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American Law Society Winter 2013 News Table of Contents President's Column p. 1-2 President's Column Bill Foote, President Legal Update p. 3-5 The New Year brings many exciting opportunities for members of Expert Opinion p. 6-10 of the year.

Teaching Column p. 11-15 First, the AP-LS annual meeting will be in Portland Oregon from March 7 through March 9th at the Portland Hilton and Executive Tower. Our executive, Kathy Gatsky, and the program Co-Chairs, Stephanie Wollard and Jennifer Madon have visited the venue, and report that things worth visiting in that lovely city. I am excited about the three plenary sessions scheduled, one on each day of the conference. On Thursday, Barry Scheck, the leader of the Innocence Project, will be the plenary speaker. On Friday, the President’s Plenary will include three distinguished authorities on sexual harassment: Terri Beiner, University of Arkansas Law Professor; Jane Goodman Delahunty, Resource Guide p. 50-56 Law and Psychology professor at John Sturt University in Australia: and, Louise Fitzgerald, from the University of Illinois. On Saturday, Oregon Supreme Court Justice Martha Walters will provide a judicial perspective on recent court decisions, along with Gary Wells and others who contributed to the APA Amicus Brief in State vs. Lawson, a research presentations and presentations on practice issues. On the light side, our Student Section will be sponsoring a fun run. In all, it promises to be a great meeting and we hope you will try it, even if it has been a few years since you attended.

Second, the Interdivisional Grant proposal sponsored by AP-LS and Division 42 (Private Practice) has been accepted by the APA Board of Directors. With the $5000 grant from APA and a matching grant from Page 1 Winter, 2013 AP-LS, we will be mounting the Forensic Practitioner’s Toolbox, a web-based educational resource that will AP-LS News have a monthly program focused on different aspects of forensic practice. The website will include links to references and other resources on each topic, plus presentations in the form of interviews or webinars by experts in each area. [email protected] Third, we will be proceeding with our survey of the membership to give you a chance to tell us how we are doing and what we can do better. You should be getting this in your email box by mid-February. Please do not just hit “delete” as we are all prone to do with such Associate Editors, things, but take time to help your Executive Committee prioritize our resources to best serve our membership. [email protected] I look forward to working over the next year with an Elizabeth Jeglic, Ph.D [email protected] excellent Executive Committee, with our Executive, Kathy Gatsky, along with the many of you who Associate Editor, contribute to the AP-LS. Legal Update Dennis Stolle, J.D., Ph.D [email protected]

Associate Editor, Expert Opinion Chris Finello, J.D., Ph.D [email protected]

Website Editor [email protected]

Senior Student Editor Elizabeth Snyder

Page 2 Winter, 2013 Legal Update

Editor: Dennis P. Stolle The Emerging American Legal Response to Workplace

By David C. Yamada Suffolk University Law School, Boston, Massachusetts

examine the emerging American legal response to , one that only recently has crossed into Everyone loses The legal void

Page 3 Winter, 2013 Furthermore, generic harassment not grounded in protected class status typically escaped coverage Healthy Workplace Bill damages to those who have been subjected to an abusive work environment that caused physical that may contribute to an abusive work environment. Even some insurance companies are beginning to holders. Other developments behaviors. Concerns about workplace bullying increasingly are being addressed at the county and

Page 4 Winter, 2013 in the New York Law Journal

References

Developing law on workplace abuse. New York Law Journal.

The bully at work: What you can do to stop the hurt and reclaim your dignity on the job

progress report and assessment. , 32, 251-

. Employee , 8

Georgetown Law Journal, 88

blog, Minding the Workplace, at .

Page 5 Winter, 2013 Expert Opinion Editor:Christina M. Finello, J.D., Ph.D. Evaluations of Dangerousness among those Adjudicated Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity

Debbie Green Farleigh Dickinson University, School of Psychology Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center/NewYork University School of Medicine Hali Wood Farleigh Dickinson University, School of Psychology Jeremy M. Schreiber Farleigh Dickinson University, School of Psychology Julie Yagoda Michelle L. West John Jay College and the Graduate Center, CUNY Michal Kunz Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center/NewYork University School of Medicine United States, Page 6 Winter, 2013 way to prevent rearrest. they no longer had a dangerous n tp tp M SD M SD t 5.52, p M=SD=45.3 versus M= Page 7 Winter, 2013 SD=tp B BB B

Page 8 Winter, 2013 References

hospital discharged and jail diverted clients.

