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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Should I tell the truth? (Read 15005 times)
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #15 - Dec 29th, 2010 at 3:24pm
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I agree with WannaBeCopper.  I had sex with prostitutes before but there is no way I'm telling the polygraphers, or ANYONE about it.  Nobody knows, it was in the past, and I don't want it on my permanent file.  This is something I'll take to the grave.  I also fudged the number of times I smoked pot because I did it on several occasions by myself and nobody knows about it.  So I just confess the number of times I did it with friends.  Am I a liar, sure, fine.  But I want the job and my past life is of no business to the nosey polygraphers.  Besides, I don't smoke pot or sleep with hookers anymore and I've put it out of my mind.  In fact, I'm at the point where I have convinced myself that I never slept with these women-of-the-night so when I lie about it I feel I am telling the truth.   

WannaBeCopper is right, if nobody knows about it and it can not be traced, then don't mention it.  There is a fine line between honesty and personal privacy and the government always crosses that line.
  
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #16 - Dec 29th, 2010 at 5:11pm
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Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 12:06am:
This site is a discussion forum on various topics, including polygraphy


And here I was thinking this site was simply devoted to the abolition of all polygraph.
  

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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #17 - Dec 29th, 2010 at 6:18pm
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pailryder wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 5:11pm:
Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 12:06am:
This site is a discussion forum on various topics, including polygraphy


And here I was thinking this site was simply devoted to the abolition of all polygraph.

Well the discussion forum side of it looks to be more of a discussion actually, which is what I was referring to.
  

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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #18 - Dec 29th, 2010 at 7:52pm
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I agree with WannaBeCopper.  I had sex with prostitutes before but there is no way I'm telling the polygraphers, or ANYONE about it.  Nobody knows, it was in the past, and I don't want it on my permanent file.  This is something I'll take to the grave.  I also fudged the number of times I smoked pot because I did it on several occasions by myself and nobody knows about it.  So I just confess the number of times I did it with friends.  Am I a liar, sure, fine.  But I want the job and my past life is of no business to the nosey polygraphers.  Besides, I don't smoke pot or sleep with hookers anymore and I've put it out of my mind.  In fact, I'm at the point where I have convinced myself that I never slept with these women-of-the-night so when I lie about it I feel I am telling the truth.  

WannaBeCopper is right, if nobody knows about it and it can not be traced, then don't mention it.  There is a fine line between honesty and personal privacy and the government always crosses that line.


This is what I'm saying. By admitting this and putting it on my file it just makes me look like an unreliable person. Even now, ppl see me as negative (on this website) because I am admitting to this mistake. I'm know just Wannabecoppper, but you see me as "wannabecopper that sleeps with prostitutes" and that status is not true. And that event in my life could be exaggerated by a polygrapher. I did it once and rather not be judged by it.

It's out of my mind as well and was YEARS ago. I learned from it and no one needs to know. It won't make the streets any safer.
  
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #19 - Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm
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I agree with WannaBeCopper.  I had sex with prostitutes before but there is no way I'm telling the polygraphers, or ANYONE about it.  Nobody knows, it was in the past, and I don't want it on my permanent file.  This is something I'll take to the grave.  I also fudged the number of times I smoked pot because I did it on several occasions by myself and nobody knows about it.  So I just confess the number of times I did it with friends.  Am I a liar, sure, fine.  But I want the job and my past life is of no business to the nosey polygraphers.  Besides, I don't smoke pot or sleep with hookers anymore and I've put it out of my mind.  In fact, I'm at the point where I have convinced myself that I never slept with these women-of-the-night so when I lie about it I feel I am telling the truth.  

WannaBeCopper is right, if nobody knows about it and it can not be traced, then don't mention it.  There is a fine line between honesty and personal privacy and the government always crosses that line.

First of all everything can be traced, including your posts, and someone will always know about it somewhere.

