Quote1. The agency that I was taking the poly for told me not to be worried about the test because the examiner would ask me questions like "Is your name_____?" and that would show them how I answered while being nervous and telling the truth. I was then told that I would be asked a question to which I would lie so that there would be a reading of how I responded when I was lying and nervous. When I went to take the test, I was not told to respond with a lie to any of the questions to test my response when lying. Was I supposed to be asked to do this?
Quote2. Now that I've read this website and studied about how inaccurate these "tests" are I am concerned about what to do when I have to re-test (the way the examiner was acting and by my own racing heart there is almost no chance I passed). When I took my poly the other day they asked "Have you read anything about polygraphs? Are you going to try to beat the test? Have you read about how to beat the test?" I had not so I was able to answer "No" truthfully. What will they do when I say yes to these questions should I have to re-test?
Quote from: gates21 on Jul 23, 2005, 06:06 AMWell, 60 posts later and I just got notice that I have passed both the phsych. & polygraphCongratulations on getting this far in the process! Good luck on the rest of it and good luck at the academy.. Im glad to have started the forums on a "lively" conversation.
Can someone help me with the bench press now
Gates21
. Im glad to have started the forums on a "lively" conversation.
Quote from: tasercop on Jul 07, 2005, 07:14 PMSome of the people on this forum were unjustly denied a job because of a failed polygraph and were not given the benefit of subsequent follow-up examinations. For them, I agree it was wrong, but hardly justifies stopping its use. Most of the people who post here, however, do not seem as if they have the honesty, integrity and fortitude of someone who should wear a badge or work with national secrets. I believe they are living proof that the system works.Tasercop,
Quote from: Poly-Killer on Jul 10, 2005, 01:39 PM...I have enjoyed a very satisfying career to this point. I just hit my 10 year mark and I have accomplished more than I would have ever thought possible
PK


Quote from: tasercop on Jul 07, 2005, 10:08 PM
Here are some examples of applicants I personally tested:
1. The examinee was just getting out of the military. He was one of the elite- special forces. Served honorably in the Persian Gulf. His background glowed and there was not a single negative mark in his background. During the polygraph he admitted to sexually molesting his 4 year old daughter, two years earlier.
2. The examinee glowed and had nothing negative in his background. During the pre-test he admitted to an undetected armed robbery.
3. Another examinee had nothing negative in his background. His employer references were top notch. After being SR on a theft question, he admitted to thousands of dollars worth of thefts from a previous employer.
I could go on for pages.
Quote from: nonombre on Jul 07, 2005, 01:03 AM
Polyfool,
Thank you for posting. I am afraid that however that I must disagree with you. Not because your vision of a classicially run investigation is not commendable, but because it unfortunately does not jive with the realities of life. I have done background investigations, and I have conducted criminal investigations and in the real world, your description much more closely fits a "textbook" criminal case.
You see, as a criminal investigator, I have managed between a dozen and two dozen felony criminal cases at a time, a managable case load when their are prosecutors and victims relying on you for a solved case and closure to what is usually a horrendus situation.
Conversly, as a background investigator, I have sometimes had 200 to 300 files, stacked on the floor, in piles from three to five feet high, with hirings pending, academy slots needing to be filled, and the other two guys out sick.
And it is not just the overwork. It is the whole dynamic of a criminal case vs. a background investigation. In a criminal case, there is physical evidence, witness interviews, confessions of co-conspirators, a criminal act, a victim, changing stories, and all the tings you have alluded to in your post. Good stuff, the stuff that solves cases.
In a background investigation, all you start with is the word of the applicant and a carefully chosen list of references HE has provided. Sure you do the usual asking of the references what other people know this guy and MAYBE you get lucky. But I hold to my earlier statement that unless you manage to find an arrest record or someone who has a beef with this person, all you are going to get is the usual "He's a really good guy." In most cases, the neighbors who are giving him such a glowing reference have no idea he had been molesting their 12 year old.
Polyfool, at one point you asked me, "Do you have any idea how many applicants are denied clearances based on information obtained during background investigations?"
I am not sure what answer you were looking for, but I can tell you this. From what I know, I would figure that VERY, VERY, few people are denied clearances based purely on a background investigation.
Ahhh, but add a full scope polygraph into the mix...
Nonombre.