polyfool wrote on Mar 16
th, 2005 at 6:19pm:
Randy,
If that's what's helping you sleep at night, I think you've got a real false sense of security. I hate to be the one to break it to you, but from my experience, the FBI's pre-employment polygraph testing procedures are not designed to catch murderers. The subject was never broached once during both my polys--I was never even asked had I ever committed crimes for which I had not been caught. I had nothing to hide, but if I had been a murderer, the FBI would not have caught me in their poly screening process. The arguement you make is not sound and quite ridiculous. You would do yourself a favor to further educate yourself on a process you seem to know very little about. Randy, try not to lose too much sleep.
Again, with respect to my post I never specifically said that I sleep better at night because the FBI catches murderers through their polygraph.
I sleep better at night because the FBI has chosen to use the polygraph to catch those one or two people who confess to activity, through the interrogations contained within the polygraph process, which make them unsuitable for FBI employment.
Murdering people was just an example. It could be anything else really. Drug use, prostitution, or the like. Really any activity which the FBI did not know about pre-polygraph, which had they known, would either cause them to deny the person's employment or cause them to deny the employment based on the person's lack of candor during the paperwork phase.
I apologize for causing so much confusion through my post. Again, murder was just an example. Any knowledge of disqualifying activity gained through the polygrapher's interrogations is a more general thought which I was trying to convey through the use of a the murderer example
And don't worry, I won't be losing any sleep as long as the FBI keeps using polygraphs, and those pesky interrogations
Randy