WannaBeCopper deleted his previous post (which was soon replaced by secretive1’s), which simply re-iterated his intention to cover up criminal activities from his very recent past, which he refers to as his “personal life”.

secretive1, you have not only admitted to several criminal acts, for which you are clearly not owning up to, nor taking responsibility for; instead you are choosing to cover up, excuse, rationalize, shift blame for, and deny your criminal past.

I’m wondering whether secretive1 is one and the same as WannaBeCopper.  I think this is a most likely and probably hypothesis.  In fact I think you both are one and the same.  I can only imagine what else will be uncovered during your polygraph session; that is, if you even get that far in the process.

Let me tell you some quick facts about your situation:      
(1) You have publicly admitted to criminal acts
(2) Worse yet, you are insisting about not only covering up your extensive criminal past, but also planning in detail about how to deceive your potential future employer
(3) You will not pass the security portion of your application, nor will you pass the psychological component
(4) You are not at all a good fit for law-enforcement, so you should do the right thing and call your recruiter and own up to your past indiscretions before it is too late for you to undo the damage you have already done.  Perhaps then you may be able to save and rehabilitate what’s left of your soul.
 
You may think you are all smart and know-it-all on the internet, but trust me when I tell you this, your interviewers will have a field day with you, and you will become the talk of the water-cooler if you insist on continuing in this direction of mendacity.  The only person you will really fool in the end is yourself, and your upcoming rejection will be all of your own doing.  Do the right thing now and put an end to this nonsense before it gets out of your control.
« Last Edit: Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:39pm by Glavlit »  

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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #20 - Dec 29th, 2010 at 11:01pm
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Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm:

First of all everything can be traced, including your posts, and someone will always know about it somewhere.

True, but who would bother? We all know that all internet activity can be traced, even if you use an anonymous proxy.  But seriously, the only way the feds will come busting down your door is if you engage in criminal activity online (making threats, terrorist plots, or having a website like Wikileaks).  We are just a bunch of people ranting and raving about the polygraph, no criminal activity here, so no law enforcement is going to care to try to track each of us down.  There are millions of websites out there with discussions like this and worse.  The feds may read this site, but that's about it. 

Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm:

WannaBeCopper deleted his previous post (which was soon replaced by secretive1’s), which simply re-iterated his intention to cover up criminal activities from his very recent past, which he refers to as his “personal life”.
secretive1, you have not only admitted to several criminal acts, for which you are clearly not owning up to, nor taking responsibility for; instead you are choosing to cover up, excuse, rationalize, shift blame for, and deny your criminal past.

Exactly.  So?  This is synonymous with our justice system at work.  So I did the deed, but what should my punishment be?  First the polygraphers have to prove guilt, which can only come from a coercive confession. There is a reason polygraph charts are inadmissible in court, they are unreliable.  If I am guilty, polygraphers argue I should get a harsh sentence (i.e. no job offer), while my defense argues an insanity defense and I deserve a slap on the wrist (i.e. I get the job).  

Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm:

I’m wondering whether secretive1 is one and the same as WannaBeCopper.  I think this is a most likely and probably hypothesis.  In fact I think you both are one and the same.  I can only imagine what else will be uncovered during your polygraph session; that is, if you even get that far in the process.

I can assure you that I am NOT WannaBeCopper.  If you don't believe me, then oh well.

Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm:

Let me tell you some quick facts about your situation:      
(1) You have publicly admitted to criminal acts
(2) Worse yet, you are insisting about not only covering up your extensive criminal past, but also planning in detail about how to deceive your potential future employer
(3) You will not pass the security portion of your application, nor will you pass the psychological component
(4) You are not at all a good fit for law-enforcement, so you should do the right thing and call your recruiter and own up to your past indiscretions before it is too late for you to undo the damage you have already done.  Perhaps then you may be able to save and rehabilitate what’s left of your soul.
 
