Quote from: Paul Woolley on Mar 14, 2002, 08:15 PM
Beechtrees,
Your response proves you have embellished on this site
QuoteYou State:
I knew it existed, Mr. Woolley. My post was a ploy to absolutely confirm we were discussing the same piece of equipment. You may confirm my prior knowledge easily enough by reading this thread. You will note that message, posted on September 5th, 2001 initiated my search for information on the type of polygraph equipment on which I knew I was to be interrogated.
I had a look at your thread you offer as proof of your prior knowledge there is no mention of the activity sensor.
This is because Lafayette tell me the activity sensor in question was NOT listed on their site in September 2001.
You could not of known about it as it was not available at the time you state. Once again I say you embellish.
Quote from: Paul W. on Mar 08, 2002, 08:57 PM
Beechtrees,
First of all you ask about me about the activity sensor and that you could not find it on the manufacturers site (suggesting it does not exist),only after you are given the information do you identify yourself as someone who took a test with the use of the very c/measure device mentioned.
QuoteThen you try to allude to the fact that the device is fake, a ploy used by examiners to intimidate examinees (not true).
QuoteYou would not of said this if you had been tested with the use of this device as you would know it was not a"fake" as you put it and you would also know it existed . You also mention you were having fun at my expense because you are intimately aware of these devices
QuoteI have a lot of trouble with your approach and your commentry about your experience with aforementioned devices,A fabrication in my personal opinion.
QuoteI am not interested in responding to any further posts from you as I am not here to waste time or to be the object of someones "fun" .
QuoteIn an effort to support your hypothesis you embellish.
Clearly you were never tested with the use of this device.
Lx 4000 has replaced the Lx 3000 and 2000.
Quote[with the sensor, it is possible to] increase sensitivity to detect pulse rates in the legs or buttocks
QuoteAs for the use of polygraph, while use is growing despite the efforts of your people . It would seem reasonable to think that your desire is only a pipe dream and wishful thinking not a reality seeing polictical motivations to look like they are doing everything possible to deter and catch terrorists and criminals overrides any validity concerns. Increases after Sep11 occured for that very reason and actually strenghthened polygraph applications in federal agencies .
QuoteAnd with the passing of the Soviet threat, many CIA officials lost interest in doing dirty human espionage—which means recruiting dangerous characters who can act as spies and infiltrate terror networks such as al-Qaeda's. And even when informants were coaxed into cooperating, the CIA still required almost all "fully recruited" spies to take a polygraph test, something that scares off useful sources and in the past has failed to catch double agents. "We recruited a whole bunch of bad agents," admits a senior intelligence official. "We wasted a lot of taxpayer money that way."
QuoteI would not know if I missed a deceptive subject but I do know that physical countermeasures would not have done it for them with the correct use of the aforementioned activity sensor.
Quote from: Paul Woolley on Mar 05, 2002, 10:20 PM
Beechtrees,
The sensor would have to be used with the LX-4000 not the 3000 you wouldn't know this as you could not pluck that info off Lafayettes site. More evidence that your story is a fabrication.