Mr. Psychology,
You write:
Quote:Hello Fair Chance,
The proof you seek is in the physical world, not on the internet. If your County uses polygraph testing in its sex offender programs, then you have all the proof you need for research in this area. Your local probation and parole department, as well as the Therapists they use, can provide you with the list of those sex-offenders who re-offended while on probation before the institution of polygraph testing, and then the list of those sex-offenders who re-offended while on probation after the institution of polygraph testing.
The drop in recitivism is dramatic. Good luck in your research.
The kind of do-it-yourself check you suggest is a poor substitute for a systematic study of the correlation, if any, between polygraphy and recidivism.
Quote:I also know several therapists who practiced pre-polygraph Sex offender therapy and who continued to practice when polygraph testing was instituted. Interestingly enough, both of these therapists admit that the polygraph is un-scientific. But it scares the sex offenders into telling the truth and that is what counts!
Less victims is the goal of sex offender therapy and polygraph testing is helping reach that end!
While polygraph screening may offer short-term benefits, any long-term benefit depends on the procedure having some genuine validity. The National Academy of Sciences has recently completed an exhaustive study and found polygraph screening to be without validity. As more and more persons in post-conviction polygraph programs learn this, it can be expected that any deterrent value of polygraph screening will only decrease.
On the flip side, reliance on polygraphy may actually serve to help enable recidivist sex offenders, given the ready availability of countermeasure information, the genuine faith in polygraphy exhibited by too many in law enforcement, the inability of polygraphers to reliably detect countermeasures, and their unwillingness to acknowledge this weakness.
Quote:People like WorriedMom, are only helping create a future victim by enabling their deviant loved-ones in their working against what modern sex-offender therapy has to offer.
I am as against the use of the polygraph in courts and the civilian job market as any of you, but to this end I say let the polygraph do its job. If it helps prevent one child from being molested, then I say it is worth it to step on the rights of a million sex-offenders. Does anyone in their right mind differ with that opinion?
I differ with your opinion. Rights are not to be trampled upon, no matter how noble the intention. For example, one of the most egregious civil rights violations stemming from post-conviction polygraph programs is that some on probation or parole end up being sent to jail or denied the right to be with their families, simply because they "failed" a completely invalid polygraph "test." Such punitive actions may be deemed necessary to maintain the official fiction that the polygraph can detect deception, but I think there is simply no excuse for this.