You may think you are all smart and know-it-all on the internet, but trust me when I tell you this, your interviewers will have a field day with you, and you will become the talk of the water-cooler if you insist on continuing in this direction of mendacity.  The only person you will really fool in the end is yourself, and your upcoming rejection will be all of your own doing.  Do the right thing now and put an end to this nonsense before it gets out of your control.

Ok, so actually I took a lifestyle polygraph with a government agency and PASSED, but turned down the offer for a higher-paying job in the private sector that didn't require me to report my personal international travel and every little private incident in my life.  On my polygraph, sexual deviance activity was not asked.  I was given a pre-polygraph screening, where they decided what areas to focus on for my poly.  My lifestyle poly questions were on crime and misuse of computers.  The counterintelligence portion was the usual foreign contacts and such.  Yes prostution and drug use is a crime, but they were more concerned with if I had robbed or killed someone.  That was it, they never honed in on sexual activity at all.  They did ask me if I looked at "explicit images" after the polygraph during the post-test/interrogation, to which I happily answered YES, I do look at porn!  Only normal straight porn at home and nothing illegal.  I wasn't ashamed and it is no big deal as they know everyone has looked at internet porn.  In my pysch evaluation I was asked during a series of questions if I ever used a prostitute and I answered NO and made a disgusting face, lol.  The shrink seemed convinced and we continued with the questioning.  That was the only time I was asked about prostitution.  And admitting to a less serious activity when grilled by polygraphers is a great strategy!  I admitted to pot use a few times (leaving out a few other times when I was alone) and they were content.  I admitted to speeding tickets and downloading music and it was no big deal, plus I had already disclosed this information to them previously.

Not everything can be traced despite Glavlit said.  If you were never arrested or caught in any way, then there is nothing in your police file and you are clean.  During a background check they will NOT go through your ATM transactions for the past several years and ask why you withdrew hundreds of dollars at 1am, lol.  They will NOT go through your phone records and ask you to verify every phone call you made.  All they do is ask your neighbors and friends about you.  So if your neighbors and friends don't know about what you did, they never smelled pot coming from your home, they never witnessed unusual traffic coming to and from your home, they didn't see you bring in numerous women into your home like some pimp (if you were smart, you went to the hooker's hotel and didn't bring her to your home), then you are fine.  

I'm willing to bet my life and a million dollars that your job will not find out about these things unless you tell them.  You don't deserve to be blackballed from your dream job for life because of a few past mistakes.  Forget about them and pretend they didn't happen.
DON'T CONFESS! DON'T CONFESS! DON'T CONFESS!
  
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #21 - Dec 30th, 2010 at 6:36am
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For your info, Glavit, we are different people. I'm with secretive1. From what I've learned here. Admissions is a bad idea.
  
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #22 - Dec 30th, 2010 at 2:35pm
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WannaBeCopper wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 7:52pm:
This is what I'm saying. By admitting this and putting it on my file it just makes me look like an unreliable person. Even now, ppl see me as negative (on this website) because I am admitting to this mistake. I'm know just Wannabecoppper, but you see me as "wannabecopper that sleeps with prostitutes" and that status is not true. And that event in my life could be exaggerated by a polygrapher. I did it once and rather not be judged by it.

It's out of my mind as well and was YEARS ago. I learned from it and no one needs to know. It won't make the streets any safer.


I am a police officer and I conduct background checks on police applicant.  The fact that you paid for sex at one point in your life means virtually nothing to me.  If it had happened yesterday, or if it had happened daily for the past twenty years, it would likely mean a bit more.  Since it was a rare occurrence and it happened long ago it would not adversely affect your application.

What would most definitely have a negative effect was if you lied about paying for sex.  Everyone, without exception, has made mistakes in their lives.  Responsible people admit their mistakes with candor, while irresponsible and immature people admit to what they think they will be caught lying about.

If you become a police officer someday would you prefer to work with honest cops, or with cops who only tell the truth when they think they will be caught in a lie?

