Marty, thanks for the "SOP" info. I am beginning to understand this "prop" usage better, re: doing interrogations to obtain confessions, etc. -- essentially that "anything goes" toward that end, and that in this respect the examiner was doing an excellent job. I think the general public expects it all to be more, well, "scientific" than that.
I have also viewed the link to Action Alerts (the original SDPD messages) that credit SDPD with smarts for taping this session. I agree that it is highly useful.
1. You wrote, regarding possible GKT on Westerfield:
Quote:If there is sufficient information about the crime scene that David has not been exposed to and that the perp would know then it might have some applicability even now.
FYI: Having been through all the trial evidence, Westerfield now knows things he never knew before, especially about the victim's home -- which he claims never to have visited. As to any "crime scene," no one ever determined how, when, or where the child died. Her body was found 30 miles from her home. That "crime scene" was also shown in court. So I think the GKT possibility here is moot.
2. You did not seem to answer the questions about the subject's physical and possible medical conditions; or address the suggestion (source: another published tape) that one of the parents polygraphed was "hyper to the nth degree" and "totally out in left field" but passed with flying colors nevertheless.
Does the examiner not have to asssess his subject's physical condition before doing the test, as to being overly calm or overly hyper? Don't they have to at least ask if the subject is on medication (or any other drug, such as tranquilizers)? I really would like to know more about this aspect.
3. You should be aware that, according to the convicted subject himself, SDPD was not totally happy with Westerfield's failed answers. He only failed two of the 5 "were-you-involved" type questions. He may have PASSED the whereabouts-of-the-child question.
SDPD officers came back to him suggesting they had "false negatives" and wanted him to retest. The lawyers refused. These same officers were the ones leaning on him for the "whereabouts" info, which he never provided or was not able to provide. (Source: one of the published Westerfield letters.)
4. Can it be determined from the tape which two of the 5 questions he failed?
We note that only 2 of 5 questions contained the words, "you yourself." Does anyone know if these were the two he would be most worried about and thus failed? Would these 2 be most likely to jolt the subject?
Another tape source (an SDPD interview after the polygraph-interrogation) says "those were the 2 that I wanted to get right" and goes on at length about how upset he was about failing "those 2" questions.
I am working from an unofficial transcript, not the tape itself. Can you who have the audio version of the poly tell WHICH questions he failed? Thanks.
Kayle