Quote:More Trimarco 'points to ponder':
1- His 'business address' listed on his web site, 9454 Wilshire, 6th Floor : another example of spin. Visit there, see what offices are there. Tell us about your 'space use when needed', Jack.
I don't find anything blameworthy in this. On the contrary, it seems like a cost-effective business choice.
Quote:2- His 'fax number' listed on his web site: it is really his home number, answered by his wife who then can then [sic] hang up and switch it to fax for you.
Again, I find no fault in this.
Quote:3- While at the FBI, actually did only a relatively small amount of examinations per month.
4- While in private practice, actually does an even relatively smaller amount of examinations per month.
In his most recent appearance on the
Dr. Phil Show, Jack Trimarco stated that he has been administering polygraph examinations since 1990 and that he has conducted 2,700 of them, which yields an average of a bit more than 13 per month distributed over the past 17 years (2,700 exams / (17 years * 12 months/year) = 13.235 exams/month). This seems to me an appreciable number, when one considers weekends, holidays, vacation, sick leave, etc.
In any event, there is no evidence demonstrating a correlation between the accuracy of a polygraph examiner's decisions and the number of examinations conducted. Indeed, there is no evidence that a seasoned veteran with thousands of examinations under his belt produces any more accurate results than does a brand new polygraph school graduate.
Quote:5- Why did he have the (embarrassing for the polygraph industry) 'inconclusive' result on the recent 'Dr Phil Show' when testing a pedophile? Because he is using a 30-year-old analog instrument, instead of a modern computerized instrument like most private & government agency examiners have upgraded to over the past 15 years. 'Inconclusives' are almost unheard of in this decade, with use of modern instruments and highly-accurate scoring software choices. Jack's only been in private practice for a few years, and with only a light exam-load, so perhaps he will upgrade when business gets better.
As I mentioned in the thread on the Dr. Phil episode that aired on 4 April 2007, Jack Trimarco did not state that the result was "inconclusive." Rather, he stated that the charts were "unreadable." And there is no evidence that computerized polygraph instruments provide any more accurate results than do analog instruments. The underlying problem is that CQT polygraphy has
no scientific basis. Computerization is no more the solution to the inherent shortcomings of polygraphy than it is to those associated with astrological chart reading.
Nonetheless, as
alluded to by Dr. Richardson, there is something else about the cardio tracing shown on the
Dr. Phil show that may be ground for considerable embarrassment.
Note also that if you saw the entire
Dr. Phil episode, you would know that there was not a shred of corroborable evidence that the examinee, Steven Junior, was a pedophile. It seems clear that Jack Trimarco, while unwilling to "stick his neck out," in fact did not believe he was guilty, and following the polygraph segment, Dr. Phil McGraw went on to strongly state his belief that Steven Junior was innocent. I shudder to think that Dr. Phil (or anyone viewing the show) might have reached a different conclusion had only Jack Trimarco opined, based on polygraph chart readings, that Steven Junior was deceptive.
Quote:6- We have reviewed many Trimarco polygraph reports over the past few years. He does an exam, writes a report, sends it right out. Oh oh- there is a common denominator on each report: they all say that the charts were reviewed by fellow examiner (name omitted) who agreed with Jack's NDI or DI scoring call, on every report. Ummmmm, Jack, that examiner (listed on your website) is hundreds of miles away from you, and you don't use a computerized instrument that lets you send chart copies by e-mail. Do you have fax records showing sending hundreds of feet of chart paper to him by fax, matching each report date, or does he happen to be in Los Angeles every time you test someone?! This is being reviewed as possible fraud now on at least one of your past exams, and is likely to expand to many past exams.
Are you saying that the chart review by the fellow examiner hundreds of miles away is stated by Trimarco to have been conducted on the same day as the examination?
Quote:7- In an industry that has many superb examiners charging $400 to $700 for excellent exams using modern equipment, explain (we would like to ignore the rumors) why someone would pay $1900 for the same service?! Straight up: What percentage of clients who have paid you $1900 did NOT get the scoring results that helped them?? And why would they pay you $1900 for an exam, then pay you an extra $5000 more PER DAY to come to court to discuss that exam?! (Jack- the rumors can be lies, so feel free to answer this).
I can think of a less sinister reason why someone might pay Jack Trimarco more than the going rate for a polygraph examination: name recognition. Jack Trimarco is arguably the most prominent polygraph examiner in practice today through his numerous television and radio appearances, including his hosting of Court TV's game show,
Fake Out.