  

Lorsque vous utilisez un argumentum ad hominem, tout le monde sait que vous êtes intellectuellement faillite.
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #23 - Dec 30th, 2010 at 7:10pm
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Sergeant1107 wrote on Dec 30th, 2010 at 2:35pm:
WannaBeCopper wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 7:52pm:
This is what I'm saying. By admitting this and putting it on my file it just makes me look like an unreliable person. Even now, ppl see me as negative (on this website) because I am admitting to this mistake. I'm know just Wannabecoppper, but you see me as "wannabecopper that sleeps with prostitutes" and that status is not true. And that event in my life could be exaggerated by a polygrapher. I did it once and rather not be judged by it.

It's out of my mind as well and was YEARS ago. I learned from it and no one needs to know. It won't make the streets any safer.


I am a police officer and I conduct background checks on police applicant.  The fact that you paid for sex at one point in your life means virtually nothing to me.  If it had happened yesterday, or if it had happened daily for the past twenty years, it would likely mean a bit more.  Since it was a rare occurrence and it happened long ago it would not adversely affect your application.

What would most definitely have a negative effect was if you lied about paying for sex.  Everyone, without exception, has made mistakes in their lives.  Responsible people admit their mistakes with candor, while irresponsible and immature people admit to what they think they will be caught lying about.

If you become a police officer someday would you prefer to work with honest cops, or with cops who only tell the truth when they think they will be caught in a lie?



I'm not scared about being caught. I won't be caught. I understand the process now. But you do make a good point. my question to you is - is it not possible that this event could be exaggerated? George states that this happens often in his book because polygraphers want to serve their own industry.

If someone tells you they''ve smoked pot 5 times you guess it somewhere around 20? and so fourth?

Couldn't this happen to me? the main problem I have with this is that I see it as an invasion of privacy. 

« Last Edit: Dec 30th, 2010 at 7:40pm by WannaBeCopper »  
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #24 - Dec 31st, 2010 at 1:48am
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WannaBeCopper wrote on Dec 30th, 2010 at 7:10pm:
I'm not scared about being caught. I won't be caught. I understand the process now. But you do make a good point. my question to you is - is it not possible that this event could be exaggerated? George states that this happens often in his book because polygraphers want to serve their own industry.

If someone tells you they''ve smoked pot 5 times you guess it somewhere around 20? and so fourth?

Couldn't this happen to me? the main problem I have with this is that I see it as an invasion of privacy. 



I don’t know to which “event” you are referring.

It is not an invasion of privacy if you are asked questions about criminal activity in your past on a job application to become a police officer.  There are volumes of laws regarding what questions employers can ask and what they can’t ask; this does not fall under the excluded questions.

However, if your personal philosophy is that no one needs to know anything about your past, for any reason, because it has no effect on who you are today, then you should feel confident in sharing that philosophy with the agencies at which you are applying.

It is disingenuous at best to lie about your past and claim you are doing so because you feel the questions shouldn’t be asked in the first place.  An honest person in the same circumstance would refuse to answer the questions rather than lie, and an honest and responsible person would be willing to accept whatever consequences came as a result of their decision.
  

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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #25 - Dec 31st, 2010 at 3:27am
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Sergeant1107 wrote on Dec 31st, 2010 at 1:48am:
WannaBeCopper wrote on Dec 30th, 2010 at 7:10pm:
I'm not scared about being caught. I won't be caught. I understand the process now. But you do make a good point. my question to you is - is it not possible that this event could be exaggerated? George states that this happens often in his book because polygraphers want to serve their own industry.

If someone tells you they''ve smoked pot 5 times you guess it somewhere around 20? and so fourth?

Couldn't this happen to me? the main problem I have with this is that I see it as an invasion of privacy. 



I don’t know to which “event” you are referring.

It is not an invasion of privacy if you are asked questions about criminal activity in your past on a job application to become a police officer.  There are volumes of laws regarding what questions employers can ask and what they can’t ask; this does not fall under the excluded questions.

