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第120节

criminal psychology-第120节

小说: criminal psychology 字数: 每页4000字

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long distance he can not be sent away。 His case; moreover; seems improbable and the man expresses himself with difficulty。 Finally; when the protocol is made; it appears that he has not been properly understood; and moreover; that he has added many irrelevant thingsin short; he strains one's patience to the limit。 Now; I should like to know the criminalist who would not acquire a vigorous prejudice against this complainant? It would be so natural that nobody would blame one for such a prejudice。 At the same time it is proper to require that it shall be only transitive; and that later; when the feeling has calmed; everything shall be handled with scrupulous conscientiousness so as to repair whatever in the first instance might have been harmed。

It is neither necessary nor possible to discuss all the particular forms of prepossession。 There is the unconditional necessity of merely making a thoroughly careful search for their presence if any indication whatever; even the remotest; shows its likelihood。 Of the extremest limit of possible prejudice; names may serve as examples。 It sounds funny to say that a man may be prejudiced for or against an individual by the sound of his name; but it is true。 Who will deny that he has been inclined to favor people because they bore a beloved name; and who has not heard remarks like; ‘‘The very name of that fellow makes me sick。'' I remember clearly two cases。 In one; Patriz Sevenpounder and Emmerenzia Hinterkofler were accused of swindling; and my first notion was that such honorable names could not possibly belong to people guilty of swindling。 The opposite case was one in which a deposition concerning some attack upon him was signed by Arthur Filgr

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