Criminal

,

, 32

Page 9 Winter, 2013

release. ,

Specialty competencies in forensic psychology.

release program. ,

in New Zealand.

Legal and Criminologial

,

A hospital.

Page 10 Winter, 2013 Building Excitement in a Psychology and Law Course Emily Stark Department of Psychology - excited to learn more about these topics.

jury processes, and the death penalty. The students who take this course are mostly sopho- -

- -

Page 11 Winter, 2013

- - - -

- our legal system.

- Page 12 Winter, 2013 -

Finally, the students in my Psychology and the Law course completed this test again in

- their interest and they now wanted to understand these issues. One student wrote in her pa-

Answer at pre- at post- test test 1. Judges are the people who decide whether scien- True evidence in court. False similar in their goals and methods. False - True Page 13 Winter, 2013 Answer at pre- at post- test test True the truth. shown that polygraphs are very reliable, and can accu- False True False - False 10. Most people diagnosed as being a psychopath are False violent. True - True False crime scenes. - True - False tent to stand trial. True to stand trial. schizophrenia, he or she is declared insane and will False not go to trial. True criminal cases. False who kill their abusers. - True ences.

Page 14 Winter, 2013 Answer at pre- at post- test test 21. Children younger than age 10 are not allowed to False - - False True about child custody, rather than juries. that use to help evaluate children and True parents in custody decisions. - True mous decision, just a majority vote. - True False True False - True rassment. 31. Convicts who are sent to prison have higher rates True - True the world. 33. Jurors who support giving the death penalty are True murders than states that do not have the death pen- False alty.

Page 15 Winter, 2013 President William Foote Past-President [email protected] President-Elect [email protected] Secretary [email protected] Treasurer [email protected] Member-at-Large Member-at-Large [email protected] Member-at-Large APA Council Rep APA Council Rep [email protected] [email protected] Editor Margaret Kovera [email protected] Webpage Editor Kevin O'Neil Lauren Kois [email protected]

[email protected] Karen Galin [email protected] Rachel Kalbeitzer [email protected] Fellows Dale McNeil Maureen Reardon [email protected] Mentorship Chriscelyn Tussey [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Mark Costanzo [email protected] Social Media Joel Liberman [email protected] [email protected] Undergraduate Paper Award Twila Wingrove [email protected] Laura Guy [email protected] [email protected] Kathy Gaskey [email protected] Stephanie Madon [email protected] Charlie Goodsell [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

Page 16 Winter, 2013 Update

Margaret Bull Kovera, Editor-in-Chief

mkovera@ jjay.cuny.edu th

Page 17 Winter, 2013 APLS Research Briefs

Editors: Elizabeth L. Jeglic, Maria Hartwig

Student Contributors: Laure Brimbal, Ginny Chan, Sarah Jordan, Jason Mandelbaum, Blair Mesa, Anthony Perillo, and Ashley Spada

quasi-experimental study.

Prospective study examining associations between clinical, demographic, criminological during early custody. Those who received primary mental health care were more likely to be

Page 18 Winter, 2013 diagnosed with MDD than another mental illness compared to those who did not receive mental health care. Those who received secondary mental health care were more likely to be diagnosed

.

, 1405-1420.

Gender-responsive drug court treatment:

, 1361-

Page 19 Winter, 2013

A training program for defendants with intellectual . Journal of the American Academy of

The predictive validity of a general risk/ needs assessment inventory on sexual inventory on sexual offender recidivism and an

Page 20 Winter, 2013

Psychopathic

Journal of

Quality

Page 21 Winter, 2013

Postpartum psychosis and the courts. Journal of

Psychopathic traits in

N with world health data.

.

are consistent with prior research.

Page 22 Winter, 2013 Co-occuring disorders in

Successful removal of .

may not be directly associated with recidivism risk but rather with a vulnerability to stress and Page 23 Winter, 2013

Decision making in the crime commission process: ,

, 1240-1254.

