I can understand how you feel as it seems that in Texas, they've bunched several things all together under one heading as sex offences and the due precesses of law revolving around it leave much to be desired. All I can say is no matter what they throw at you, keep your cool. You know who you are and that you really are not guilty even though you had to plead guilty to something that you didin't do. It is a screwed up system in Texas and most lawyers don't want to mess with such cases simply because they already know that it is a lost cause. My advice to you is to either learn to recognize the "control questions" and employ countermeasures or simply do as I did. Just relax breathe deeply and evenly and normally (whatever is normal for you), hear the questions but DO NOT think about them. Since you'll already know the answers beforehand, just hear them and keep firmly in your mind an image that is relaxing and tranquil like laying on the beach or something. Hear the questions but do not think about them and it will keep the graph even an consistent all the way across giving the polygrapher nothing to compare to and will thus render your results "inconclusive". The point is, wether you pass or fail, their minds are already made up and since the damn things aren't really admissable in court anyway, if the results are "inconclusive" this is even moreso. The point is, they are only used to to trip a person up and get a false confession and depending on how far their minds are made up about your having violated probation in one way or another, as long as your results are inconclusive at best, which I've found is the more preferable outcome, they really can't do anything to you. BUT wether yo pass or fail, most of the time their minds are made up anyway and they just want to use the pseudo-science of polygraphy to confirm their own lies since, if any of them were at the recieving end of polygraphy and if they were asked questions as to their abusiveness in the dealing with their clients (probationers), none of them would ever pass simply because their mindset is already ripe for failure by virtue of their "beilef" in the falsehood of polygraphy in the first place. It all works on the principles of instilling fear when the reality of probation is as long as you fulfill your obligations in terms of probation, pay your fees each month and send them certified with a return receipt, and have no arrests or trouble with the law other than a traffic ticket, then at the end of your probation or rather near the end, make sure that all your fees are paid in advance and when the file goes before the judge for review, most of the time they will NOT extend your probation because fo the costs involved when they have more serious things to deal with. This may not seem the the case when yo have P.O. from hell that does nothing but threatens you based on the meanderings of polygraphy. Do not be fooled. Tell these people what they want to hear and lay your fears to rest because that is what it all feeds upon anyway. As long as you exhibit fear, they will assume guilt when the focus is really upon, yes, you pleaded guilty fo something you did not do but for the duration of the probation you are just going to have to pretend that you did do it and keep these people happy. Remember they have their own agenda, most of it geared towards stroking their own egos at the misfortune of others and they get off on doling out misery, all the while claiming that they are just doing a job that they were sanctioned by the court to do. Just don't fall for the fear instillation tactics. As long as you adhere to the terms of your probation, at the end of it, they WON'T extend it, despite all the fear and bullshit they will have thrown at you for the duration of. Keep cool, play the part, and render the poly results inconclusive a time or two and by then they will have realized that polygraphy isn't going to give them the results they want either. Just remember, it all depends on YOU and your handling of the disgusting tactics of trickery that they will throw at you and as long as you do not exhibit fear, coupled with inconclusive poly results, by the end of your probation, the court will not extend it. Good luck in your endeavors.
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