Brettski:
Quote:The interagator knew that he needed a confession to make a case against the kid. So he asked Jeffrey to take a little polygraph test, but the report makes a direct point that this test was arranged for the "sole purpose of obtaining a confession." The examiner graded Jeffrey as inconclusive, so the investigator decided to make a little white lie, and tell Jeffrey that he had failed.
Tell how you know these intimate details. This seems like self-serving embellishment.
Quote:We all understand that a girl died in this tragedy; I don't need a patronizing reminder.
Yes you do. Her name was Angela Correa. She was 15 years old. She had a family that missed her. She was rapped and strangled and beaten and killed.
This young man's name is Jeffrey Deskovic. He is now known to be a victim or casualty of a faulty investigation and faulty legal proceedings.
Unless you think them inherently evil, the investigators and courts were attempting to solve a murder.
Quote:There's nothing shameful about trying to prevent it from happening again.
No problem there.
Quote:I believe the polygraph caused an innocent person to be convicted by playing a direct and prominent role in inducing a false confession.
Beliefs are fine, but they are just beliefs. Its not the polygraph test that got the false confession. Its the interrogation that followed.
If that interrogation was as flawed as has been presented, its quite possible the investigator would have pursued that matter with or without the polygraph.
Please honor the fact that these are people's lives, and stop with the self-serving embellishment. Its not at all compassionate or humane.