Page 24 Winter, 2013

Psychopathic

Self-reported psychopathic-like

Childhood maltreatment . Child Abuse

Page 25 Winter, 2013

The .

. Journal of

and substance abuse.

Page 26 Winter, 2013 1222-1232.

Transferring juvenile defendants from adult . Journal , 333-340.

Page 27 Winter, 2013 Psychopathic traits in

N with world health data.

Childhood

Problem

Low self-control and the religiosity-crime

Page 28 Winter, 2013

Do harsh

adolescent boys and girls.

th between CU traits and substance abuse, but gender served as a moderator. Males with elevated CU th grade, while

Page 29 Winter, 2013 substance abuse in adolescents

Police-induced confessions: An empirical analysis of their content and impact.

n

. Journal of Experimental

N N

Page 30 Winter, 2013 . during their interview. Truth tellers made more rhythmic pulsing gestures than truth tellers.

Legal and Criminological n M

.

N

and in the told , and more in the truths.

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Page 31 Winter, 2013 Juror arguments showed that some were troubled by PCE, which they saw as unwarranted and

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.

n sentences. More heinous crimes were also associated with harsher sentences.

.

nn

making.

n those not exposed to PTP.

of stereotypes than note takers who do not review.

n guilty than those who did not review or take notes.

Page 32 Winter, 2013

,

Criminal

treatment.

Absolute Page 33 Winter, 2013

physical aggression.

The , 423-431.

Page 34 Winter, 2013

Compared risk assessment accuracy between psychiatrists and psychiatric residents, and evaluated

Walters, G. D.

to predict general and violent recidivism beyond age and criminal history.

Does change in

community. Treatment outcome status, as measured by several psychometric instruments, was

Page 35 Winter, 2013

: A Journal of Research 411-430.

predicted sexual assault, via gender role ideology and alcohol use.

Sexual Abuse: A Journal Page 36 Winter, 2013

.

.

The Journal

recidivism. The authors highlight that hormones and sexual aggression may be a promising new

Page 37 Winter, 2013

long term recidivism rates.

555-

nonsexual recidivism.

Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and

Page 38 Winter, 2013

,

Page 39 Winter, 2013 Sexual Abuse: A Journal of

Sexual Abuse: A Journal of , 501-514.

Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 42

.

.

Page 40 Winter, 2013

of innocent people.

n n

.

N N

Law

N= not

, 23

Page 41 Winter, 2013

Bias of script-driven processing on eyewitness

Own-age bias in video lineups: A comparison between children and adults.

The authors examined eyewitness accuracy when the witness is the same age as the target. nn

The self-administered interview: A .

n

NN

Page 42 Winter, 2013

,

NN =

N N

Page 43 Winter, 2013

N N

.

Law and Human

N

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Journal of , Page 44 Winter, 2013

Criminal

Evaluating script-like knowledge in offenders and a small group of non-apprehended offenders.

nn n burglary behaviour.

N correctness.

Page 45 Winter, 2013 Criminal

Triggers for alcohol-related violence in young

T behaviors.

the police presence in pictures of neighborhoods in a laboratory experiment. Both studies show by police presence. Men felt less safe when police were present compared with when police are absent.

Page 46 Winter, 2013 Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Behavioral Sciences and Law: Disability, Law and Public Policy, and the World Wide Web

Disability, To address these and other and social advocates, online service providers, educators and employers, and policymakers

We invite conceptual, legal, and empirical papers on disability, law and policy and the web.

submissions is [email protected]

Page 47 Winter, 2013 American Academy of Forensic Psychology Dissertation Grants in Applied Law/Psychology

President-Elect, AAFP 1200 Prince St.

[email protected]

Page 48 Winter, 2013 MAC and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) New Connections Reception

or Mid-career Consultants.

com.

