8/20/25
My Experience with Investigative Interviews
My time spent with CPI investigations this
summer proved to be invaluable in more ways than the term can properly define.
In pursuit of a career in law enforcement, I always worried mostly about the
environment and the personalities I’d be surrounded by. One can learn and read
on his own to gain insights into the mindset and the lifestyle of an
investigator at any level, but it provides a whole new perspective on it all
when you get the opportunity to be in the same room as these esteemed
individuals such as my boss Detective Judd Bank. I was gifted with this chance
to experience a glimpse into the personalities and ideologies of an
investigator with over thirty years of experience in the field. Going into
things, I was very nervous about how I might feel in this realm or whether I
could even hope to belong in the same room. I was quickly welcomed and reminded
that I am merely a student of a generation that is in need of insightful
knowledge from the former. Mr. Bank introduced me to his lifelong field of work
and study in an exceptional manner, providing me with his comprehensive blogs
and an informative packet that follows the basis of his strategical approach to
an investigative interview.
This
strategy is known as S.P.E.A.R., which stands for strategy/structure,
planning/preparation, engaging, accounts/clarification, and review/evaluate.
Following this baseline strategy, I learned that it is necessary to do things
as such because things can quickly become disorganized or you as the
investigator can easily lose your foothold in an interview. To have a strategy
gives you an instant advantage over the person sitting across from you, as they
won’t have something nearly as prepared in response to you unless they are a
special class of criminal/individual. The importance of each step proves
crucial to winning in an investigative interview and an investigation in
general. I carefully use the term “winning” because this is how it must be
viewed to defeat the person sitting across from you. There are basic principles
everybody should follow regarding morality when dealing with one another on a
regular basis, but in an investigative interview these bets are off.
You
must view the person across from you as the opponent in an almost complex
version of a chess match. A person trying to hide something illicit from you
will do whatever they can to lie and sneak their way out of that room
unscathed, and it's your job as an investigator to take advantage of their
desire to escape and force them into telling you the truth, whatever the truth
may be. The methods of this process range widely and can be employed in
multitudes of situations from varying angles, but they all have a simplified
trigger to guide the investigator towards their chosen approach. Mr. Bank
created a process of identifying approaches through the teachings of a
historical samurai known as Miyamoto Musashi. This process does not follow the
exact same principles Musashi spoke of in his book called, “The Book of Five
Rings”, but it uses the teachings in a modernized recreation. Using different
elements of the earth to classify an individual's state of mind makes employing
the tactics of an investigator much easier to the alternative of just going
with the flow of things. This is not to say that things will always be this
simple and a person might be classified as strictly let’s say fire, but having
this format remains useful regardless. You can switch the tone at any moment to
react accordingly to a suspect’s approach, but you must not take things too far
because it’ll be impossible to bring them back down from that level. The
approach should typically remain that you as an investigator are trying to
befriend the suspect and give them the illusion that you are there for their
benefit and their benefit alone. If you decide to tune up the intensity of the
interview and put too much pressure on the suspect too soon, you lose the
advantage of your befriending illusion and have now become a hostile entity in
the eyes of the suspect in question. Retaining posture and employing these more
visceral tactics only when necessary is an art that I learned needs perfecting
and practice constantly.
Intuition
is a massive factor in this process because it will guide you in the right
direction through subtle queues and nuances that only a trained eye can pick up
on. To be intuitive in these settings, you must have this knowledge already
holstered within your subconscious so that you can react accordingly without
having to dwell on any given instance for far too long. Training this instinct
is crucial to gain a better understanding of an investigative interview and
also to just understand the nature of humans at a much higher level. Only after
training in these teachings and techniques can you start to pick up on the
subtle queues that might give your insight into the suspect’s mind or better
yet the ideas, he is trying to convince you of. This was another massively
important thing I learned with my time spent there, which is that you need to
be looking for the character the suspect is trying to portray and why they are
trying to portray this. People in an uncomfortable situation like this that
have something to hide will typically try to convince you of something that
expresses their innocence, but it's the investigators job to figure out why
they want you to believe this false narrative to decipher which questions to
press on further. Understanding this reasoning for a suspect's story opens the
doors to which parts of their story need clarification and deeper questioning
from the investigator.
I also had the privilege of witnessing these
teachings in real-time being used in an interrogative interview. Sitting in the
room gives a completely different perspective as opposed to watching it on
YouTube or television. I got to see firsthand what it feels like to be on both
sides of the coin in these scenarios because you can feel the tension hanging
in the air like no other. All these teachings are just that if you don’t get
the chance to see them in practice and truly grasp the reasoning behind their usefulness,
so this experience was truly informative. I won’t get into the details of it
but it’s safe to say that everything I was taught and am still learning holds
true in this environment.
To conclude, my experience with CPI
investigations was that of something I don’t think I could acquire anywhere
else. These are not things you can learn so efficiently from any class or
YouTube video on the internet. Having Mr. Bank share his lifetime experiences
and active working knowledge with me proved to be more useful than most classes
I have taken in my entire college career. Learning is just that without the
real-world experience to apply it or practice, so it truly was a gift to be a
part of, and I will continue to value and practice what I gained for the rest
of my life and foreseeable future career.
