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Polygraph and CVSA Forums >> Polygraph Policy >> FBI File of William Moulton Marston
https://antipolygraph.org/cgi-bin/forums/YaBB.pl?num=1162308313 Message started by George W. Maschke on Oct 31st, 2006 at 6:25pm |
Title: FBI File of William Moulton Marston Post by George W. Maschke on Oct 31st, 2006 at 6:25pm
A contributor who prefers to remain anonymous has provided AntiPolygraph.org with the FBI file of lie detector inventor William Moulton Marston, who under the pen name Charles Moulton also created the comic book character Wonder Woman, whose magical Lasso of Truth causes those trapped in its coils to reveal all. The file, released under the Freedom of Information Act, may be downloaded as a 736 kb PDF file here:
https://antipolygraph.org/documents/marston-fbi-file.pdf The FBI opened its file on Marston in March 1938, with acknowledgment of receipt of an advance copy of Marston's book, The Lie Detector Test, "which copy was sent to [FBI Director J. Edgar] Hoover for review." E.P. Coffey, who headed the FBI's Technical Laboratory, trashes the book in a review dated 11 May 1938. According to James Allan Matte (Forensic Psychophysiology Using the Polygraph, p. 29), "Special Agent Coffey was the first FBI polygraphist...and probably the first examiner in the Federal Government." Regarding Marston's book Coffey writes: Quote:
Yet Marston's claims are little more egotistical and ridiculous than those commonly made by polygraph operators to this very day. Also of interest is a "personal and confidential" memorandum dated 13 July 1939 from John S. Bugas, the Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Detroit office to Director Hoover. Bugas reports that Marston misrepresented the results of an experiment using the lie detector that was supposed to show that Gillette razor blades were superior to those of competitors. It didn't. Nonetheless, Marston appeared in a 1938 advertisement (5.2 mb PDF) claiming, "My study enables me to state flatly that Gillette Blades are far superior in every respect to competitive blades tested": Quote:
A hand-written note on the letter reads, "I always thought this fellow Marston was a phoney & this proves it." In addition, a memorandum dated 30 October 1940 summarizing the Bureau's response to a Congressional inquiry regarding a newspaper article reporting that Marston was going to establish a "truth bureau" includes the handwritten note: "He is a crackpot." On 12 December 1941, five days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor marked America's entry into the Second World War, Marston sent a letter to the president of the United States, along with his book, The Lie Detector Test, volunteering his services to the nation. His letter was referred to the Justice Department, which on 5 January 1942 sent him a polite letter giving him the brush-off. How ironic that the FBI, which viewed the creator of the lie detector as a crackpot and a phony, today relies heavily his pseudoscientific creation to guide investigations as well as to screen applicants and employees. |
Title: Re: FBI File of William Moulton Marston Post by George W. Maschke on Nov 1st, 2006 at 12:28pm
It's also worth noting that just the day before E.P Coffey of the FBI Technical Laboratory wrote his scathing report on Marston's book, The Lie Detector Test, Nazi spy suspect Dr. Theodor Ignatz Griebl, an officer in the U.S. Army Reserve, was able to escape to Germany abord the S.S. Bremen because the FBI, relying on the result of a lie detector test that Griebl had passed, had relaxed its surveillance of him.
Leon Turrou mentions in the above-linked chapter that the polygraph testing of Griebl and six other Nazi spy suspects was conducted "by two F.B.I. experts from Washington." Coffey may well have been one of them. |
Title: Re: FBI File of William Moulton Marston Post by George W. Maschke on Mar 20th, 2007 at 6:42pm
Of related interest, though not in his FBI file, the following appeared on page 7 of the New York Times on 17 March 1923:
Quote:
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Title: More on the Arrest of William Moulton Marston Post by George W. Maschke on Mar 21st, 2007 at 3:45pm
Additional detail is provided in the article, "Will Give Hearing to Alleged Mail Defrauder," the Bridgeport Telegram, Wednesday, 7 March 1923, p. 13:
Quote:
News of Marston's arrest was also published in the Frederick, Maryland Post in a pictorial section on 7 May 1923: |
Title: Re: FBI File of William Moulton Marston Post by George W. Maschke on Jul 21st, 2018 at 7:38am
As I'll be in the Boston area soon, I was thinking of using the opportunity to research Boston court records to find out what ever became of the fraud charges filed against lie detector creator William Moulton Marston. While doing preliminary research online, I discovered that historian Jill Lepore has already solved this mystery.
Lepore researched, among other things, William M. Marston's indictment and arrest for her article, "On Evidence: Proving Frye as a Matter of Law, Science, and History," Yale Law Journal, 124, pp. 1092-1158. In relevant part, Lepore writes (footnotes omitted): Quote:
The relevant court documents are on file with the National Archives in Boston. |
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