Breeze,
You write:
Quote:You certainly seem passionate in protecting Mr. Zelicoff. I bet he can fend off my vicious attacks alone, and knows where to find me. ?Such vehemence from calling a group of scientists (including Al) whiners?
No, Breeze. Such "vehemence" stems from your
very specific characterization of Dr. Zelicoff as a "whiner" concerned only with his personally being required to submit to a polygraph screening examination.
Quote:I hardly have a cavilier attitude towords [sic] the truth, but will generalize on occasion as you do. ?Our previous discussion was on your admissions to the FBI after your failed polygraph. ?You said I overstated it and you did not lie on your application. I wondered what you would have to explain in a post test if you had been completely forthcoming, and asked you to post it. You said it was private. Is that essentially correct?
Breeze, you falsely accused me of having been untruthful in my FBI application process. When asked on what basis you made that claim, you referred to my testimony before the National Academy of Sciences, smugly stating, "When you explain that event to your breathless listeners, you will see that an apology is not needed." But when I asked you where in
my testimony before the NAS I had indicated that I told anything but the truth in any aspect of my FBI application, you could not point to any such statement. (Apparently, you had never even listened to my remarks.) Instead, you demanded that I prove my innocence by posting my FBI HQ file and that I discuss my security clearance. My reply remains that "regarding security clearance matters, I have nothing to add to my remarks at the NAS meeting, and I see no compelling need to post Privacy Act information about myself to counter your completely unsubstantiated accusations against me." To date, you have provided absolutely no evidence whatsoever to support your libelous claim I was untruthful in my FBI application.
When I spoke of your "cavalier attitude toward the truth" I was referring to your demonstrated willingness to malign individuals without evidence.
Quote:In reference to Howard, my source said he was removed after failing a CIA polygraph. ?I wondered how it could be believed that he was removed from duty, relocated to Santa Fe and had FBI babysitters if not under intense scruitiny? Does the CIA have counterintelligence officers watch everyone it lets go? Why did he run to Moscow as a non spying civilian? Would you do that??
Let us both assume we do not have all the information, and apply common sense and reason. My problem with your source is that this author could not possibly know when Howard was compromised, but is stating an appearance of fact. ?I also believe the CIA may not blurt out every fact in reference to its spies, thier compromise, access or capture.
My line threatened the often repeated belief on this site that spies have not been caught by polygraph. ?As far as the NAS comment in this area, they have what they were allowed to see.
The problem with some posters here is that anything published that fits their viewpoint is continually paraded as ultimate truth! Let me give you the basic answer, I dont find your Howard source authoritative!
Your source who told you that Edward Lee Howard's CIA employment was terminated "after failing a CIA polygraph" is by all accounts correct. But this is entirely consistent with Howard having begun his espionage after, not before, failing the polygraph: the issue then was not espionage, but alcohol consumption. Again, as I mentioned in the message thread
Constricting your sphincter, with regard to the Howard case, see
Washington Post staff writer Walter Pincus's 20 July 2002 article,
"CIA Defector Howard Said to Have Died in Moscow." Concerning the timing of Howard's failed polygraph and the beginning of his espionage, Pincus writes:
Quote:Howard joined the CIA in 1981. In 1983, as a newly trained case officer, he and his wife, Mary, also a CIA officer, were prepared for an initial posting to Moscow. But Howard failed a polygraph on the eve of their departure.
Howard was fired from the agency after his case was reviewed, an investigation during which his heavy consumption of alcohol also became an issue.
Although the CIA helped him get employment with a state government agency in Santa Fe, N.M., Howard's drinking got him in trouble there. Faced with financial problems, he apparently made contact with Soviet agents in Vienna in 1984 while on vacation with his wife, and allegedly sold them secrets he had learned while preparing for the posting in Moscow.
You say that "my source" (Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Walter Pincus) "could not possibly know when Howard was compromised." Not so. Pincus also reveals how Howard's espionage was ultimately discovered: "In August 1985, armed with a tip provided by Soviet defector Vitaly Yurchenko, the FBI identified Howard as a possible CIA mole."
Again, if Pincus is correct, it appears that Howard began selling secrets
after failing his CIA polygraph, not before. You may not consider Walter Pincus to be a reliable source, but you have not provided any evidence whatsoever that Edward Lee Howard was engaged in espionage against the United States at the time of his failed CIA polygraph.
Quote:When you spoke of Zelicoff being a part of the input prior to DOE's adoption of its current screeing program, let me ask you a question: why do you suppose that groups input to Sandia management (and then to DOE/HQ) had so little weight?
It is abundantly clear that the Department of Energy made its decision to adopt polygraph screening for political reasons -- to deflect criticism of lax security at the DOE laboratories following release of the Cox Report. So long as the public at large believes in the lie detector, policymakers can create the public impression that they are "getting tough on security" by ordering more polygraphs. Which is precisely what then Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson did.
Quote:And finally, I may be confused but I re-read the post you left on the 26th and the only suggestions I can see are; you wondering if we should not accuse everyone of deception and fish for admissions. ?I thought I was asking a serious question, do you really think you gave me anything constructive?
Yes, my suggestions to you were sincere and intended to be constructive. I was not suggesting that you
should accuse everyone of deception and fish for admissions, but observing that you are likely to get more admissions this way, rather than by limiting yourself to accusing those who "fail" a completely invalid "test."
You seemed to be under the impression that your department has very few, if any, false positives because, as you note, "all DI charts (this year) were supported by confessions/explanations and then sent back out to background."
I pointed out that it is not surprising that there were confessions or explanations associated with all DI ("deception indicated") polygraph charts because polygraphers routinely ask those who "fail" what they were thinking of when answering one or more questions and hence, even where no confession is obtained, there is at least an "explanation."
I suggested a methodology by which you might better estimate the extent to which your department may be wrongly turning away truthful qualified applicants based on false positive polygraph outcomes.
Quote:I read on another thread someone commenting about your employment with the Iranian government, to which you answered that you were not employed by Iran. ?Then the question became providing services via contract. ?Have you spoken to that? ?You are getting evasive again George, like when I asked you about your clearance adjudication process, or FBI admissions. Or granting a "free pass" to other aspects of federal and local hiring that are at least as troublesome as polygraph. You can do better.
The thread to which you refer is
My FBI Poly (Used Countermeasures and Passed), where "patriot" knowingly and falsely claimed that I am currently working for the Iranian government. (I don't, and never have, neither as an employee nor as a contractor.)
As for "granting a 'free pass' to other aspects of federal and local hiring that are at least as troublesome as polygraph," AntiPolygraph.org exists for the specific purpose of exposing and ending polygraph waste, fraud, and abuse. Certainly, there are other troubling aspects of federal and local hiring, but this website exists to address the specific, unnecessary, and avoidable harm being caused by reliance on the pseudoscience of polygraphy.