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Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Aug 22nd, 2020 at 10:38am
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Just a week after the arrest of accused Chinese spy Alexander Yuk Ching Ma in Honolulu, a former U.S. Army Special Forces officer and INSCOM and DIA contractor, Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins, has been arrested on a charge of spying for Russia. As explained on the blog, it appears that Debbins, too, beat the polygraph:

https://antipolygraph.org/blog/2020/08/22/accused-russian-spy-peter-rafael-dzibi...
« Last Edit: Apr 17th, 2021 at 5:49pm by George W. Maschke »  

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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #1 - Aug 26th, 2020 at 4:15pm
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It is very common to use fake "spies" using fake documents to make the other side think they are getting real information. That is all part of the game. When caught, these "spies" are given fake trials to convince the other side they got good information. After the fake trial, nobody ever knows or bothers to find out where the fake spy really is. Probably enjoying his retirement.
  
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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #2 - Aug 26th, 2020 at 4:39pm
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Quote:
It is very common to use fake "spies" using fake documents to make the other side think they are getting real information. That is all part of the game. When caught, these "spies" are given fake trials to convince the other side they got good information. After the fake trial, nobody ever knows or bothers to find out where the fake spy really is. Probably enjoying his retirement.


Examples?
  

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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #3 - Aug 27th, 2020 at 6:33am
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This story from 7 years ago was complete facade.  CIA officer's are not that stupid to get caught red-handed like Ryan Fogle did.  Ryan Fogle, if that was his real name, was not a CIA officer.  He was just a decoy, or bait, to create a diversion from the real spying that was going on.

https://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/15/world/europe/russia-detains-american-saying-h...

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-usa-detention/russia-says-cia-agent-ca...
  
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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #4 - Aug 27th, 2020 at 2:28pm
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No intelligence agency would be so stupid as to reveal to their target how they fooled them, for how long and in what ways. Spying, counter-spying, information and disinformation has only one purpose: to always have the upper hand if war should ever happen so to beat the enemy.
  
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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #5 - Aug 28th, 2020 at 8:25am
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Court filings in a detention hearing for accused spy Peter Debbins provide considerable new detail on the crimes with which he has been charged. It appears that the government's primary (and perhaps only) source of information was Debbins himself. He evidently disclosed his contacts with Russian intelligence to the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) in July 2019.

In a letter to the office of U.S. Senator Mike Rounds (R-SD), Debbins wrote:

Quote:
My DIA clearance was suspended when I self-reported an incident back in July. DIA referred it to the FBI for investigation (standard protocol). I am in regular contact with the FBI investigator. He told me that their investigation should have no impact on how DIA determines my clearance. However, DIA doesn't want to proceed to make a determination, saying that they won't proceed until the FBI finalizes their investigation. To which the FBI investigator replies that their investigation should have no impact on DIA's process (he also said that they are pretty well done with my case).

Being in this status is preventing me from providing my expertise even at an unclassified level. I have a contracting job offer for an HHS (Health and Human Services) position that only requires a "Public Trust" (which doesn't involve any classified information), but can't even get that, while having a suspension on my records.

I am currently residing in the Washington DC area, so I can come to the Congressional Offices in DC.

Peter Debbins


On 11 July 2019, Debbins wrote out by hand and signed what amounts to a confession to all the Espionage Act violations enumerated in the criminal complaint.

In addition, it appears that Debbins' work at Fort Meade, Maryland from January 2011 to March 2014 was not with the National Security Agency (NSA), but rather with the 902nd Military Intelligence Group, an Army counterintelligence unit that is also headquartered at Fort Meade.

In a resume, Debbins wrote:

Quote:

01/2011-03/2014

Senior Russian Cyber Analyst, 902nd Military Intelligence Group
MISSION ESSENTIAL PERSONNEL, Fort Meade, Maryland

Mr. Debbins provided direct analytical support to CI (counter-intelligence) cyberspace operations to include consultation and advice on linguistic, technical, and cultural issues impacting mission execution. He utilized Boolean searches, HOTR, M-3, ISM, JWICS, open source and classified databases to identify and assess cyberspace threats. His key accomplishments were:
  • Presenting recommendations for courses of action which were adopted by the Department of Justice (DOJ).
  • Establishing an SOP (Standard Operating Procedure) for training incoming linguists on collection protocol, report writing and presentation.
  • Formulating solutions for agency and branch directors for Eurasian issues.
  • Supporting decision making and special projects on intelligence integration issues to include the preparation, production, and coordination of written products and briefings for senior IC members, policy makers, military decisions [sic] makers, members of Congress, and other major stakeholders on intelligence integration efforts.
  • Authoring 14 reports with "A" community evaluations resulting in the formation of community working groups to address the report issues.
  • Representing his company in an online public relations and business services marketing.



No doubt, Debbins would have been required to pass a polygraph for this contractor position with the 902nd MI Group.

