This board has been fun, but a full time job and graduate studies are taking its toll and I'm afraid I won't have much time from now on to come out and play with everyone.
So, I will try to answer as much as I can in what is probably my last post for a while.
Drew, you know as well as I do that there is no way for a guilty person, or deceptive person, whatever you want to call them, to diminish responses to relevant questions. In a screening R/I examination there are no comparison questions, so there is nothing to be manipulated. Know all you want about the polygraph, you can't change your sympathetic responses to questions to which you are lying. Since you can't change your deceptive responses, the only hope in a probably lie comparison question test is to manipulate the comparison questions. Countermeasures are very detectable, so this is not really a problem.
If what you are saying is true, one would expect a change in the past 10 years in an increase in examinees passing the examination. It hasn't happened. I pulled the stats from my agency and in 1994, 92.2% of applicants making it to the polygraph, passed their examinations (not all were hired of course, due to other factors, such as admissions and other negatives in their background). That is, 92.2% were found NDI (as it was called back then). In 2004, 95.1% were found to have No Significant Responses. I think you will agree that a 2.9% increase is statistically insignificant, especially when you consider the next set of stats.
What has changed is the percentage of inconclusives. In 1994, 4.6% of examinees were inconclusive. In 2004 it was .25%. This is due to the practice of not automatically disqualifying applicants due to an inconclusive or SR screening examination without collaborative information. We now do follow-up examinations in these cases.
What else do these stats show? Most applicants pass the polygraph and that the current trend with researching the polygraph has little or no affect on the results.
I could give you additional stats on countermeasures detected in 1994 compared to 2004, but you wouldn't believe them anyway, so I'm not going to waste my time. Its the old saying, "Don't try to argue with a conspiracy theorist, it only proves you're part of the conspiracy" LOL.
As far as the information about the FBI abuses, I can't post specifics here as it would violate applicant confidentiality, but I certainly believe it. Two applicants have reported the same experience, from different examiners, at different periods of time in the same year. The two did not know each other. Yes, I filed a complaint and hope it will be investigated, not only by the feds, but also the APA (I don't hold out much hope with the APA).
Brandon,
The easy way out! I wish. 6 years of college so far. 3 exams a day, 5 days per week. I do it because I know it works. I have convicted the guilty, exonerated the innocent and kept the undesirable away from the badge. And believe it or not, exonerating the innocent is what police examiners do most. 75% of examinees (this is not official, but what most examiners I talk to report) pass a criminal police polygraph. If you listen to most on this board, you would think we are just out to screw people, but it couldn't be farther from the truth. Private examiners report just the opposite. 75% of criminal examinations are DI. Why? Because defense attorneys tell their suspected guilty clients to take it from a private examiner. If they fail, it is privileged information. If we are the ones out to screw the innocent, why are ours 75% NDI? Makes no sense.
I don't know for sure if I had not been hurt if I would have become a polygrapher. It was something I was always interested in, but I had so many other duties and responsibilities that I loved, that I probably wouldn't have put in for it.
Jeffery,
I have taken 4 polygraph exams in my life (not including the practice ones during polygraph school) and passed all. I just told the truth. No, I have never used countermeasures. Never needed to and know that doing so and getting caught would be the end of a career.
Well its been fun, but I have work to do. Maybe I will see some of you in my chair one of these days.