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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Philly polygraphers let one squeak through (Read 50876 times)
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #30 - Oct 26th, 2002 at 12:49am
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The_Breeze wrote on Oct 26th, 2002 at 12:05am:


Another thing we do is to go over an applicants paperwork line by line and have them re-answer all the questions, prior to polygraph.  This not only centers any areas of concern that an applicant may want to explain, but I believe it makes the test very specific to an applicant who intends to lie about a portion of thier past. I think this has saved numerous applicants who changed a "no" to a yes with an explanation.


I disagree with this.  You may go over the questions one by one and define them, but the questions are still open-ended and (undoubtably) emotionally charged.  Or do you ask, "Have you ever illegally killed someone?  Have you ever illegally taken a car? Have you ever illegally taken a computer? Did you ever defraud someone of more than $250 in Maine?" etc., etc.  (I actually have no idea at what level Maine law defines fraud as a "felony", but I hope you get what I'm driving at.)

Even these questions are somewhat vague, and moreso because of the fact that most applicants are probably not legal experts.  What if they don't realize something they've done qualifies as a specific crime or (more ludicrously) a "felony" vs. a "misdemeanor"?  You'd be surprised how few people know the legal definitions of "fraud", "stealing", "voyeurism", "theft", etc. much less at what level these crimes constitute "felonies" (that's why we have lawyers, of course).

No matter how you slice it, a pre-employment screening poly is a fishing expedition, and due to the low rates of guilt present in your applicant pool, false positives are happening -- in fact, statistics say they're happening a lot more often than your polygraph screen is finding people with real problems.

Skeptic
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #31 - Oct 26th, 2002 at 1:56am
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I find it ironic and sad that you The Breeze would comment negatively upon sloppy research. George was right, I took about 5 minutes of searching to cobble together those few cases among thousands that demonstrate that the polygraph does not help in the application process insofar as it is purported to be used. If you want to label it The Coercion Tool rather than the Lie Detector, fine with me. If a police officer candidate is naive and foolish enough to buy the hogwash the polygraher is selling as well as the integrity of the process itself, then I suppose he gets what he deserves when he is arbitrarily accused of lying just to see how he reacts or to what he confesses.

It seems to enrage you when I point these cases out... you tend to characterize it as some sort of smearing campaign or hatefult trampling upon the hallowed occupation of law enforcement, instead of simple accurate reporting of the truth. I ask no one to extrapolate anything from the cases posted EXCEPT that the polygraph was useless in weeding out these criminals from the good officers.

Either one of two things are happening when a pre-employment polygraphed officer commits crimes:

1. He led a life of crime (or drug use, or deviant sexual behavior) prior to being hired, in which case the polygraph failed to detect his lies

2. He indeed was of sterling character and the occupation somehow morphed him into a felon. If that is the case then perhaps we need to look at other issues besides the pseudo-scientific fraud of polygraphy.

I will refrain from posting other examples of police officers passing polygraphs and then going on to commit heinous acts of violence and oppression on other people as it really seems to anger you. Have a nice day
  

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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #32 - Oct 26th, 2002 at 2:03am
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Dear The Breeze,

You answered that you are doing the following items:

1. In-depth background check, last chance to change applicant information, and then a polygraph.

2.  The polygraph proceedure is videotaped.

3.  You make records of the event easily available to the applicant in cases of dispute (or just general information).

This is so far a superior method than what I went through.

Are there cases where their are no negative findings which would not need any type of polygraph to "clear" them?

 I have discussed the fact if their are negative findings or absence of fact necessary to clear application discrepancies, a specific incident polygraph option could be given to the applicant.  The applicant should have the option to say no and their application stopped without any negative comments on their personel file.  This would have to be appealable to a group who can make security decisions concerning the position needing to be filled.  Extreme legal wrangling would be avoided in a vast majority of cases.

There should be many applications which need no polygraph intervention because everything fits and falls into place.  As you stated, someone who has traveled alot might have some blank spaces.  Unless you have a specific concern during this period,  that history should not be adjudicated by only polygraph.  This adjudication process could also lead to a security breach due to over confidence in the polygraph outcome.

