It is impossible to say, based on the account you provided, whether your polygrapher scored your polygraph chart as "deception indicated," "no deception indicated," or "inconclusive." However, if you did not receive a post-test interrogation, then it seems likely that you either passed or that your results were at worst deemed inconclusive.
Some of the things you stated in your account strike me as odd. To begin with, you wrote:
Quote:...I was amazed that the ploygrapher played to dumb when questioned about the difference between "relevant" and "control" questions.
Did you actually ask your polygrapher about the difference between relevant and "control" questions? Unless one is planning on using the complete honesty approach outlined in Chapter 4 of
[url]The Lie Behind the Lie Detector[/url], it is highly unwise to ask such a question of one's polygrapher. It immediately alerts the polygrapher to the fact that one knows more than he/she would like one to know about polygraphy, and will put the polygrapher on heightened alert for countermeasures attempts.
You also wrote:
Quote:...the chart lines were even and consistent all the way across with no jumps...
It seems unusual that your polygrapher showed you your complete charts so that you could make this observation. To be effective, polygraph countermeasures must produce augmented physiological responses to the "control" questions. What specific countermeasure(s) did you employ?
I do not know what the legal ramifications would be if you were to refuse the remaining two polygraph interrogations to which you are required to submit during the period of your probation. I suspect that the cost(s) of refusal (whether in cash or in kind) would be greater than the polygrapher's fee. You might want to check with a lawyer on this point.