However, if your personal philosophy is that no one needs to know anything about your past, for any reason, because it has no effect on who you are today, then you should feel confident in sharing that philosophy with the agencies at which you are applying.

It is disingenuous at best to lie about your past and claim you are doing so because you feel the questions shouldn’t be asked in the first place.  An honest person in the same circumstance would refuse to answer the questions rather than lie, and an honest and responsible person would be willing to accept whatever consequences came as a result of their decision.


You didn't answer my question. 

the event is that I say the truth and give them an admission.
  
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #26 - Dec 31st, 2010 at 4:01pm
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WannaBeCopper wrote on Dec 31st, 2010 at 3:27am:
You didn't answer my question.   

the event is that I say the truth and give them an admission.


If the event to which you are referring is your admission to smoking marijuana five times, and you are asking if, after you make that admission and I “guess” you are lying, what would happen, the answer is that I would ask you to think about it and answer truthfully.   

I am not a polygraph operator; I am a detective who is sometimes assigned to do background checks on police applicants.  If I am interviewing an applicant and I get the sense they are lying, I will ask them, sometimes several times, to answer the questions truthfully.  I will explain to them that everyone makes mistakes, and that mistakes won’t necessarily keep you from becoming a cop, but lying will.  Once a cop’s credibility is gone they can’t testify in court any more, and if they can’t testify they can’t work the road or do investigations.  If they can’t do those things they pretty much can’t be cops any more.

Generally speaking, a cop is going to be able to tell when you are lying.  Sometimes he won’t be able to tell what you are lying about, but he will get a sense as to whether you are being truthful or deceptive.  If I am doing a background and I get the sense someone is lying to me, and they ignore my requests to answer the questions truthfully, I will start digging deeper.  Usually it is not all that hard to find corroborating evidence in the person’s past; this evidence is not often good enough for probable cause, but sufficient to drop that person’s application in the shredder.

I also generally tell the applicants that state law requires them to pass a polygraph in order to get into the police academy.  Without getting into my reservations about the polygraph, I tell them that if the polygraph operator believes they are lying their application will go into the shredder.   

  

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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #27 - Dec 31st, 2010 at 7:15pm
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Sergeant1107 wrote on Dec 31st, 2010 at 4:01pm:
WannaBeCopper wrote on Dec 31st, 2010 at 3:27am:
You didn't answer my question.  

the event is that I say the truth and give them an admission.


If the event to which you are referring is your admission to smoking marijuana five times, and you are asking if, after you make that admission and I “guess” you are lying, what would happen, the answer is that I would ask you to think about it and answer truthfully.  

I am not a polygraph operator; I am a detective who is sometimes assigned to do background checks on police applicants.  If I am interviewing an applicant and I get the sense they are lying, I will ask them, sometimes several times, to answer the questions truthfully.  I will explain to them that everyone makes mistakes, and that mistakes won’t necessarily keep you from becoming a cop, but lying will.  Once a cop’s credibility is gone they can’t testify in court any more, and if they can’t testify they can’t work the road or do investigations.  If they can’t do those things they pretty much can’t be cops any more.

Generally speaking, a cop is going to be able to tell when you are lying.  Sometimes he won’t be able to tell what you are lying about, but he will get a sense as to whether you are being truthful or deceptive.  If I am doing a background and I get the sense someone is lying to me, and they ignore my requests to answer the questions truthfully, I will start digging deeper.  Usually it is not all that hard to find corroborating evidence in the person’s past; this evidence is not often good enough for probable cause, but sufficient to drop that person’s application in the shredder.

I also generally tell the applicants that state law requires them to pass a polygraph in order to get into the police academy.  Without getting into my reservations about the polygraph, I tell them that if the polygraph operator believes they are lying their application will go into the shredder.  



I see. You've convinced me to be candid about my background. I'll tell the truth and let the chips fall where they may.
  