The polygraph is going to lose its placebo effect as information is disseminated from people like myself and reports such as the NAS.  The amount of confessions are going to drop and its utility as a method to obtain confessions will become extremely poor.  

My legal rancor statement was in reference that if an employment decision is made with only polygraph results being used, the NAS report is opening the door to lawsuits based on its conclusion that pre-screening and screening polygraphs in themselves (minus confessions and admissions) are poor indicators of security risk.

Thanks for the discussion.
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #33 - Oct 26th, 2002 at 8:13am
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Quote:

Although there clearly is bonding occurring as the result of polygraph screening, I believe you badly miss the population of where that bonding is occurring.  There is no more bonding amongst a group of employees as a result of having taken polygraph screening exams than there is amongst employees who have endured rectal digital exams in a yearly physical.  The bonding that has occurred has been amongst victims of polygraph examinations with many of these victims having been denied employment and not those who as present employees are merely sharing past memories of their hiring experience.  The good news is that those who actually share this bonding are the same who are thus motivated to create this site, contribute to it, and will ultimately be those who eliminate that which is anything but an experience to be treasured and remembered as shared trials of days gone by.



Drew,

You raise an excellent point that, I had somehow overlooked (by focusing on those within organizations that rely on polygraph screening).

I have the deepest admiration and respect for the many polygraph victims I've gotten to know in the three years that I've been publicly speaking against polygraphy and am honored to have had the opportunity to meet some of them in person. But the principled efforts of people like yourself, David Lykken, Bill Iacono, John Furedy, and Al Zelicoff, who have not personally been victimized by polygraphy, are especially heartening.
  

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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #34 - Oct 26th, 2002 at 9:17am
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The_Breeze wrote on Oct 25th, 2002 at 5:50pm:

Fair Chance
You seem like a reasonable person, so here's the problem. Your thought about background investigations solving most hidden employee issues is just not true, Im sorry to say.  Just this year our department had  applicants admit ( after failing a polygraph) to an agg. battery, felony fraud, sodomy of a child, and of course drastically different drug use histories than placed in the application for hire.  We in contrast to the federal govt, do a background first.  Many of course fail for various suitability reasons, but if an individual is from another state, or thier violations are dated, a background will just not find it in many cases.  This was a common thread in the individuals having the histories I mentioned.
So if we followed the thinking as put forth here, we would have to take our chances in putting our limited resources in a background and calling the process over.  I suggest to you that that approach would of enabled several people that should never even come close to the uniform to be armed and go to work.  I have no hope that our psychologist would of been able to do more than the background investigators.  Does anyone have any good faith suggestions for the real world scenario that I am giving here? (please dont tell me to hire new fully competent background investigators, all are retired Det's with 20+ years experience) If your wondering how many good candidates we falsely turned away, let me say now that all DI charts (this year) were supported by confessions/explanations and then sent back out to background. Someone explain to me without rancor how to prevent an unsuitable candidate from being hired if the background can not provide a legal end to the application.


 
Breeze,
 
There simply is no reliable way to prevent an ethically unsuitable candidate from being hired if the background investigation fails to turn up disqualifying information. As the National Academy of Sciences has made abundantly clear, polygraph screening is completely invalid.

Nonetheless, so long as people still believe that the polygraph can detect lies, polygraph screening can have some utility as a means of obtaining admissions that might not otherwise be made, as illustrated in the cases you cited. Considering that polygraph screening itself is without validity, and that some unknown number of deceptive persons can be expected to pass, it is likely that your agency's polygraphers would obtain even more disqualifying admissions if they were to routinely accuse all examinees of deception and to follow up with a full-blown "post-test" interrogation, regardless of how the charts are scored. However, this bluffery cannot go on indefinitely. As more and more people discover "the lie behind the lie detector" (i.e., that polygraph "testing" is a fraud), polygraph-induced admissions will inevitably dry up.

I think that your agency's use of polygraph screening only after a background investigation has been completed is commendable. Also commendable is your agency's practice of videotaping all polygraph examinations, which you mentioned in a separate post.

