Quote from: George_Maschke on Jun 18, 2015, 12:39 AMThe case to which Trimarco refers is evidently USA v. Jesus Hernandeo Angulo Mosquera, which according to the court schedule is being heard by a jury this week.Thank you Dan and George. I read the information in the link you provided and found it interesting. The defense desires to introduce a passed polygraph exam for their defendant in an effort to exonerate the defendant. The prosecution, referred to as the government, objected to the introduction of the polygraph evidence as "junk science" and not reliable. This is the same government that is using polygraph results to the detriment of thousands of applicants and on board government employees. What absolute hypocrites.
Quote from: Wandersmann on Jun 17, 2015, 05:06 PMIs there anything to Trimarco's claim that the admittance of the polygraph in Federal court in Florida signals expanded use of the polygraph ?
Quote...As of a month ago, you should know, this is gigantic news in the world of law and polygraph, in federal court out of the state of Florida, polygraph was admitted as evidence, and so the floodgates have opened, at least on the federal level, and that will be the new precedent.
Quote from: George_Maschke on Jun 17, 2015, 02:13 PMNote how Trimarco danced around the question Leiberman put to him (at 7:10): "How difficult is it to beat a lie detector, Jack, and can specialists like yourself beat it?"