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #28 - Dec 31st, 2010 at 9:05pm
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Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm:

First of all everything can be traced, including your posts, and someone will always know about it somewhere.

True, but who would bother? We all know that all internet activity can be traced, even if you use an anonymous proxy.  But seriously, the only way the feds will come busting down your door is if you engage in criminal activity online (making threats, terrorist plots, or having a website like Wikileaks).  We are just a bunch of people ranting and raving about the polygraph, no criminal activity here, so no law enforcement is going to care to try to track each of us down.  There are millions of websites out there with discussions like this and worse.  The feds may read this site, but that's about it. 

Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm:

WannaBeCopper deleted his previous post (which was soon replaced by secretive1’s), which simply re-iterated his intention to cover up criminal activities from his very recent past, which he refers to as his “personal life”.
secretive1, you have not only admitted to several criminal acts, for which you are clearly not owning up to, nor taking responsibility for; instead you are choosing to cover up, excuse, rationalize, shift blame for, and deny your criminal past.

Exactly.  So?  This is synonymous with our justice system at work.  So I did the deed, but what should my punishment be?  First the polygraphers have to prove guilt, which can only come from a coercive confession. There is a reason polygraph charts are inadmissible in court, they are unreliable.  If I am guilty, polygraphers argue I should get a harsh sentence (i.e. no job offer), while my defense argues an insanity defense and I deserve a slap on the wrist (i.e. I get the job).  

Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm:

I’m wondering whether secretive1 is one and the same as WannaBeCopper.  I think this is a most likely and probably hypothesis.  In fact I think you both are one and the same.  I can only imagine what else will be uncovered during your polygraph session; that is, if you even get that far in the process.

I can assure you that I am NOT WannaBeCopper.  If you don't believe me, then oh well.

Glavlit wrote on Dec 29th, 2010 at 8:21pm:

Let me tell you some quick facts about your situation:      
(1) You have publicly admitted to criminal acts
(2) Worse yet, you are insisting about not only covering up your extensive criminal past, but also planning in detail about how to deceive your potential future employer
(3) You will not pass the security portion of your application, nor will you pass the psychological component
(4) You are not at all a good fit for law-enforcement, so you should do the right thing and call your recruiter and own up to your past indiscretions before it is too late for you to undo the damage you have already done.  Perhaps then you may be able to save and rehabilitate what’s left of your soul.
 
You may think you are all smart and know-it-all on the internet, but trust me when I tell you this, your interviewers will have a field day with you, and you will become the talk of the water-cooler if you insist on continuing in this direction of mendacity.  The only person you will really fool in the end is yourself, and your upcoming rejection will be all of your own doing.  Do the right thing now and put an end to this nonsense before it gets out of your control.

Ok, so actually I took a lifestyle polygraph with a government agency and PASSED, but turned down the offer for a higher-paying job in the private sector that didn't require me to report my personal international travel and every little private incident in my life.  On my polygraph, sexual deviance activity was not asked.  I was given a pre-polygraph screening, where they decided what areas to focus on for my poly.  My lifestyle poly questions were on crime and misuse of computers.  The counterintelligence portion was the usual foreign contacts and such.  Yes prostution and drug use is a crime, but they were more concerned with if I had robbed or killed someone.  That was it, they never honed in on sexual activity at all.  They did ask me if I looked at "explicit images" after the polygraph during the post-test/interrogation, to which I happily answered YES, I do look at porn!  Only normal straight porn at home and nothing illegal.  I wasn't ashamed and it is no big deal as they know everyone has looked at internet porn.  In my pysch evaluation I was asked during a series of questions if I ever used a prostitute and I answered NO and made a disgusting face, lol.  The shrink seemed convinced and we continued with the questioning.  That was the only time I was asked about prostitution.  And admitting to a less serious activity when grilled by polygraphers is a great strategy!  I admitted to pot use a few times (leaving out a few other times when I was alone) and they were content.  I admitted to speeding tickets and downloading music and it was no big deal, plus I had already disclosed this information to them previously.

