Quote:I am currently under investigation in the U.S. for money laundering and racketeering. I suspect that I am under physical surveillance and that my phone calls and emails are being monitored. The state police have asked me to take a voluntary polygraph as part of their investigation. I have not been arrested or charged yet but I feel like that moment is coming.
Should I take the polygraph or refuse?
You are well-advised to refuse the polygraph, to secure legal counsel, and to not speak further with the state police without your lawyer present. You may wish to have your lawyer communicate your refusal to be polygraphed.
As used by police, a polygraph "test" is often little more than a pretext for interrogating a suspect without a lawyer present. The suspect's "failing" the "test" may be part of the interrogation plan.
Quote:I have beaten polygraphs in the past and after researching this site I am sure I can beat it again. By beating the poly, will it clear my name so these LE guys can get off my back?
If the police have credible evidence against you, beating the polygraph is unlikely to end their investigation.
Quote:I need to communicate with some people and since my phone calls and emails are being monitored, I want to know if anyone can give advice on a technique known as "
drafting." The way
drafting works is that me and the others I need to communicate with would have an anonymous email account that we would set up, maybe Protonmail or Yandex, and share the password. We would only ever access it through Tor and save emails as drafts for each other to read and then delete them. We would never actually send the emails. Email providers don't store draft emails on their servers, and even if they did, Protonmail and Yandex are not U.S. companies. Can anyone comment on how successful drafting is?
I don't care to advise you on how to communicate securely, but I note that the drafting technique you mention was used unsuccessfully by former CIA director David Petraeus and his mistress, Paula Broadwell:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2012/11/12/heres-the-e-mail-tr...