toysoldier
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Exactly. She talked to him as a child that she had known from the neighborhood. She sure did not have any experience in getting coerced statements out of a child. I think both police officers were truly saddened to know he could do such a thing.
He was very chatty and quite talkative on his own accord without them prompting him.
That is actually how coerced confessions work. It usually involves two people, one person playing friendly while the other plays the bully. Neckels acted as the friendly person while Avilia acted as the bully. For the first ten minutes they simply asked him what happened and he explained it. They asked him the same things several times and his story did not change.
It was not until the officer and the detective for a day began telling him that he was lying that his story began to change. His story never 'unwound.' They simply lied to him and told him that they found gunpowder on him, that the bullets matched his gun and that someone had seen him.
Coincidentally, nothing he said in the interrogation other than the location of the bodies actually matched the crime scene. He not only got the number of shots wrong, but he also got the location of the wounds wrong.
To belief that he was able to maintain his lie while revealing the truth is ludicrous. Either the boy is a mastermind on par with fictional characters like Batman or he is simply a child.
If it is the former, then we have a problem because if he is smart enough not to tell the complete truth, why would it never occur to him to keep lying? Even if the police say they have proof, if he is that adept at lying, why stop? Better yet, since Neckels offered the possibility that he was being spanked, why would this mastermind not introduce that as a reason for killing them? Obviously he would have to be capable of thinking on his feet and smart enough to kill any witness to the act, so why would that slip his mind?
If it is the latter, then we have another problem because if he is simply a child, he is easily confused and biologically prone to pleasing adults, especially when frightened or in trouble. Avilia had her loaded gun only a few inches from him. Both officers had him trapped in a room. He heard them deny his grandfather and other family members access to the room so that they would be there for him. Every time he corrected them with what he stated happened, they kept telling him they had proof they did not have. No child that age is capable of maintaining the truth in that situation. They will say whatever the person wants them to say to be able to get out of the situation.
Of course, that is precisely how a coerced confession works. The officers kept going until they got exactly what they wanted: him saying that he killed both men because he was mad for being punished the night before. They did not stop until they got exactly what they wanted. And it is worth mentioning that every expert, every attorney, every judge, even the former Attorney General of Arizona consider the confession false and completely untrustworthy.
It takes an impressive amount of cowardice and utter patheticness to do that to a child. The problem the state has is that if there was anything conclusively proving the boy did this, it makes no sense for them not to have released it. It serves no one to hide that information, although it does serve the state not to actually investigate the crime, to ignore several statements from people who corroborated the boy's statements about seeing a white car drive away and it definitely helps when the state completely tramples a child's rights, ignoring the fact that both the defense's and the state's evaluators found the boy incompetent, and then lying to him and tricking him into signing a plea agreement his own lawyer admitted in an interview the boy could not even understand.
Ultimately, it takes very little to scapegoat a child, only the most minimal cowardice and general political self-interest.