Note that in 2014, AntiPolygraph.org published documentation of a so-called "confirmed polygraph countermeasure case" involving the 902nd MI Group. That case did not support the polygraph community's claimed ability to detect sophisticated countermeasures.
« Last Edit: Aug 28th, 2020 at 8:27pm by George W. Maschke »  

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Peter Debbins Pleads Guilty to Espionage, Reportedly Confessed After Failing Polygraph
Reply #6 - Nov 19th, 2020 at 3:59pm
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Peter Debbins has pled guilty to espionage and is scheduled to be sentenced on 26 February 2021. Debbins plea agreement is available here and a statement of facts to which he agreed is available here.

In reporting on Debbins' guilty plea, New York Times reporter Adam Goldman writes, among other things:

Quote:
Mr. Debbins, who held top security clearances, failed a polygraph, people familiar with the case said. That prompted the sensitive investigation and ultimately a criminal charge accusing him of violating the espionage statute.


Rachel Weiner of the Washington Post also reported on Debbins' guilty plea and noted, among other things:

Quote:
According to court records, during a security-clearance renewal last year, Debbins failed a polygraph test and subsequently confessed that he had been in contact with Russian intelligence for 15 years.


I didn't see any mention of Debbins having failed a polygraph in the court records, and in reply to an inquiry, Weiner clarified, "You are right. I should have said “According to prosecutors and in court records; the prosecutors have said it but I don’t think it’s actually in the public record. I imagine it will be by sentencing. I know he did in fact fail the polygraph in 2019; he spoke to friends about it."
  

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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #7 - Nov 20th, 2020 at 1:33am
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George W. Maschke wrote on Nov 19th, 2020 at 3:59pm:


Quote:
Mr. Debbins, who held top security clearances, failed a polygraph, people familiar with the case said. That prompted the sensitive investigation and ultimately a criminal charge accusing him of violating the espionage statute.


Quote:
According to court records, during a security-clearance renewal last year, Debbins failed a polygraph test and subsequently confessed that he had been in contact with Russian intelligence for 15 years.


I didn't see any mention of Debbins having failed a polygraph in the court records, and in reply to an inquiry, Weiner clarified, "You are right. I should have said “According to prosecutors and in court records; the prosecutors have said it but I don’t think it’s actually in the public record. I imagine it will be by sentencing. I know he did in fact fail the polygraph in 2019; he spoke to friends about it."


George,

You and others on this board have stated many times that the polygraph has never caught a spy.  

In this 2015 blog post, you stated "the DIA polygraph screening program has never caught a spy. " 

In this 2018 forum post, you stated, "It's [the polygraph] a pseudoscientific fraud that never caught a spy."

In a 2013 forum post, even Doug Williams bragged that "there has never been even one spy ever caught by the polygraph!"

Would this case of Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins be the first case, on record, of a spy being caught by the polygraph?  We should note, of course, that he ultimately made a confession to spying which was the nail in the coffin for him.
  
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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #8 - Nov 20th, 2020 at 7:12am
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troll of truth,

The U.S. government has never publicly claimed that polygraph screening has caught a spy.

Retired CIA polygraph operator John F. Sullivan has plausibly claimed that it was a polygraph screening session that led to the identification of CIA clerical employee Sharon Marie Scranage as a spy for Ghana. See Chapter 9 of Gatekeeper: Memoirs of a CIA Polygraph Examiner, Potomac Books, 2007. The CIA, however, has not publicly endorsed this claim, and it is possible that other factors were involved in Scranage's identification as a spy.

After the arrest of CIA spy Harold Nicholson, the FBI publicly suggested that it was the polygraph that tipped them off to his espionage. But in fact, it was a Russian intelligence officer spying for the United States, Alexander Zaporozhsky, whose assistance led to Nicholson's arrest. See investigative reporter Bryan Denson's book, The Spy's Son: The True Story of the Highest-Ranking CIA Officer Ever Convicted of Espionage and the Son He Trained to Spy for Russia,  Scribe Publications, 2015. The public suggestion that it was the polygraph that caught Nicholson was a likely subterfuge to misdirect Russian counterintelligence away from Zaporozhsky.

In the Debbins case, no government official has stated on the record that it is the polygraph that identified him as a Russian spy. If such a claim is made, it would be a first in the U.S. government's more than seven decades of polygraph screening.
  

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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #9 - Nov 20th, 2020 at 8:06am
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George W. Maschke wrote on Nov 20th, 2020 at 7:12am:

In the Debbins case, no government official has stated on the record that it is the polygraph that identified him as a Russian spy. If such a claim is made, it would be a first in the U.S. government's more than seven decades of polygraph screening.


When you put it like that, I don't expect any U.S. government official to ever mention what the polygraph did, because those that work in the polygraph industry are told not to discuss it as it would open up the polygraph to exploitation. The articles says that Peter Debbins failed a polygraph test and subsequently confessed that he had been in contact with Russian intelligence for 15 years. Sounds like the polygraph caught him, or it helped.

There have been several cases of people taking polygraphs and then later being convicted of espionage.  Glenn Shriver is one example, and he was still a student.  Kun Shan Chun was an FBI employee.  Here is a list of a few others.

