Mr. Truth wrote on Nov 19
th, 2007 at 5:26am:
Yeah, the test is so accurate that it (the polygrapher) can conclude that 1) I was truthful about not having sex with anyone other than my wife and 2) I was being deceptive about having sex with someone under the age of 18. Given that my wife was well over 30 at the time, the stupidity of being "consequenced" for having failed that maintenance exam is beyond words. The polygraph is a fraud, it is used to suit whatever conclusions examiners wish to draw, and anyone subject to conditions where taking a polygraph is a requirement and who chooses to remain ignorant of the fraud being perpetrated on them deserves whatever else he or she gets.
React more to control questions than to relevant questions and you will pass. It is that simple.
EJohnson wrote on Nov 16
th, 2007 at 1:09am:
Perhaps your question should be addressed in the post conviction section of this board, as it seems evident that you are a sex offender in treatment and on supervision. Once more, it appears that you are at this site in order to sidestep your treatment---as a sexual history test is a treatment exam. Your presence here signifies your desire to manipulate (yet more) people who actually want to help you.
To George;
You haven't the slightest clue as to the possible consequences of your encouragement that sexual offenders manipulate treatment providers by disengaging from treatment----and providing the empiricaly proven effective treatment notions of (ATSA) "full responsibility and engagement/disclosure". Your advice puts kids and women at risk. "Say Nothing" means danger for all---including the offenders themselves. I have little doubt that the poster will tank his tests provided that he lingers around here----but his focus will continue to be self serving, manipulative, and narcissistic----the same damn behaviors/cognitions that got him in trouble to begin with.
Interesting. For those that don't know, a "Maintenance" exam is a test given to sex ofenders who are on parole or probation (living in the community) to try and ascertain the compliance of the offender with the rules of supervision--i.e. contact with children, drinking alcohol, ....you know, doing things that most people don't want sex offenders doing. One of the reasons that sex offenders are not allowed to have contact with children is that kids are so easily manipulated---and worse yet, if a child happens to sit on the lap of the wrong guy, that guy can recieve sexual pleasure---such an act is called "Frottage" (uninvited touching.) Of course there are many Offenders who secretly have contact with children---usually familial children, unbeknownst to authorities. Many Offenders are and have been married, and if they are the manipulater type, will play on the ignorances of those that believe that men who are sexually attracted to adults will not also be attracted to children. But going back to the contact with children issue---both "non-sexual and sexual contact", many Offenders regard such contact as their secret right, and such Offenders are usually of the very narcissistic variety (superbly selfish) in that they have unrealistic trust of their behavioral fortitude, despite a long history of grand thinking errors. Although not perfect by any means, polygraph is helpful in indicating Offender's who lie about such contact, as Frottage (for example) is a sexual crime that is very subtle.
Going back to this notion of righteous indignation over treatment and supervision (including being polygraphed)---such self involvement is pervasive. It (superb selfishness) is demonstrated well in the above poster's anecdotal reply, as it seems many people who would sexually molest children are quite "into" themselves, and will readily martyr themselves as desperate attempts to divert attention to their past. Once more, we see Offenders characterizing their offenses as mere accidents----flukes-----a kind of whoops, "I accidentally had oral sex with a 7 yr old boy/girl" type of tresspass. Also, we see (saw) many Offenders lying (attempting) to lie about the age of their victim to their new group, despite the documents which proved otherwise. To be fair, there are many recovering sex offenders who do the right thing, and see their cohorts as being of the highest level of manipulaters in our society. Such higher thinking recoverers understand that in order to recover, they must start anew, and disregard old thinking errors that would toll the line of attempting to defeat a threat---namely polygraph.
The original poster of this thread seeks to understand the differences in question value/ relevance of his test -----a test which is meant to try, despite test construct errors (all tests have them), to determine some risky behaviors in order to create a more robust report than what the Offender would decide to self-report---as I stated above---an oft times folly as the vast majority of sex Offenders are not known for their veracity and candor in the earlier stages of their treatment. Such is also proven true and documented in addiction therapy literature. 1904 added nothing but criticism of the questions of the polygraph examiner, not the question of the sex offender---the one who was proven (very likely) to have raped a woman or a child. The fact that he is even on the internet is a violation in nearly every state. Perhaps 1904 and others would feel differently if the Offender was on a "how to hypnotize a child" website or a "how to create a fake ID card" website. And to cap off, the above threader tells a sad tale which is ultimately either a polygraph error which probably caused some temporary supervision sanctions---given that society is repulsed at letting sex offenders free, is hardly compelling as parole/probation is one giant ever changing sanction---or the offender went to a secret birthday party he wasn't supposed to attend, got a little sexually "moved" or was flooded with physical contact by virtue of hugs/kisses---and tanked a test. We see this type of incident countless times. Either way, when it comes to kids, caution prevails and all know polygraph has weaknesses, but sex offenders have proven empirically to have greater acute dynamic risk behaviors than polygraph has errors.
I am not in love with Jeff's stated test questions, but they all seem quite relevant to me. I hope for the sake of Jeff's community he is on the straight and narrow path to recovery. Good luck Jeff and please get the F*** off the internet!