Quote from: nonombre on Jul 16, 2005, 12:21 AMSergeant1107 ,Nonombre,
I understand your point. I truly do. However, what if I had studied and planned my whole life to go to work for the local police department, and was denied employment, because two of the members of the panel decided they did not like my accent, perhaps the way I part my hair?
Quote from: Matty on Jul 16, 2005, 12:32 AMNonombre,
As you well know, many times an applicant is failed by the examiner before the test begins, simply because the examiner may already have a bias or doesn't like the way the person looks...yada, yada, yada.

Quote from: Sergeant1107 on Jul 15, 2005, 11:44 AM
Nonombre,
Do you think your opinion would be any different if you had been completely honest and failed? Or would you have been willing to forego your career, knowing that even though you were being unfairly denied employment at least there will be some criminals caught at some point in the future? Would you have been willing to take one for the team?

Quote from: nonombre on Jul 14, 2005, 11:33 PMNonombre,
I was completely honest on my own pre-employment polygraph examination.
There were no "controls" asked during my test.
I was administered (and passed) an R/I examination
Nonombre
Quote from: Jeffery on Jul 14, 2005, 10:25 PM
Had you been completely honest on your own pre-emply poly, including controls, you may be thinking differently here.
Quote from: nonombre on Jul 14, 2005, 09:47 PMI still believe it to be a good compromise.Had you been completely honest on your own pre-emply poly, including controls, you may be thinking differently here.
Quote from: Sergeant1107 on Jul 14, 2005, 10:55 AM
1. It is not only possible, but likely that a truthful person with no disqualifying incidents in his past will go through a polygraph exam without being deceptive and still fail....
2. You have been forthright (which I appreciate) in your acknowledgement of false-positives being a problem, yet your solution is less than practical. It almost sounds like your plan concedes that polygraph testing is flawed therefore it should only be assigned a place on a point scale. I believe that if we know the test is flawed then it shouldn't be used at all. At least it shouldn't be used for pre-employment screening (I have read it is more accurate on specific issue testing, but I have no experience in such matters.)
Quote from: Drew Richardson on Jul 14, 2005, 11:31 AMSergeant1107,Drew,
You write in part to nonombre:
As I have said before, the malpractice added to the process by any non-compliant (to industry standards) and willfully unethical polygraph examiner does not stand alone or even foremost in the analysis of the foolishness that we know as "lie detection." It is merely that which is added to the QUACKERY that is practiced by each and every practitioner of "lie detection." There is no theoretical basis for said practice and there exists no validity in the day to day use of said practice as a diagnostic instrument.
Quote
Please don't use the tired old "there are bad examiners out there" excuse to explain away the false-positives. Even though I can believe there are bad examiners in your profession I find it hard to believe that every single incident of a truthful person being labeled "deceptive" was due to an unskilled or unethical examiner....
Quote from: nonombre on Jul 13, 2005, 09:15 PMBut who I am truly concerned about are the truthful people, who based on what they have been told on this site, have practiced countermeasures, have gotten caught, and whether they ultimately owned up to them or not, have found themselves immediately disqualified from a job they otherwise would have gotten (or worse).Nonombre,
Now I know you or someone else will immediately counter with "What about all those people who went into the polygraph, told the truth, and were called "deceptive."