environments in their interactions with suspects/witnesses. The first type of environment are relatively co-operative sequences during which the aim is the reconstruction of events and constructing the record; here, B-event statements are realised as confirmation seeking questions. The second type of environment, a hostile interactional environment, is composed of argumentative sequences in which detectives aim to determine (...)
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  • Tunnel vision in a murder case: Telephone interaction between police detectives and the prime suspect.David Schelly & Douglas W. Maynard - 2017 - Discourse Studies 19 (2):169-195.
    The article analyzes an interactional form of tunnel vision or cognitive bias in a series of mundane police–suspect interactions. The data come from a murder case in which the suspect, later convicted and then released from prison with the help of the Wisconsin Innocence Project, frequently calls police detectives to inquire about his confiscated van. As he is operating in a context in which accusations are rarely made explicit, we highlight the suspect’s use of a complaint-denial device to tacitly claim (...)
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