QuoteSecond, we found that the FBI did not always comply with its own policy governing employee access to Sensitive Compartmented Information, classified national intelligence information concerning or derived from sensitive intelligence sources, methods, or analytical processes, which is to be handled exclusively within formal access control systems established by the Director of National Intelligence. The FBI's policy generally prohibits access to Sensitive Compartmented Information for FBI employees who have not passed a polygraph examination within a specified period. We identified instances in which employees unable to pass multiple polygraph examinations were allowed to retain access to sensitive information, systems, and spaces for extended periods of time without required risk assessments — potentially posing a security risk to the FBI.
Quote from: George_Maschke on Jul 12, 2018, 03:53 PMThere is no evidence John M. lied regarding any of the relevant questions on his polygraph screening "test."And there's no evidence that he didn't.
Quote from: George_Maschke on Jul 12, 2018, 05:15 PMIn a House of Representatives joint committee hearing today, Peter Strzok explained that an employee's polygraph being "out of scope" means that the employee is overdue for a periodic polygraph examination. He affirmed that he has not failed any FBI polygraph examination."Out of scope" means the last polygraph taken has expired. It has nothing to do with the scope of the relevant questions. The DOD standard is 5 years, 7 for some agencies.
Quote from: George_Maschke on Jul 08, 2018, 01:20 PMThe Federal Psychophysiological Detection of Deception Examiner Handbook does not include any such term as "out of scope" to describe polygraph results. Has anyone heard of such phraseology before? What precisely is that supposed to mean? And why would the FBI polygraph unit use that term instead of the standard polygraph outcomes of "significant response," "no significant response," or "inconclusive?"
Quote from: quickfix on Jul 12, 2018, 03:16 PMQuoteJohn M. wrote Today at 3:17pm:
How can you justify your budget if you're not finding liars?
We found you!
QuoteQuoteJohn M. wrote Today at 3:17pm:
They never did accuse me of actually doing anything wrong, I just spiked the charts.
That's called deception.
Quote from: sammorter on Jul 12, 2018, 11:17 AMFACT: According to DOD policy, individuals with mental, psychological or emotional conditions should be exempted from examinations.Oh Really? In the real world, there is no such policy.
Quote
author=5E4C4040425F59485F2D0 link=1531070425/9#9 date=1531408632] I will be happy to work beside you in any capacity that I can.
Quote from: sammorter on Jul 12, 2018, 11:17 AMHow can you justify your budget if you're not finding liars?
Quote from: sammorter on Jul 12, 2018, 11:17 AMThey never did accuse me of actually doing anything wrong, I just spiked the charts.
Quote from: danmangan on Jul 11, 2018, 07:47 PMSuccess, such as it is, hinges mainly on theatre
Quote from: danmangan on Jul 11, 2018, 07:47 PMIn my professional opinion, polygraph "testing" is a pseudo-scientific guessing game. In other words, a crap shoot.
In terms of accuracy, the results are close to flipping a coin.
But the polygraph, when artfully applied as a prop, is one hell of an investigative tool.
Bottom line:
Squeeze the lemon hard enough, and you'll get some juice.
Success, such as it is, hinges mainly on theatre -- and applies to both the examiner and the examiner.
Quote from: danmangan on Jul 11, 2018, 07:47 PMSqueeze the lemon hard enough, and you'll get some juice.Or squeeze it too hard and you cause someone to suffer a nervous breakdown. Five interrogations in three years is abuse. They disabled retired me from federal service due to PTSD that I acquired from this abusive treatment. Now, I can't even get them to pay my doctors' bills.
Quote from: beat_the_system on Jul 09, 2018, 11:14 PMSeems like a waste of time. Sounds like they wanted to keep the guy Strzok on board so they just ignored his spikey poly charts.It would only seem a waste of time for those who know the secret. It is in fact, a violation of National policy to take unfavorable actions against an existing employee based solely with their polygraph chart results, readings, interpretations, or whatever.
Quote from: beat_the_system on Jul 10, 2018, 05:49 AMThe quoted point that I raised IS relevant to Strzok's polygraph. They grilled him on having an affair.
Quote from: beat_the_system on Jul 09, 2018, 11:14 PMQuote from: George_Maschke on Jul 10, 2018, 05:27 AMQuote from: beat_the_system on Jul 09, 2018, 11:14 PMFunny how a heterosexual affair is frowned upon, but a homosexual lifestyle is accepted, supported, and even accommodated. I know of couples with open marriages and their security clearance goes in jeopardy because of it. However, the flaming faggots can run free. What a fucked up world we live in.
I find the bigotry you've expressed here deplorable. Some people are gay. Get over it.
The notion that homosexuals enjoy some privileged status over heterosexuals in government service is risible. On the contrary, they have faced institutional discrimination for decades not only in the intelligence community but elsewhere in government and in society at large.
Lastly, the quoted point you raised is irrelevant to the matter of Peter Strzok's "out of scope" polygraph results.
Lastly, the quoted point you raised is irrelevant to the matter of Peter Strzok's "out of scope" polygraph results.
Quote from: beat_the_system on Jul 09, 2018, 11:14 PMFunny how a heterosexual affair is frowned upon, but a homosexual lifestyle is accepted, supported, and even accommodated. I know of couples with open marriages and their security clearance goes in jeopardy because of it. However, the flaming faggots can run free. What a fucked up world we live in.