I received notification a few days ago regarding a failed polygraph from CPB too. My experience is very similar to many of yours. I'm a Veteran in my early 30's, I've held a TS/SCI since 2007, I have 10 years of HUMINT experience, I currently serve in a reserve component, and I previously worked as a Police Officer. The military no longer uses a polygraph as part of the TS/SCI process, probably because there is no reason to do so. I was administered a polygraph test during pre-employment screening when I was a police officer and passed that test with no issues. I have never been comfortable with the polygraph process. I am familiar with the test due to my HUMINT and law enforcement backgrounds. I feel like I’m being treated like a terrorist or criminal when if I’m being given the test. I was given the test by a polygrapher in west Texas named Keith Kyle. I was immediately uncomfortable talking to him. He is an older, white male, with a bald head, and serial killer blue eyes. To do not feel at ease when people like him try to act buddy-buddy with me, I do not know him, he is not my friend, and is not there to help me; he is there to earn a nice day of GS-14 pay which he will get no matter how my day goes. I do not appreciate when people run approaches on me. His personal stories he told to try to relate to me to try to illicit information were not believable, and I was in interested in hearing them. Many of his questions he asked before hooking me up to the machine were not appropriate, and caused a lot of anxiety during test. None of these involved anything that would make me unsuitable. He asked if I had been raped or sexually assaulted. I have been on two occasions, but I said no because both were situations that were “grey areas” and I did not want to discuss this with the creepy looking middle, aged male polygrapher. It’s not the age or gender, it’s the polygrapher part, it’s not his job to try to get female applicants to discuss being victims of sexual assault. These awkward questions caused me to think about the incident sporadically throughout the test. He also discussed my family life, my parents disowned me about 10 years ago, which was hurtful, and not something I should have got questioned about in depth since this is not his job. He also had no place digging when I said I don’t have children, my e-quip says I don’t have children, he does not need to dig on why, I’m unmarried and over 30, that ship has sailed and it’s not by choice. I was upset prior to being hooked up due to being forced to discuss irrelevant personal and relationship issues. During the actual test, I was truthful and not hiding anything. I had trouble sitting still for a few reasons; I use mentholated foot powder due to athlete’s foot so my feet were tingling, the padded office chair forced me to sit in an unnatural leaning back position, and the polygrapher used a large blood pressure cuff on my forearm causing lot of discomfort. The large blood pressure cuff was probably not meant for my forearm, I am fairly petit and it is meant for the upper arm of someone larger. My hand and wrist were tomato red and swollen the whole time, and the next day my whole forearm was covered in small bruises. I found that due to the discomfort of the devices my body would not allow me to breath in a natural rhythm when I was hooked up. This is a fairly common response to pain or discomfort. He continuously harped on me to breathe normally during the test, but I couldn’t, telling someone to breath naturally seems like an oxymoron. Later in the test he decided use “silent answers,” this concerned me because I worried that he could not tell how I was answering the questions. The process took almost 8 hours, which was the worst 8 hours I’ve experienced in a very long time. The polygrapher determined that I had committed some sort of serious crime and was lying about it. I have never committed any serious crime and could not recall any non-serious crimes I had committed either. During the test I answered honestly, but found myself scraping my mind for any occurrence that would relate to the scenario I was asked about. I’m the type of person who when asked the control question “are the lights on” I looked up to see if there were one or two bulbs illuminated since lights was plural in the question. He also accused me of “using something to help myself with the test, but it didn’t work.” I assume he was referring to countermeasures, I was not familiar with any prior to the test, I did not research any because I did not think I needed to since I have not issues with the poly in the past. I was very anxious leading up to the test because CBP was really my “plan C.” It is not an ideal position for me, but I did not pass the FBI’s PT test and have to wait at least a year to retake it, and I passed up the hiring process for my local police department since I was going through the FBI’s process. I’m not sure if I should even retake the FBI PT test and continue with that process since it will also include a polygraph. I’m looking into going back to school since my criminology B.A. is worthless if I can’t pass polygraphs. Is there anything I can do about this?
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