Kalex wrote on Jul 27
th, 2007 at 1:36pm:
Why do you assume that the question "Have you lied to anyone in group or to your Probation Officer"
is a Control Question (probable lie) ?
It is a POORLY constructed question, but if a p/g examiner uses such a poor question he could be using it
as a Relevant Question.
I believe it to be a probable-lie control question because in post conviction sex offender "testing," the relevant questions tend to be about go-to-jail violations of the examinee's terms of probation or parole. This question is vague in nature, and lies told "in group" or to the probation officer are not necessarily material to the examinee's terms of probation or parole.
Quote:GotNo admits that he is a convicted offender. Nowhere in his post does he proclaim to be innocent or
wrongfully convicted.
Agreed.
Quote:I think that to offer any advice to sexual offenders (on how to beat any test devised to detect bestial behaviour) is deplorable, and you should rethink your position in similar situations.
What I find deplorable is governmental reliance a fraudulent procedure that is wrongly called a "test" to monitor the compliance of convicted criminals with the terms of their probation or parole. Such reliance on an inherently unreliable, scientifically baseless procedure is clear and present danger to public safety.
I
am interested in the details of any novel polygraph techniques, and thus would like to know more about the procedure used with Gotnochoice.
Quote:I hope that GotNo fails his test, goes to jail and gets it good.
I would only hope so if, in fact, Gotnochoice has violated his or her terms of probation/parole. At this point, there is no indication that such is the case.