Police officers are often believed to provide more reliable testimony than civilian eyewitnesses.We reviewed the available empirical evidence for this belief. There is some evidence to suggest that police officers do indeed report more accurate details about witnessed events than civilians do, particularly concerning crime-relevant details. That research finding does not translate directly to practice, however, since an average difference between police and civilian witnesses does not mean that a particular police officer in a specific case should be believed over a particular civilian eyewitness. More importantly, police officers are no better than civilians at identifying a perpetrator from a line-up and may even be more likely to make a false identification. Because eyewitness misidentifications have far more severe consequences than misreported event details, expert witnesses in court should warn decision-makers that police officers are at least as likely as the average eyewitness to falsely identify an innocent person. In a court of law, a sworn statement from a police officer about his or her own observations may carry considerable weight. Statements made by civilian eyewitnesses, on the other hand, are often viewed with more skepticism. In The Netherlands, a distinction between police officers and civilians has even been incorporated in the law: a single statement by a civilian eyewitness is not sufficient to convict, but a single statement by a police officer is. 1 Many people, including jurors and judges, believe that police officers are better eyewitnesses than civilians (e.g., Benton, Ross, Bradshaw, Thomas, & Bradshaw, 2006;Deffenbacher & Loftus, 1982;Noon & Hollin, 1987;Yarmey, 1986;Yarmey & Jones, 1983).Why would police officers perform better as eyewitnesses than civilians? We have heard various outlandish theories on this question, including one attorney's claim that police officers develop superior night vision as a result of working night shifts (Reisberg, 2016, personal communication). Of course, this is nonsense. Police officers have the same visual system as any other human being and are thus similar to other humans in many respects.Another claim is that police officers are better at identifying perpetrators because they have been specifically trained in encoding and recognizing faces. Research shows, however, that face recognition training programs are not effective (see e.g., Malpass, 1981; Malpass, Lavigueur, & Weldon, 1973;Woodhead, Baddeley, & Simmonds, 1979). Similarly, instructions that improve recall of events, such as mental context reinstatement and eye-closure, typically do not improve face recognition performance (e.g., Searcy, Bartlett, Memon, & Swanson, 2001; Smith & Vela, 1992;Vredeveldt, Tredoux, Kempen, & Nortje, 2015). In light of the fact that 1 Note that there is an important practical reason for this: many small offences, such as a parking offence or a broken bike light, would go unpunished if a single police statement were not sufficient evidence (see a...