With regard to "good candidates being falsely turned away" you note that "all DI charts (this year) were supported by confessions/explanations and then sent back out to background." It is not surprising that there were confessions or explanations associated with all DI ("deception indicated") polygraph charts. Polygraphers routinely ask those who "fail" what they were thinking of when answering one or more questions. So, even where no confession is obtained, there is at least an "explanation."

A better way to assess the extent to which your agency may be falsely accusing the innocent and denying them employment based on polygraph chart readings is to candidly answer the following questions:

1) What percentage of applicants polygraphed "fail?"

2) What percentage of those who "fail" make no disqualifying admission(s) and are referred for further background investigation?

3) What percentage of these are ultimately hired?

4) Is passing a polygraph "test" a requirement for employment, either de jure or de facto?
  

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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #35 - Oct 26th, 2002 at 4:43pm
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Dear The Breeze,

I did not answer the last part of your last discussion.  I was offered no further option to "clear" myself of any accusations made by the examiner.

As you can see by the results of your posting, many people do read your opinions on this website.

I am doing my best to keep an open mind but the "emotional imprinting" that is created by a negative polygraph experience is quite impressive.  Why would anyone "hang-on" to such a short experience in their life?  Why would a person like myself spend significant parts of my free time at this website?  I know that what happened to me in that small room, by an inanimate machine, and abusive examiner was wrong.  I have served my country in the Armed Forces and Federal Law Enforcement for decades with great conviction without any such abuse (we know that the military and federal government like to play mind games too but I never felt it to be abusive).  I have a long history of fighting for what I believe in.  I do not believe the government that I pay taxes, fought for, and work for, should be using this method of employment screening.  If the NAS report never existed, I would still believe this.

I will use that same conviction to stop this nonsense of pre-screening.  If it was as accurate as proponents of polygraph assume, I would not have been accused and I might have believed in its validity.  My first hand experience with this "would be science" was awful.

You are doing your best at a tough job.  I do realize that no other alternatives but background checks are available.   I only know how it has affected me and I know how much it has also affected others in this website.

I look forward to your reply.
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #36 - Oct 29th, 2002 at 7:15pm
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Fair chance, others
I do not have time to direct a comment to every question since my last post so I will come back to the issue.
Assume with me for a minute that the polygraph has some value in weeding out the unsuitable (naive or not)
Since I have seen this occur with frequency, please do not tell me that I am seeing a chance event, random act or blind luck. Im going to believe my experience more than a sincere, committed person with a failed polygraph under thier belt.
Now, we remove polygraph from the employment process and rely only on the background check.  Forgive me if I generalize, but this is where the LAPD and FBI were until recently.  This approach clearly does not have great success either.
Is it better to give someone a polygraph in a preapplication setting and have a chance of eliciting disqualifying information or trust to the background check and call the process finished when nothing is unearthed?  Both approaches are filled with the potential for error. (I realize that a knowledgable or manipulative applicant will not make admissions, but we will not likely find negative background information either).  Most large depts. and agencies have already answered this question, because results have been obtained not otherwise available (with background alone)
No one needs to write and let me know that a polygraph/background approach is eliminating qualified applicants since I have allready spoken of my agencies approach relative this issue. So George, large case, I dont know what the % of applicants are that fail, I would have to research it on a slow day.  But it is small, and retests are routinely given on specific issues of concern after a DI. The specific issue re-test has been effective in resolving problem applications.
Fair chance, you have too much honorable service to dwell on this issue long. If I had failed one of my several polygraphs over the years, I might feel like you do now.  As a former fed myself who went local for personal reasons, I understand that you have been embarrased by a "total numbers" process.
I respect your drive to post here with thoughtfullness, since you lack the venom of other especially unqualified posters.  Will you be in the calendar as well??
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #37 - Oct 29th, 2002 at 7:53pm
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Breeze,

