Quote...Besides, IMHO this polygraph fooey won't be around another 10 years from now anyway, at least as far as the Fed is concerned. Besides being voodoo crap, some lawsuit I'm sure will be successful to knock it off....
Quote from: 5F515657380 on Apr 01, 2005, 03:53 AMQuoteHe wanted to dictate the statement and basically wanted me to admit to using countermeasures, then he would schedule me for a retest.From the tone of your post, it appears that you wisely did not fall for this ploy. When a polygraph operator requests that you make a written statement (especially one worded like you described), it's not because he feels that things are inconclusive and he wants you to continue in the process with another operator.
Instead, it is overwhelming likely that the examiner is planning to make a written report to disqualify you (for either deception or an arbitrary determination that you employed countermeasures). He is looking for a written confession to help solidify his case. You were smart not to give him one.
Nothing good that can come from making a written admission once a polygraph session has begun. NOTHING.
This is one of the most important pieces of advice that anyone facing a polygraph should know. Failing a polygraph "test" is extremely negative for one's career potential in law enforcement. Still, having a failed polygraph on your record pales in comparison to having a folder sitting in FBI HQ file drawer with a signed statement from an FBI Special Agent stating that you admitted to him that you attempted to beat the pre-employment screening polygraph. Worse yet is when the above sheet of paper is immediately followed by a note in your handwriting admitting to the above.
It is our experience that applicants who fall for the polygrapher's "I am here to help you get hired act—it is you and I against 'headquarters'..." will sign almost anything after a reassuring statement informing the applicant that this is in his best interests. Regrettably, those who go along with this act are often caused irreparable damage.
Quoteput a lot of details in my letter and got a re-test.Putting detail in an appeal letter probably won't affect your chances of a retest being granted. It may, however, affect your ability to litigate the matter at a later point if you should so choose. For this reason, I advise withholding detail.
Quotei dont think they are worried about upstaging each other with different results. they would not have an appeal process at all if they were worried about that.I respectfully disagree. Prior to the lawsuit being filed against the FBI by Mark Zaid, it appeared that retests were granted very rarely. One of the grounds advanced by the lawsuit is that the plaintiffs had virtually no appeal process available to them after they were disqualified. These retests appear to be an attempt to protect the FBI against future litigation.
Quotei wouldnt get too conspiratorial in thinking about the process.I'm not being conspiratorial, just rational in light of the lawsuit against the FBI working its way through the federal courts. It makes sense for them to now have an appeal process. It does not, however, make sense for them to start overturning a large number of results. This is bad both on the institutional level (numerous divergent results would indicate that the whole process is a fraud—which it is) and on the individual level (it would require one examiner to conclude that the work of another is wrong).
QuoteHe wanted to dictate the statement and basically wanted me to admit to using countermeasures, then he would schedule me for a retest.From the tone of your post, it appears that you wisely did not fall for this ploy. When a polygraph operator requests that you make a written statement (especially one worded like you described), it's not because he feels that things are inconclusive and he wants you to continue in the process with another operator.
QuoteIf I am granted a retest, how could I not fail again?You may be granted a "retest," but the chance of "passing" it is extremely slim. If a substantial number of people who receive second tests actually passed, it would be an implicit admission by the FBI that the whole process is a sham (which it is). Plus, the 2nd examiner would essentially be making the work of the first look bad.
Will the retest be the same? or rather a whole test regarding drug use?
Quoteor rather a whole test regarding drug use?As a rule, FBI retests tend to be full-scope screening exams like the original, not specific issue "tests."
Quotethink its very difficult to pass a re-test simply because the anxiety attached to the questions in now greater. the "flight or fight" response is triggered by many things besides lying, but you cant tell a polygrapher that.As I said above, the bigger issue would be that in order to pass the second "test," you must get one FBI examiner to essentially accuse another of being wrong. This is extremely unlikely, for obvious reasons.