Quote from: Public Servant on Jul 19, 2003, 04:52 AMI'd agree that a DNA match pretty much says without a doubt that the person, whose DNA matched, left the source of evidence. But this does not prove the person committed the crime. If a man has sex with a woman then departs; then someone else comes in and kills said woman, with minimal contact and/or leaving little of his own DNA, etc; who will now be the best suspect? The innocent man left skin cells, hairs, and semen all over the decedent's body. Given that this man is now undeniably connected to the scene, there is already a very strong case against him. DNA is powerful evidence and if a shread of motive is found (sex leads to plenty of motive theories), this innocent man could be convicted. And on the flip side, the lack of DNA evidence found at the scene obviously does not prove the guilty guy innocent, though one would likely be inclined to think so.
QuoteBecause polygraph is recognized as less than 100%, no DI exam results would be presented as evidence of guilt in court. Confessions can be admitted as evidence, but rarely will the result of any poly. DI alone never put anyone in jail.
Now do you think poly is more dangerous than DNA, given how they both are used? Don't get me wrong, DNA evidence is great, but we must ensure we know what it actually proves, and does not prove. Those parameters are fairly well set, to a safe zone, when it comes to criminal investigative polygraphy.
QuoteBecause polygraph is recognized as less than 100%, no DI exam results would be presented as evidence of guilt in court. Confessions can be admitted as evidence, but rarely will the result of any poly. DI alone never put anyone in jail.
QuoteWhy would you think that? DNA testing, for example, while not 100% accurate, is highly unlikely to identify an innocent person, much less 11, for a single murder (or theft, or whatever).
Quote from: Saidme on Jul 18, 2003, 06:46 PMIf nothing is 100% I suppose everything is well below 100%, mooooooooooo.
QuoteNo serious, accuracy is everything. That's why I prefer to give examinee's a polygraph first.
QuoteThat way I know for a fact whether or not their deceptive about the issue at hand.
Quote from: Canadian Crusader on Jul 18, 2003, 06:48 PMWhy are we (anti poly) trying to argue the scientific validity of the poly with the likes of Saidme?
QuoteAs for cases I've conducted I can't really share any details with youWhy not? Surely if these people you have polygraphed and obtained confessions from are real, they are now members of the prison population. And their criminal records are a matter of public record. So why can't you disclose that info?
QuoteHow many people have you accused of lying that did not give you a confession and were later found to be guilty in a court of law?To which Saidme replied that same day:
QuoteI can't give you an exact number but many. And you're right, they were all found guilty.(Emphasis added)


Quote from: Saidme on Jul 18, 2003, 04:42 PM
SEX (put it like you mean it)
QuoteNothing's 100%, I think we've made that clear. Blah Blah Blah

Quote from: Saidme on Jul 17, 2003, 05:16 PMLet's say you're going to polygraph a group of employees working at the 7-11 over the theft of $100. You're going to polygraph them on that specific issue. Let's say for arguments sake, only one in the group stole the money. Let's say the group consists of 11 people (I'll use your number). At the conclusion of the 11 polygraphs let's say 9 were DI. Obviously, one person stole the money, why would 8 others go DI? What might cause that is a little bleed over from other incidents. Maybe the other 8 people stole money from the 7-11 in the recent past, but they didn't steal that $100. That would explain why you had more than one DI. Of course you would interrogate them all equally. From an examiner's standpoint, not only might he/she solve the crime of the stolen $100, but could resolve many other thefts that went unreported. I've seen this very scenario occur.