Page 49 Winter, 2013

Document Title Summary APA index.aspx - - APA - - tody - - APA - - APA Policy statement adopted by the APA

Page 50 Winter, 2013 Document Title Summary - APA - Guidelines regarding mainte- APA APA - APA - APA to psychologists regarding issues - APA Coping With Subpoenas or Com- Statement on responding to sub- APA Statement on Third Party Observers - APA party observers in psychological

Page 51 Winter, 2013 Document Title Summary AAPL and the Law - AAPL - - AAPL - AAPL - the Neuropsychological Assessment - AACN - Ethical Complaints Made Against Clinical Neuropsychologists During Statement on ethical complaints made against neuropsycholo- AACN gists during adversarial court proceedings. - ogy on serial neuropsychological AACN

Page 52 Winter, 2013 Document Title Summary - - metric technicians and trainees AACN in neuropsychological evalua- Third Party Observers in Neuropsy- Statement regarding the pres- AACN during neuropsychological evalu- - - NAN - NAN data Forensic Neuropsychological Exami- Statement regarding indepen- NAN NAN third party observers during neu- - - - NAN -

Page 53 Winter, 2013 Document Title Summary - - NAN sponse style and symptom valid- ity Statement on test security and NAN NAN - data - Update to the statement on test NAN data - NAN chometrists in neuropsychologi- - - AFCC - - - AFCC - - - AFCC - to court-involved clients -

Page 54 Winter, 2013 Document Title Summary - - AFCC - - - AFCC - - - - AFCC - - Document Title Summary - Federal Evidence Review cluding FRE 104, 401, 402, 403, - - gists - State and Provincial Psychology Psychologists - counseling - - APA

Page 55 Winter, 2013

Page 56 Winter, 2013 Call for Nominations

August, 2013.

and will have editorial responsibility over the content posted on the AP-LS The Web Editor will work with an APA programmer to make changes to the the web page and the AP-LS email list.

[email protected]

Page 57 Winter, 2013 Call for Papers

Journal of Threat Assessment and Management (JTAM) is a scholarly journal publishing peer-reviewed JTAM is 2013.

The Journal of Threat Assessment and Management - - -

Journal of Threat Assessment and Management to a large body users.

Journal of Threat Assessment and Management - The Journal of Threat Assessment and Management

Page 58 Winter, 2013

- -

Call for Proposals for the APLS Book Series

- edge base.

Page 59 Winter, 2013

And

-

About the Grants -

Amount

-

Page 60 Winter, 2013

involved

-

-- -Workplan and Timeline - - - major personnel. -Budget -

Submission Process and Deadline

Page 61 Winter, 2013

American Psychological Association

Deadline: February 15, 2013

to General Psychology, the Psychology, and the , which is an American

Anne Anastasi Student Poster Award presented in the Division One poster session, and The Anne Anastasi General Psychology Graduate Student Award

For the Page 62 Winter, 2013

For the

For the

The is to be announced in 2013 and given

Anne Anastasi Student Poster Award

The

b. More than two years beyond the baccalaureate.

Page 63 Winter, 2013

Page 64 Winter, 2013

-

Current Chair

Chair

Member

Fellows Chair, Member

Grants-in-Aid Member

Membership Member

Member

Member

Undergraduate Award Member

Page 65 Winter, 2013

Stay tuned

our webpage and like us on Facebook

Alana N. Cook, M.S.

Simon Fraser University Drexel University

Page 66 Winter, 2013

the previous year.

1 Page 67 Winter, 2013

a.

b.

c.

d.

Page 68 Winter, 2013

e.

f.

g.

Page 69 Winter, 2013

be enacted.

Page 70 Winter, 2013

2013.

early. The early-

Law

Page 71 Winter, 2013 Full-Day Workshops

Ph.D.

Full-Day Workshops

Kathy Pezdek, Ph.D. Steven Penrod, J.D., Ph.D.

5KM FUN RUN

[email protected]

Chairs, Stephanie Madon and Jen Woolard at .

and Contro-

Page 72 Winter, 2013 Grant Planner Society for the Psychological American Psychological Law and Social Sciences Student Awards Division Submission deadlines: Submission Deadlines: the APAGS are available for students yearly www.spssi.org - American Psychology-Law Society Grants-in-Aid American Psychological American Psychological Submission deadlines: career psychophysiological the APA are available for ECPs research Submission deadline: various page 56 Submission deadline: - Law and Social Sciences - Division guigan.html American Psychological Grants Submission deadlines: by the APA are available for psychologists yearly Submission deadlines: health see www.nimh.gov scholarships.html

