
Thank you digithead and two block for all the input. I wrote in more detail about the situation under new topics. I hope it showed up. Quote from: quickfix on May 13, 2008, 08:55 PMdigithead
I know little to nothing about community supervision. My interest has been at the federal level.
Years ago I read an article by a federal judge, 9th. circuit I believe, that illustrated, in part, the truth about prisons and post-prison supervision. He said that "prison guards and supervisors and probation and parole officers have the mistaken belief that it is part of their job to inflict punishment on prisoners and parolees. This is totally wrong thinking. Thier job is to ensure order and compliance only. Judges and juries inflict the punishment by sending the guilty to prison. Just being in prison and on probation and parole is the only punishment intended by the courts".
I don't know if the polygraph is effictive on SOs or not. I do know that it is the lowest recidivism rate of the major crimes. Those statistics are not hard to come by. Polygraphers will probably say they are the reason recidivism is so low. From the interviews I have seen and read, the vast majority of SOs will stay on the straight and narrow because 1. They don't want to go back the verbal and physical abuse of fellow inmates. 2. They give a lot of credit to their treatment providers teaching them the proper boundries. Then there are the addicted ones that prison is the only answer.
Quote from: quickfix on May 13, 2008, 05:11 PMdigithead
If a convict has served his total time, then parole is not a privilege. It's a constitutional right. (Constitutional law is very interesting. That's where the rubber meets the road). If the sentancing judge ordered time on parole and included polygraphs, he has to take them. Parole officers has to follow the sentancing guidelines. They cannot legally make up their own laws. If he is realeased early by the parole board, then I agree the board can set guidelines which includes polygraphs. I have read where POs have been set back on their heels by the courts concerning their behavior. Most always, a drug offender is required to give UA samples for a specified time by the court but few are required to take polys. I have a distant relative that's a PO and he says that none of his drug parolees are required to take polys. That was a couple of years ago, however.
Quote from: quickfix on May 13, 2008, 12:55 PMcat
He needs to check with a lawyer. I don't know what state in which you live, but I don't believe a polygraph can be required except for SO's. You said he has not been convicted of a sex offense. A PO cannot make his own rules. If polygraphs were not a part of his parole ordered by a judge, then he can't be required to take one. He may have cause for a lawsuit himself.