polyfool wrote on Nov 15
th, 2005 at 4:52am:
Revolver,
I'll answer your question, but first, I have to put my two cents in about your situation, though you may not want to hear it.
I welcome any advice or suggestions, regardless if I favor it or not.
polyfool wrote on Nov 15
th, 2005 at 4:52am:
You should really think about waiting the required ten years and applying to be a LEO then. You're only 2-4 years from that now. May seem like a long time, but really it's not.
I have, and due to my situation, I feel that I cannot lose 2-4 years. I am in my twenties, and feel that I may be passed over at any time if I do reveal my charge due to there being more qualified applicants without any record.
polyfool wrote on Nov 15
th, 2005 at 4:52am:
If you waited, then applied, you could move forward with a clean conscience without having to look over your shoulder. If you're caught lying, you won't be able to overcome it. Anyway, the decision is yours.
I will use the existance of this website as justification for my reasoning. Completely honest applicants have been betrayed by this test due to being uninformed or disinformed about the procedure. I believe I can beat this machine, due in no small part to the book published by the owner of this site.
I may be less qualified now and remain less qualified for the rest of my life. It's better to lie now and find out my destiny, instead of being disappointed 2-4 years from now.
polyfool wrote on Nov 15
th, 2005 at 4:52am:
If your test goes as badly as mine did, the longest part of the exam will end up being the post test interrogation. I can tell you from experience-you want no part of that. My denials were truthful, I couldn't imagine being subjected to all that had I been lying. There's no way I could have held out--something you might want to think about.
I am not concerned with interrogation tactics or barrage questioning. Please understand my reasons for being vague, but I have been through (and passed/enjoyed) a resistance training course given by the DoD. It is, in my humble opinion, an impossibility for someone to gain a confession from me on a subject that I know cannot be proven.
This is the reason I am researching my past. I should have my fingerprint check back in 6-8 weeks. If it comes back clear, I will no longer actively post until I pass the polygraph test. I just don't feel guilty about what I've done in the past, since I do not feel that it delegates me to being a second-teir LEO applicant.
I'm still going to buy lottery tickets, with the hope to avoid this issue altogether.
Thanks for the post.