Page 73 Winter, 2013 Thursday March 7, 2013 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm 10:00pm

Hilton 8:00p - 11:00p Executive University of Massachusetts/Drexel Tower University/Fordham University Reception Salon I, II, III

2:15p - 3:35p 3:50p - 4:50p 5:00p - 6:00p Implementing the Toward a False SAVRY in Juvenile Broader and Probation Theory of Suggestibility Hilton Discriminatio Portland Hotel n and Hostile Broadway I/II Environments: The Role of Dehumanizati on

2:15p - 3:35p 3:50p - 4:50p 5:00p - 6:00p Hilton Forensic Animal Eyewitness Jurors in Hate Portland Hotel Maltreatment Crimes and Broadway Evaluations Sexual Assault III/IV Cases

Hilton 8:00a - 12:00p Portland Hotel Executive Committee Meeting Council Suite

2:15p - 3:35p 3:50p - 4:50p 5:00p - 6:00p Suspects and Advances in Viewing Law Defendants during Risk and Order Hilton Pre-trial Assessment Portland Hotel Proceedings: A and Galleria North Focus on Management Vulnerable Populations

9:00a - 2:15p - 3:35p 3:50p - 4:50p 5:00p - 6:00p 10:00a Trust in Institutions Interrogation Mental Health Hilton Student of Authority: A Stress and and Forensic Portland Hotel Welcome Discussion of Trust Resistance to Populations Galleria South Breakfast/Con in Legally Relevant Confession ference Domains Orientation

12:00p - 2:00p Plenary: Oregon Supreme Hilton Court Justice Martha Walters: Portland Hotel Can Psychological Science Grand Inform the Courts? A View Ballroom from the Oregon Supreme Court Concerning Eyewitness Evidence

2:15p - 3:35p 3:50p - 4:50p 5:00p - 6:00p “Ask the editors”: Minnesota Alibis, Pleas, Publishing in Multiphasic and Hilton eminent North Personality Perceptions of Portland Hotel American and Inventory Exonerees Parlors BC international psychology-law journals and legal periodicals Thursday March 7, 2013 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm 10:00pm

Hilton 6:30p - 8:00p Portland Hotel Welcome Reception Pavilion East/West

2:15p - 3:35p 3:50p - 4:50p 5:00p - 6:00p When and how are Child Children's experts biased? Witnesses Memories Hilton Understanding Portland Hotel Adversarial Pavillion West Allegiance in Forensic Assessment

Friday March 8, 2013 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm 10:00pm

12:30p - Hilton 1:30p Minority Execut Affairs Committee ive (MAC) Invited Tower Luncheon Salon I and II

Hilton 8:00p - 11:00p Executive University of Nebraska-Lincoln Reception Tower Salon I, II, III

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Face Examining the Current Advances The School to Lineup Biases Hilton Recognition benefits and in the Psychology of Prison and their Portland Hotel strategies used to Investigative Pipeline Effects Broadway I/II build rapport with Interviewing: child and adult Experimental witnesses Approaches

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Justice Selecting Appellate Emergent Jurors in Stereotypes Risk, Reentry, Hilton Reasoning and Judges: Views from controversies in Homicide and and Portland Hotel Procedural the Bench and the civil commitment Trials Perceptions Recidivism Broadway Justice Academy evaluations of III/IV sexually violent predators

12:20p - 2:15p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Networking Event Confessions: Warnings and Hilton Causes and Challenges to Portland Hotel Consequences Detecting Council Suite False Confessions

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p 8:00p - 10:00p Jurors' In the Shadow of The Future of Jury Juror APLS APLS Student Section Reception Hilton Perceptions of the Law: Research Understanding Teaching and Distinguished Portland Hotel Defendants Adolescent Dating of Evidence Mentoring Contributions Forum Violence and Risky and Award Award Sexual Behavior Instructions Address Address

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 12:20p - 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Reporting and The veracity and 1:20p Improving Lineup Influences on Testifying consequences of Film: Guilty outcomes for female Paper Session: Procedures Verdicts and Hilton information Except for juvenile offenders: Psychopathy and Sentencing Portland Hotel obtained during Insanity The Juvenile Justice in Juveniles Administrator Galleria North interrogations. Management Biases (JJAM) Treatment for Girls Friday March 8, 2013 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm 10:00pm

