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You don't like the fact that attorneys can hire experts to rebut prosecutor's experts? I hope to God you are not a cop.
The investigator on my case actually had the nerve to tell my wife that he has never put an innocent man in jail, only to joke later that no one is truly innocent. Har, Har.
The entire legal system is corrupt...cops and prosecutors PAY legal experts to testify, attorneys PAY other experts to testify to the opposite, and the victim and defendant sit in the middle without a clue. It all boils down to who can convince 12 otherwise un-extraordinary people that the other side is wrong.
Posted by: polyscam - Ex Member Posted on: Jul 15th, 2005 at 6:30pm
Actually, this is an example of two "experts" finding differing results based on the same offense. It is an example of the lack of continuity between two examiners. Polygraphy does nothing to give more confidence in the officers on our streets. It is no guarantee of integrity or worthiness of the badge.
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Posted by: spark Posted on: Jul 15th, 2005 at 3:30am
How is this any different than the normal everyday conflict between “expert witnesses” (both hired by the defense vs. those hired by prosecution) in an everyday criminal trial. I always found it odd that a defense attorney can hire an expert to say the “sky is green” or the “glove don’t fit.” I guess my only question is would you want a person who is sworn to protect to instead be spending his time actually casing your house while your gone, looking for an opportunity to victimize your wife or someone else’s wife because you hate polygraph? I know that example doesn’t necessarily apply to this article.. but come on people. Shall we cut off our nose to spite our face?
Posted by: Sergeant1107 Posted on: Jul 13th, 2005 at 8:38pm
Actually it appears to be even more ridiculous than that. From the article it appears that the officer only submitted to a single polygraph exam. The examiner hired by his attorney looked at the charts and said there was no deception. Another examiner, hired by the city, looked at the charts and said that there was deception.
This explanation for this example must fall into the rather lame category of ‘there are bad polygraph examiners out there.’ Which one was “bad” in this case?
Posted by: polyscam - Ex Member Posted on: Jul 13th, 2005 at 7:52pm
This police officer "passed" an examination he requested. However, he "failed" a polygraph he was compelled to undergo. Seems that there may be a little truth to the argument that the outcome depends on who pays for the examination. Lack of industry-wide integrity? Did the coin toss go both ways?