darkcobra2005 wrote on Aug 16
th, 2005 at 2:11am:
George,
As stated before, no one is going to accept Dr. Richardson's challenge. It would violate the APA standards, it poses no threat to Dr. Richardson, therefore no fear of being caught using counter measures or fear of being found deceptive. If there is no consequence, there is no fear, if there is no fear there is no reaction. Possibly the challenge could be refered to others in the polygraph community with there being a fear or consiquence for being deceptive and using countermeasures. The stakes would have to be high to instill the necessary fear of detection of deception and countermeasures. How would you propose to structure such a test? I personally would not participate in any such test....
Darkcobra2005,
Specifically which paragraph of the APA standards prohibits a member from accepting Dr. Richardson's challenge?
You suggest that no meaningful analog (laboratory) test of a polygrapher's ability to detect countermeasures can be constructed. I disagree with that notion. Charles Honts has conducted experiments along these lines and published his results in peer-reviewed journals. His results indicated that even experienced polygraphers could not detect countermeasures at better-than-chance levels of accuracy.
I think it is abundantly clear to the neutral observer why not even one of the 3,000+ polygraphers operating in the United States has accepted Dr. Richardson's challenge.
Quote:...I can assure you that I have observed numerous individuals using the countermeasures proposed on this site and they have admitted to using them, I don't need per review when I get admissions, I know they have used the couner measures, I confront them and they admit to the use of them.
The fact that you have accused examinees of countermeasure use and received admissions does not establish your ability to actually
detect countermeasures. (By detection I mean identification at better-than-chance levels of accuracy.)
How many of those whom you have accused of countermeasure use, and who made no admission, were in fact innocent of such? You have no way of knowing.
How many of those whose charts you scored as "no deception indicated" in fact used countermeasures to pass (whether or not they answered the relevant questions truthfully)? Again, you have no way of knowing.
Considering the absence of any research evidence whatsoever suggesting that polygraphers can reliably detect countermeasures, the fact that polygraph screening is without scientific basis, and that many law enforcement agencies, including the LAPD, have pre-employment polygraph failure rates on the order of 50%, I think many applicants will conclude that using countermeasures to avert a false positive outcome is a reasonable survival strategy.
Quote:Please do not read this as a accusation against you or your integrity or honesty. I truly believe that you have been wronged by polygraph, and I cannot fix that. I can only strive to not treat any person in the manner you or others report they have been treated by polygraph examiners.
I don't take any offense at your arguments, and hope you take none at mine, either. But please understand that the unfair treatment I have experienced as a result of polygraph screening stems from the inherent unreliability of polygraphy. I have no evidence that my FBI and LAPD polygraphers engaged in any willfull misconduct. Had you conducted my polygraph examinations, the results may very well have been the same.
If you don't want to cause others the kind of harm that I, Sergeant1107, mustbaliar, and many other truthful individuals have experienced, you need to follow the example of
FBI Special Agent Leroy Chan and get out of the business of polygraph screening.