RT Article T1 Taking the stand: defendant statements in court cases of alleged sexual abuse against infants, toddlers and preschoolers JF Psychology, crime & law VO 24 IS 7 SP 744 OP 759 A1 Magnusson, Mikaela A1 Granhag, Pär Anders 1964- A1 Ernberg, Emelie A1 Landström, Sara LA English YR 2018 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1736221345 AB Investigating and adjudicating allegations of child sexual abuse are challenging tasks. In the present study, we examined defendant statements concerning charges of sexual abuse against young children in Swedish district court cases (87 defendants, 140 child complainants, tried between January 2010 to December 2015). A main objective was to test predictive factors for admissions of guilt using inferential statistical analyses. Furthermore, using qualitative thematical analysis, we sought to identify common patterns in the defendants’ explanations to the allegation. Approximately one-third of the defendants (31%) pleaded guilty during trial. Admissions of guilt were more likely if the defendant was young, if the child was young at the onset of abuse, if the child and perpetrator had an extrafamilial relationship, and if the defendant possessed child pornography. A conflict with the person who made the report (e.g. a custody dispute), a testimony from the child, a direct eyewitness, or an informal disclosure recipient were significantly more common in cases of denials. In the qualitative analysis, a range of alternative explanations behind the abuse allegations were identified. Legal professionals and investigators may benefit from considering these alternative hypotheses during their investigative and judicial work. K1 Admission of guilt K1 Child Sexual Abuse K1 Confession K1 Courtroom K1 Legal decision-making DO 10.1080/1068316X.2018.1424845