Normal Topic I was caught by the polygraph (Read 2626 times)
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box PROAc
New User
*
Offline



Posts: 22
Joined: Apr 18th, 2002
I was caught by the polygraph
Apr 19th, 2002 at 1:16am
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
Recently, I took a polygraph test by a national intelligence agency (guess which of the three). It was two days. On the first day, I passed 4 questions out of the five. The examiner (who was professional) told me I lied in the criminal category. I never use drugs, never had an alcohol problem, no financial problems, no criminal records all my life. The second day I had to explain. But where in the USCA and CFR is the penalties if you have a secret or TS clearance and broke the laws???
The reason is that I was proactive at the defense contractor where I work. It was easy to do something that was illegal. However, I failed to realized that showing a security weakness to the "security experts" will get me fired. DSS (Defense Security Service) should have something like a A Centralized Security Violation Reporting Program mentioned at http://www.usdoj.gov/05publications/websterreport.html

Spies like Ames, Pollard, and Hanssen were able to do because all security personnel are reactive. It is the clerks and support staff who are proactive but afraid to tell the "experts".  CI agents should be promoted on how proactive they are, not being reactive. They should "inflitraded" and act like a Red Cell team.
I read most of the sites on antipolygraph.org  You guys want to beat the polygraph. I don't. But I am being punished for being proactive, thus I was denied a TS clearance. I'm neither anti nor pro. Just a loyal American. I'm on the security appeal list - long
  
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
Paste Member Name in Quick Reply Box beech trees
God Member
*****
Offline



Posts: 593
Joined: Jun 22nd, 2001
Gender: Male
Re: I was caught by the polygraph
Reply #1 - Apr 19th, 2002 at 2:01pm
Mark & QuoteQuote Print Post  
Could I ask you to explain what you mean exactly by the words 'proactive' and 'reactive' in the context of your post? Why would being one or the other have any bearing on a polygraph interrogation? Just curious,

BT

  

"It is the duty of the patriot to protect his country from its government." ~ Thomas Paine
Back to top
 
IP Logged
 
I was caught by the polygraph

Please type the characters that appear in the image. The characters must be typed in the same order, and they are case-sensitive.
Open Preview Preview

You can resize the textbox by dragging the right or bottom border.
Insert Hyperlink Insert FTP Link Insert Image Insert E-mail Insert Media Insert Table Insert Table Row Insert Table Column Insert Horizontal Rule Insert Teletype Insert Code Insert Quote Edited Superscript Subscript Insert List /me - my name Insert Marquee Insert Timestamp No Parse
Bold Italicized Underline Insert Strikethrough Highlight
                       
Change Text Color
Insert Preformatted Text Left Align Centered Right Align
resize_wb
resize_hb







Max 200000 characters. Remaining characters:
Text size: pt
More Smilies
View All Smilies
Collapse additional features Collapse/Expand additional features Smiley Wink Cheesy Grin Angry Sad Shocked Cool Huh Roll Eyes Tongue Embarrassed Lips Sealed Undecided Kiss Cry
Attachments More Attachments Allowed file types: txt doc docx ics psd pdf bmp jpe jpg jpeg gif png swf zip rar tar gz 7z odt ods mp3 mp4 wav avi mov 3gp html maff pgp gpg
Maximum Attachment size: 500000 KB
Attachment 1:
X