Following the issuance of the NAS polygraph study/report, the jury is no longer out on polygraph screening.  Polygraph screening is dead.  The jury is now out on organized polygraphy.  That which was previously recognized as stupid in every sector of the scientific world is now not only universally recognized as invalid but also now claims the dubious honor of having been officially declared stupid.  There may well exist a short term game of pay me now or pay me later, i.e., either the polygraph community and end users such as your department can responsibly end that which has been declared invalid or wait and be forced to do so through legislation that will likely be introduced over the next several months (I suspect the next session of Congress) and wait for the onslaught of legal claims to come.  If those two communities choose the latter course, I suggest not only polygraphers but also those making hiring decisions in human resources departments and continuing to use polygraph-screening results as a filter seek to greatly increase their professional liability insurance.  Furthermore the degree to which the polygraph community will have any credibility and the degree to which its input will be valued regarding the remaining specific issue testing will in large part rest with the degree to which polygraph screening is responsibly and in timely fashion repudiated by that community.
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #38 - Oct 29th, 2002 at 8:16pm
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The_Breeze wrote on Oct 29th, 2002 at 7:15pm:

Fair chance, others
I do not have time to direct a comment to every question since my last post so I will come back to the issue.
Assume with me for a minute that the polygraph has some value in weeding out the unsuitable (naive or not)
Since I have seen this occur with frequency, please do not tell me that I am seeing a chance event, random act or blind luck. Im going to believe my experience more than a sincere, committed person with a failed polygraph under thier belt.


Breeze,
To put it bluntly, all you're seeing is the effects of a good interrogation prop.  As George rightly observed, you can "weed out the unsuitable" with greater effectiveness if you accuse and interrogate everyone, not just those the polygraph "flags".

I am glad, though, that you don't use polygraph "results" as the deciding factor in your hiring process.

Skeptic
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #39 - Oct 30th, 2002 at 12:00am
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #40 - Oct 30th, 2002 at 12:49am
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Anonymous
Your sweeping statements and wishful thinking say to me that you are not in government service and do not understand its mysterious ways.
Polygraph screening did not, and will not die as a result of the NAS report.  If you would care to wager, lets meet back here in a year and check status. Nothing too extravagant, Im just a local deputy. You may send me a gift certificate for dinner. (Drew, start the clock)
When you officially declare something as stupid, we may be talking about two different things. What you and other like minded folk think is stupid, others such as myself see as a regrettable necessity. (until something better comes along)
I think all will agree that the polygraph has been controversial for decades, and will continue to be so regardless of what happens on these pages.
Legal claims as the result of not being accepted for employment? dont hold your breath.  Waivers are standard practice, and besides if a person feels strongly about it, they should not apply to any wrong headed organization that requires such a foolish process to occur. Each step requires a statement of "voluntary" on the applicant's part.
Your comment about the polygraph profession needing to somehow distance itself from "polygraph screeners" is a classic. I think most do both as the need arises.
An animal rights activist will try to ban lion or bear hunting before getting to the point, no hunting at all. You dont attack the center, you attack the fringe and hope the center in time collapses.
A anti gun activist will talk about assault weapons and how no one needs them, (knowing not many own them) final goal of course is that no one needs any personal weapons.  The long term strategy of this site is clear, dont insult the readership with divide and conquer platitudes.
What is the slogan for this site again?
There is no more liability attached to polygraph than already exists in backgrounds (where a staff officer must make a judgement call) or to a psychological screen.  Did you know that if you are the VICTIM of certain acts, you cannot make it past the good Dr. of psychology?  So think about this for a moment....something unspeakable happens to you as a juvenile, no fault of your own, and as a result even as a completely qualified applicant you may not realize your dream of becoming a LE officer.
Gentlemen, where is the outrage?

Skeptic
As I understand the thought here, a "prop" is a misrepresented device used by LE to hopefully persuade a naive subject to be forthcoming. When I speak of polygraph results, I do not speak of some amount of fear generating a confession, using the "prop", but rather observable reactions as described in polygraph literature which could indicate deceptiveness.  I am actually surprised sometimes when I see this, with what looks to be a squared away candidate.  Even more surprised when the drug use goes from 3 to 53.  I would like to state the obvious again, knowing the scorn it will bring.
MANY PEOPLE LIE ON JOB APPLICATIONS.
Give me some ideas to solve that problem and I will listen.
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #41 - Oct 30th, 2002 at 2:10am
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The_Breeze wrote on Oct 30th, 2002 at 12:49am:

There is no more liability attached to polygraph than already exists in backgrounds (where a staff officer must make a judgement call) or to a psychological screen.  Did you know that if you are the VICTIM of certain acts, you cannot make it past the good Dr. of psychology?  So think about this for a moment....something unspeakable happens to you as a juvenile, no fault of your own, and as a result even as a completely qualified applicant you may not realize your dream of becoming a LE officer.
Gentlemen, where is the outrage?