Not everything can be traced despite Glavlit said.  If you were never arrested or caught in any way, then there is nothing in your police file and you are clean.  During a background check they will NOT go through your ATM transactions for the past several years and ask why you withdrew hundreds of dollars at 1am, lol.  They will NOT go through your phone records and ask you to verify every phone call you made.  All they do is ask your neighbors and friends about you.  So if your neighbors and friends don't know about what you did, they never smelled pot coming from your home, they never witnessed unusual traffic coming to and from your home, they didn't see you bring in numerous women into your home like some pimp (if you were smart, you went to the hooker's hotel and didn't bring her to your home), then you are fine.  

I'm willing to bet my life and a million dollars that your job will not find out about these things unless you tell them.  You don't deserve to be blackballed from your dream job for life because of a few past mistakes.  Forget about them and pretend they didn't happen.
DON'T CONFESS! DON'T CONFESS! DON'T CONFESS!

Technically you did admit to most of your indiscretions up front, so you weren’t really covering anything else up that was major.

That is rather odd that they would ask you after the test if you looked at "explicit images".  What is even stranger is that they did not ask you about illegal sexual activity before or during the polygraph.  It must not have been law enforcement screening, or the interviewer did not do a very good job.  Sounds like you didn’t go through a thorough background investigation either, if all they did was just talk to a few neighbours and friends.

The psych evaluation sounds even more strange, if you were asked about prostitution, but not drug use.

In the end you ended up not taking the job, which again just goes to show that it wasn’t meant to happen for you; whether for one reason or another.
  

Ignorance is foolish.
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Re: Should I tell the truth?
Reply #29 - Dec 31st, 2010 at 9:09pm
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WannaBeCopper wrote on Dec 31st, 2010 at 7:15pm:
Sergeant1107 wrote on Dec 31st, 2010 at 4:01pm:
WannaBeCopper wrote on Dec 31st, 2010 at 3:27am:
You didn't answer my question.  

the event is that I say the truth and give them an admission.


If the event to which you are referring is your admission to smoking marijuana five times, and you are asking if, after you make that admission and I “guess” you are lying, what would happen, the answer is that I would ask you to think about it and answer truthfully.  

I am not a polygraph operator; I am a detective who is sometimes assigned to do background checks on police applicants.  If I am interviewing an applicant and I get the sense they are lying, I will ask them, sometimes several times, to answer the questions truthfully.  I will explain to them that everyone makes mistakes, and that mistakes won’t necessarily keep you from becoming a cop, but lying will.  Once a cop’s credibility is gone they can’t testify in court any more, and if they can’t testify they can’t work the road or do investigations.  If they can’t do those things they pretty much can’t be cops any more.

Generally speaking, a cop is going to be able to tell when you are lying.  Sometimes he won’t be able to tell what you are lying about, but he will get a sense as to whether you are being truthful or deceptive.  If I am doing a background and I get the sense someone is lying to me, and they ignore my requests to answer the questions truthfully, I will start digging deeper.  Usually it is not all that hard to find corroborating evidence in the person’s past; this evidence is not often good enough for probable cause, but sufficient to drop that person’s application in the shredder.

I also generally tell the applicants that state law requires them to pass a polygraph in order to get into the police academy.  Without getting into my reservations about the polygraph, I tell them that if the polygraph operator believes they are lying their application will go into the shredder.  



I see. You've convinced me to be candid about my background. I'll tell the truth and let the chips fall where they may.

As a wise sage once said:
“There may be problems with the polygraph, but anyone who would try to lie has no business working for government agencies based on integrity.”

It all comes down to trust in the end; if they don’t feel that they can trust you, or feel that you are not reliable; then they will most likely shred your application; no hard evidence or explanation required.
  

Ignorance is foolish.
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