Quote:Can the polygraphers on this board come clean for a moment? What reward do you all get when you obtain a signed confession or disqualifying admission from a subject?
Do you get a pay raise, bonus, promotion opportunity, or just bragging rights in the office?
It is extremely immoral and unethical to advance in your career by ruining the careers of others.
Of course, coercing confessions is what it's all about. Take this comment from Don Grubin in an article for
The Guardian a few years back:
Grubin believes the polygraph reveals the importance of a question to the individual under test, its emotional significance, and the cognitive work required if they lie when answering. “All of that ends up being seen in the physiological response,” he says. “It’s not detecting lies, and shouldn’t be thought of as a lie detector. It is an indicator of the salience of the question and the cognitive processing associated with it. It also encourages disclosures for reasons we don’t understand, and in that respect it might be thought of as a truth facilitator. In the end, test outcome and disclosure are both important, and complementary.”
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/mar/05/there-is-no-bomb-what-i-learned-... If the ultimate goal is to produce "disclosures," it would make sense that the more "disclosures" a polygraph operator obtains, the more accolades (bonuses, promotions, letters of commendation, etc.) they would receive.
I made several disclosures during my five attempts at the polygraph "test," but none were ever deemed damaging enough.
My career and reputation were destroyed by the Insider Threat Program at the Defense Intelligence Agency because I simply couldn't "successfully complete" the Polygraph Credibility Assessment.
Operating directly under the National Counterintelligence Executive, the Insider Threat Program's mission is to eliminate threats and catch spies. Thanks to the polygraph, brother, business is good.
In a document that I was able to obtain through discovery, the Insider Threat Program Coordinator, Steven D. McIntosh, wrote the attached memorandum. The last paragraph is where he sings the praises of his team. Without a doubt, I was one of those 11 where his team took credit for the identification and/or resolution of a CI matter in 2012. Also, notice how the number jumped to 38 in 2013.