Skeptic
As I understand the thought here, a "prop" is a misrepresented device used by LE to hopefully persuade a naive subject to be forthcoming. When I speak of polygraph results, I do not speak of some amount of fear generating a confession, using the "prop", but rather observable reactions as described in polygraph literature which could indicate deceptiveness.  I am actually surprised sometimes when I see this, with what looks to be a squared away candidate.  Even more surprised when the drug use goes from 3 to 53.  I would like to state the obvious again, knowing the scorn it will bring.
MANY PEOPLE LIE ON JOB APPLICATIONS.
Give me some ideas to solve that problem and I will listen.


I wish I could, Breeze, if for no other reason than I'd be a good deal more well off than I am Smiley

How do you know that those deemed NDI aren't also concealing past indescretions (haven't we had this conversation)?

Also, are you privvy to all candidate results, or do you only hear about some of them?

Oh, and BTW, the psychological tests usually used in employment screening, e.g. the MMPI-2, aren't validated for such use.

Skeptic
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #42 - Oct 30th, 2002 at 3:31am
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Read and weep,

The polygraph is here to stay ladies and gentlemen.  Why are you so scared?  Now tell the truth or I'll request that you submit to a polygraph Grin
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #43 - Oct 30th, 2002 at 4:22am
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Dear The Breeze,

I guess we will agree to stay on opposite sides of the street on this one.  Can you help little "george" and Polyman 2002,and Polydonotlie create postings with better substance?  Their terse statements do not even have a little meat to chew on during a discussion.

Like yourself, I have no illusions that the polygraph will end with any discussion here.  It will only be when the utilitarian mission of the polygraph loses its kick.  I do think the tide is slowly going out.  Days, months, or years, it will slowly resolve itself.

Unlike myself, there are many people who are part of the "numbers game" who have been affected by polygraph who do not enjoy my curent job and position. They truly do suffer and I think the country suffers when we do not get the best and the brightest.  The FBI has computer systems that cannot get memos from one office to another.  The Federal Law Enforcement Agencies truly need the best that we can get.  I would hate to see the best not be considered based on polygraph pre-screening.  I think you should write to them with your system.  I absolutely know that it is better than what they have now and any improvement is better then none.

You know that I do not agree with you on polygraph pre-screening, but I will agree that as a minimum, the background check should be done and the polygraph itself should be videotaped.  I will pay you six dollars out of nine but I will argue about the rest of the bill.

You keep throwing carcasses on the table and we will keep picking at them.

Regards.
  
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Re: Philly polygraphers let one squeak through
Reply #44 - Oct 30th, 2002 at 5:01pm
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Breeze,

That which the NAS panel has concluded is a danger to national security and a blunt instrument not to be trusted is most assuredly dead.  The viability of polygraph screening is no longer an issue; the only guesswork surrounds the burial date.  With regard to the jury being out on organized polygraphy regarding its handling of the aforementioned burial, it is not the pro or anti-polygraph communities (or their goals, desires, strategies, etc) that I refer to but the American public.  Perhaps you did not notice, but every major wire service, every major paper, newscast in America carried reports, op-ed pieces, etc regarding the NAS panel's report.  This is no longer a secret to the American public, and the death sentence to polygraph screening is no secret to your community.  One proponent (Dan Sosnowski) tests the public opinion waters and is badly embarrassed; the rest of your leaders are cowering in the shadows hoping to buy time, but they can dream on.  I would expect to see first changes in the screening program of the NAS panel's host, DOE.  I predict this will be followed by greater changes and likely abandonment with a new Congress.  This will spread amongst the federal polygraph community then to state and local municipalities eventually reaching you.  I do know something about the intransigence and inertia in government and therefore don't pretend to know the exact timing of when polygraph screening goes from dead to seriously dead.  To borrow loosely from a more precise form of human behavior this is no longer a matter of thermodynamics (end products) but of kinetics (rate of getting there).
  
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