Breaking Point

In Breaking Point, I work with six exonerees, all of whom were wrongfully convicted because they confessed to crimes they did not commit, to take an indepth look at coercive police interrogations and their ability to produce false confessions.

Why do innocent people confess to crimes they did not commit? This question has troubled the public for decades. Most of us assume we would never admit to something we did not do—especially if it could send us to prison. Yet false confessions are one of the leading causes of wrongful convictions in the United States. Research shows that coercive police interrogation tactics are often to blame.

These tactics include isolating suspects in unfamiliar surroundings; subjecting them to long, confrontational questioning; denying them access to lawyers or other support systems; lying about the existence or strength of evidence; subjecting them to bogus polygraph examinations; and making false suggestions of leniency. Young people and people with cognitive impairments are especially vulnerable. Many come to believe the only way to stop the pressure is to accept the story the police are pushing, even if it isn’t true.

In her project entitled Breaking Point, Robin Dahlberg explores this problem directly. She collaborates with six exonerees – Jeffrey Deskovic, Vanessa Gathers, Brian Halsey, Eddie Lowery, Christopher Ochoa, and Raymond Santana – all of whom falsely confessed and were wrongfully convicted as a result. Together, their experience demonstrate how coercive interrogations can lead innocent people to admit to crimes they did not commit—and how those confessions can destroy lives.

© Robin Dahlberg - Image from the Breaking Point photography project
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In 1998, 39-year-old Vanessa Gathers falsely confessed after a detective yelled, screamed and menaced her with his gun during interrogation. Convicted of manslaughter, she was exonerated in 2016 when prosecutors found the questioning coercive and unethical.

© Robin Dahlberg - Excerpt from interview with Vanessa Gathers
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Excerpt from interview with Vanessa Gathers

© Robin Dahlberg - Image from the Breaking Point photography project
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In 1988, 28-year-old Byron Halsey signed a blank sheet of paper after more than 30 hours of police interrogation about the murder of his girlfriend’s two children. Officers later wrote a confession on the paper and used it to convict him. Halsey, who had a sixth-grade education and significant learning disabilities, spent nearly two decades in prison before DNA testing in 2006 exonerated him.

© Robin Dahlberg - Excerpt from interview with Byron Halsey.
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Excerpt from interview with Byron Halsey.

© Robin Dahlberg - Image from the Breaking Point photography project
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In 1989, 16-year-old Jeffrey Deskovic falsely confessed to sexually assaulting and murdering a 15-year-old classmate after being told that he failed a bogus six-hour polygraph exam and police officers wanted to beat him. Sixteen years after his conviction, he was exonerated when DNA analysis revealed the true perpetrator.

© Robin Dahlberg - Excerpt from interview with Jeffrey Deskovic.
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Excerpt from interview with Jeffrey Deskovic.

© Robin Dahlberg - Image from the Breaking Point photography project
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In 1988, 22-year-old Christopher Ochoa falsely confessed to the rape and murder of a coworker after a two-day interrogation in which detectives screamed at him, threatened him with the death penalty, and denied him access to a lawyer. He pled guilty and was sentenced to life in prison. After 12 years, DNA testing confirmed the guilt of the real perpetrator and exonerated Ochoa.

© Robin Dahlberg - Excerpt from interview with Christopher Ochoa.
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Excerpt from interview with Christopher Ochoa.

© Robin Dahlberg - Image from the Breaking Point photography project
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In 1981, 22-year-old Army soldier Eddie James Lowery falsely confessed to raping a 74-year-old woman after an eleven-hour interrogation in which detectives intimidated him, denied him food and water, and blocked his requests for a lawyer. Although he recanted immediately, his confession was used to convict him, and he spent nine years in prison. In 2002, DNA testing exonerated him.

© Robin Dahlberg - Excerpt from interview with Eddie James Lowery.
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Excerpt from interview with Eddie James Lowery.

© Robin Dahlberg - Image from the Breaking Point photography project
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In 1989, 14-year-old Raymond Santana falsely confessed to the rape and assault of the Central Park jogger after more than 15 hours of interrogation. Detectives yelled, threatened, and intimidated him while his grandmother—who spoke no English—was repeatedly removed from the room. He was convicted and sentenced to five to ten years in prison. Twelve years later, DNA evidence exonerated him.

© Robin Dahlberg - Excerpt from interview with Raymond Santana.
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Excerpt from interview with Raymond Santana.

© Robin Dahlberg - Screenshot of a video of an actual police interrogation.
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Screenshot of a video of an actual police interrogation.

© Robin Dahlberg - Screen shot of a video of an actual police interrogation.
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Screen shot of a video of an actual police interrogation.

© Robin Dahlberg - Excerpts from interviews with Eddie James Lowery and Raymond Santana.
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Excerpts from interviews with Eddie James Lowery and Raymond Santana.

Breaking Point by Robin Dahlberg

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