I think what happens is that these spies are already under investigation, and they are presented with evidence, possibly circumstantial evidence, of their espionage activities during or after the polygraph.  If that happens, the polygraph can be used to tell the spy that "we know you are hiding something, we know that you are a spy."  The spy believes the polygraph works and it can read his or her mind, the spy digests all the circumstantial evidence, and then confesses.  Boom.  The polygraph machine is a hero!

That may be the best the polygraph can do.  The machine isn't going to spit out a result saying the person is a spy and should be immediately convicted.  If the polygraph is leading these people to espionage confessions, then can't we say that the polygraph caught a spy?

  
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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #10 - Nov 20th, 2020 at 9:14am
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When I speak of a spy being "caught" by polygraph screening, I mean someone who was not previously under suspicion coming under suspicion as a result of a polygraph "test" and eventually being convicted of a violation of the Espionage Act.

I see no policy consideration that would prevent the U.S. government from publicly stating that a spy had been caught by the polygraph if such a thing has ever happened. I don't understand on what basis you believe that discussing it would "open up the polygraph to exploitation."

In the case of Glenn Shriver, it seems clear that he had been identified as a Chinese agent prior to his CIA pre-employment polygraph, and that he did not confess to his polygraph operator. I am not aware of any information that the polygraph had anything to do with Kun Shan Chun's identification as an agent for China, or with his confession.

As for the role of the polygraph in the detection of Peter Debbins' espionage, considering the paucity of publicly available evidence, I think it is prudent to reserve judgment.
  

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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #11 - Nov 20th, 2020 at 10:14am
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George W. Maschke wrote on Nov 20th, 2020 at 9:14am:

I see no policy consideration that would prevent the U.S. government from publicly stating that a spy had been caught by the polygraph if such a thing has ever happened. I don't understand on what basis you believe that discussing it would "open up the polygraph to exploitation."


I do. Let me explain. I deduced from this website that the easiest way a person can fail a polygraph is from making a confession or disqualifying admission.  Here is a hypothetical public interview with a polygrapher:

News Reporter: How did you catch John Doe spying?

Polygrapher: During his polygraph, we asked him "Have you ever given classified information to someone not authorized to receive it?"  He showed a response on his charts to that question, so we probed further.

News Reporter: Please explain.

Polygrapher: We asked more profound questions about why he reacted to the question about leaking classified information.  He soon confessed to giving classified information to Planet Mars.

News Reporter: So it was only after his confession that you were able to arrest him?

Polygrapher: Yes.

News Reporter: So if he never confessed, he would have likely gotten away with the crime? 

Polygrapher: Uhhh. . .  [silence]


I think that once people know that confessions are what guarantees a polygraph fail, then people will be less likely to make confessions, thus, exploiting the weakness of the polygraph.

These IC polygraphs just ask a few general questions that cover everything, mostly crime, including drugs and espionage.  The polygraphers usually don't know much except what is on applicants' SF86 forms if they are taking pre-employment polys, or some preliminary investigation in other cases.  I'm willing to bet that suspects make confessions on the poly that the polygrapher would have never discovered otherwise.

My point in all of my postings is that the polygraph is used as part of investigations and usually is the fatal blow to applicants and spies.  I'm sure spies have been arrested after their polygraph confession gave enough evidence for the arrest.  However, the U.S. government will never publicly say this because then spies will learn to avoid confessing.
« Last Edit: Nov 20th, 2020 at 10:33am by troll_of_truth »  
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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #12 - Nov 20th, 2020 at 10:33am
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troll_of_truth wrote on Nov 20th, 2020 at 10:14am:
However, the U.S. government will never publicly say this because then spies will learn to avoid confessing.


I expect most spies already know that confessing is a bad idea.

If a failed polygraph "test" were ever the trigger for an espionage investigation that culminated in a conviction, nothing would prevent the U.S. government from publicly stating so, and it would be under no obligation to answer questions from journalists about it that it did not want to answer.
  

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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #13 - Nov 20th, 2020 at 10:42am
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George W. Maschke wrote on Nov 20th, 2020 at 10:33am:
troll_of_truth wrote on Nov 20th, 2020 at 10:14am:
However, the U.S. government will never publicly say this because then spies will learn to avoid confessing.


I expect most spies already know that confessing is a bad idea.


Agreed.  Grin  Though in these polygraph/interrogation sessions, you never know what the polygrapher or LE is threatening the subject with to make him or her confess.

George W. Maschke wrote on Nov 20th, 2020 at 10:33am:

If a failed polygraph "test" were ever the trigger for an espionage investigation that culminated in a conviction, nothing would prevent the U.S. government from publicly stating so, and it would be under no obligation to answer questions from journalists about it that it did not want to answer.


I presume this is what happened in this Peter Debbins case!  However, you are right, let's reserve judgement until all the facts come out, if they all come out.
  
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Re: Accused Spy Peter Rafael Dzibinski Debbins: Yet Another Catastrophic Failure of Polygraph Screening
Reply #14 - Feb 13th, 2021 at 2:11pm
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Peter Debbins' sentencing hearing, which was to be held on 26 February 2021, has been rescheduled to 16 April 2021 at 09:00 AM in Alexandria Courtroom 800 before District Judge Claude M. Hilton. A pre-sentence investigation report filed in January 2021 remains under seal.
  

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