Quote from: Fair Chance on Feb 20, 2004, 04:00 PMMarty,
I third experience was almost a mirror of my first. Same style, same questions, no displayed hostility or disrespect.
Quote from: Fair Chance on Feb 19, 2004, 11:42 PMMarty,
As an applicant who "placed all of his cards on the table", my third polygraph examiner seemed to take it all in stride. I would tend to think that any applicant who has gone through two polygraphs, was completely honest, and accused would investigate accordingly.
Quote from: Ray on Feb 18, 2004, 05:34 PMIf an applicant fails to tell me what they know then the test essentially becomes a known-lie test. IMO, this test is still valid however I think the odds of inconclusive results are somewhat increased.Ray,
Quote...The reality is that if an applicant tells me what he or she knows I'll have a better opportunity to present a fair test....
QuoteHere's my take on this. First of all, if an examinee fails to tell me what he or she knows about polygraph then that's on them. I can't read minds However, I understand why they may be reluctant to speak with me openly because this site puts an examinee between a rock and a hard place. George and other posters on this site present examiners as being evil and the enemy (not an exact quote but you get my drift) Make no admissions!!! The reality is that if an applicant tells me what he or she knows I'll have a better opportunity to present a fair test. It makes my job more difficult but then it's on me.
QuoteHowever, we seem to also agree that a number of child molestors may actually move past the polygraph and perhaps even the background investigation phase.
QuoteOne other point neglected - what about those 1 or 2 qualified candidates that might be unfairly labeled as child molestors because of this flawed process?
Quotepersons that are aware of the various polygraph techniques, but for personal reasons decide not to use CMs, are more apt to produce a false positive or inconclusive result.
However, I understand why they may be reluctant to speak with me openly because this site puts an examinee between a rock and a hard place. George and other posters on this site present examiners as being evil and the enemy (not an exact quote but you get my drift) Make no admissions!!! The reality is that if an applicant tells me what he or she knows I'll have a better opportunity to present a fair test. It makes my job more difficult but then it's on me.
QuoteRay,
You would have us believe that a law enforcement applicant who applied countermeasures learned on this website decided to admit to the same AND confess to a felony crime (rape). Tell us, then:
1) What happened to this applicant next?
2) Was he arrested? If not, why not?
3) If he was in fact arrested, then you should have no objection to posting the confessed rapist's name. After all, arrests are public records.
4) Were criminal charges filed based on the confession you say you obtained? If not, why not, and what is the disposition of this case now?
5) If criminal charges were filed, what is the docket number of the case?
Your logic concerning his story leaves Ray precious little room in not providing the information you seek should he care to retain any credibility whatsover. Time to show em or fold em, Ray...Quote from: Ray on Feb 18, 2004, 03:15 AMMr. Truth,Congratulations Ray. I hope the rape admission is admissible evidence in your state. As for the CM's taught on this site, I don't believe "suppressing his relevant responses" is the teaching though it is an often described ad-hoc CM.
..In fact, I had an applicant admit to a rape AND use of CM's learned on this site...he had a hard time suppressing his relevant responses)
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