Monthly archives: October, 2001

“Big Lies”

The Los Angeles Daily News discusses the city’s recent polygraph contract in this editorial. Excerpt: City Hall’s budget woes get worse every day. This year’s projected deficit has nearly doubled in just a week. Maybe that’s because City Hall pays twice the going rate for its services and contracts. Take lie-detectors — and frankly it …

Terror Suspect Allegedly Deceptive on Polygraph

Brooke A. Masters of the Washington Post reports in an article titled, “Man Named in Note in Hijacker’s Car Is Indicted.” Excerpt: An Alexandria security guard whose name and phone number were found in the car left behind by the hijackers who attacked the Pentagon was indicted yesterday by a federal grand jury on 12 …

DoD Seeks Lie Detector for Counterterrorist Screening

The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics (USD (AT&L)) and Combating Terrorism Technology Support Office, Technical Support Working Group (TSWG) are soliciting proposals for a lie detection technology for screening travelers. The following is an excerpt from a TSWG Broad Agency Announcement dated 23 October 2001 (BAA#02-Q-4655): R-111 Ports of Entry Passenger …

“7 Football Players Don’t Pass Polygraph Test”

Brad Burke of the Peoria Journal reports. Excerpt: DUNLAP – Seven Dunlap High School football players on Sunday did not pass polygraph tests they hoped would salvage their seasons by proving they complied with the school’s athletic policy. Three other students – one boy’s soccer player and two football players, according to a source involved …

“Decoding Minds, Foiling Adversaries”

Sharon Berry reports in the October issue of SIGNAL magazine on a new technology which which Dr. John D. Norseen of Lockeed Martin Aeronautics Co. says may be able to determine if a person is lying. Excerpt: Whether a threat comes from pilot error or enemy aggression, scientists are finding that multisensor mapping and analysis …

“Parents Negotiate Lie-Detector Terms”

Brad Burke of the Peoria Journal Star reports. Excerpt: DUNLAP – Several intangibles will play key roles in determining whether 10 Dunlap High School student-athletes pass school-mandated lie-detector tests planned for next week, a longtime polygrapher said Friday. Harry Reed, president of the Illinois Polygraph Society and a Chicago-based polygrapher for the Illinois State Police, …

“Athletes to Take Polygraph”

Brad Burke of the Peoria Journal Star reports on the controversy surrounding Dunlap, Illinois school superintendent William Collier’s demand that athletes accused of attending a party where alcoholic beverages were served submit to polygraphic interrogation. Excerpt: DUNLAP – The postseason fate of Dunlap High School’s football team will be decided on the field tonight, but …

“Players to Take Tests”

The Associated Press reports on the case of Dunlap, Illinois high school athletes pressured to submit to polygraph “testing.” Excerpt: DUNLAP, Ill. (AP) – Ten football players are fighting accusations from Dunlap High officials that they violated the school’s athletic code by attending a party where alcohol was served. The student-athletes, most of them varsity …