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Assessment, DSM-5 Antisocial Mental illness in Victimization Expert Psychopathy Adjustment, & Personality criminal justice and Violence Witnesses and among Adult Hilton Aggression Disorder: Links to settings: Identifying Judicial Inmates Portland Hotel among Inmate Psychopathy, needs and custodial Decisions Galleria South Populations Personality, and concerns Neurocognitive Deficits

10:45a - 12:15p Sex Discrimination Hilton and Harassment: Portland Hotel Status of the Law, Grand Research and Ballroom International Perspectives

Hilton 6:00p - 7:30p Portland Hotel Minority Affairs Hospitality Committee/RWFJ New (Governor's) Connections Reception Suite

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Expert Factors that New Directions in Youth Feigning Risk Hilton Testimony influence jurors’ Legal Socialization capacities and Illness Screening Portland Hotel perceptions and Research justice Parlors BC decisions in civil processing trials

Hilton 6:30p - 8:00p Portland Hotel Friday Evening Poster Pavilion Session East/West

Hilton 8:00p - 10:00p Portland Hotel Early Career Professional Studio Suite Reception

Saturday March 9, 2013 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm 10:00pm

Hilton 12:45p - 2:00p 8:00p - 11:00p Executive Mentoring Event John Jay College of Criminal Justice Reception Tower Salon I, II, III

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Jury Paper Interdisciplinarity Disproportionality, Eyewitness Public Policy Showups and Session: and the Psychology- Race, and Decision- Identifications Lineup Hilton Pretrial Law Professional: Making in Child Procedures Portland Hotel influences on Considerations for Welfare Broadway I/II jurors Graduate Training and Early Career Academics

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Hilton Patterns of Women as Expert Current Advances and Psychopathy Risk Portland Hotel Risk Witnesses in the Psychology of Lies among Youth Assessment, Broadway Assessment Investigative and Young Dangerousnes III/IV Responding Interviewing: Field Adults s, and Perspectives Violence

3:00p - 4:00p Hilton Risk Portland Hotel Assessment Council Suite and Sex Offenders

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Forensic Counterintuitive Contexts that Affect Saleem Shah Police Psychopathy Assessment Race Effects in Children's Award Practices, and Hilton Measurement Legal Decision Reporting Address Interrogations, Psychometrics Portland Hotel Making: and Interviews Forum Unexpected Leniency Toward African American Defendants

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p Victimization New Views of Current Issues & Female Children as and False Eyewitness Practice Patterns in Juvenile Victims and Hilton Reports Identification Competency to Offenders Witnesses Portland Hotel Reform: Receiver Stand Trial Galleria North Operating Evaluation Characteristic and Cumulative Effect Size Analysis

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 5:20p - 6:20p How Weapons On the Current and Future Mental Health Predicting Hilton and Drugs Admissibility of Directions in Issues and Misconduct, Portland Hotel Affect Expert Testimony Deception Detection Juvenile Recidivism, Galleria South Witnesses Regarding and Interrogations Offenders and Parole Interrogations and Research Confessions

Hilton 10:45a - 12:30p Portland Hotel Plenary: Barry Scheck Grand from the Innocence Project Ballroom Saturday March 9, 2013 7:00am 8:00am 9:00am 10:00am 11:00am 12:00pm 1:00pm 2:00pm 3:00pm 4:00pm 5:00pm 6:00pm 7:00pm 8:00pm 9:00pm 10:00pm

8:00a - 9:00a 9:15a - 10:35a 1:30p - 2:50p 3:00p - 4:00p 4:10p - 5:10p 5:20p - 6:20p Topics in Legal Decisions Conceptual/method Lay persons, Forensic Research and Psychopathy ological Issues in law Evaluators policy on Culturally enforcement, children in the Hilton Responsive and courts Portland Hotel Psycholegal psychopathy Parlors BC Research: Four Empirical Illustrations of Intimate Partner Violence Research

Hilton 6:30p - 8:00p Portland Hotel Saturday Evening Pavilion Poster Session East/West