Unlawful Referral Scheme Alleged in Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex Post-Conviction Sex Offender Polygraph Testing

Started by George W. Maschke, Mar 23, 2008, 08:41 AM

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Control Freaks

Thank you for the reply and the suggestions / opinion. This case has not yet been filed, so therefore, no cause number. I sent out a demand letter to all of the actors on my list, and included a copy to the governor of Wisconsin, because it was his CPS agency who failed my children. I am now waiting for responses, or the lack of them, from my demand for insurance information. I'm obviously not an attorney, but in order to preserve the statute of limitations on civil claims, a demand had to be sent. It will absolutely be ignored, because the pompass-assses who did all of this believed I would had been charged and convicted, and relied on all of that scenario just as the FBI believed Hillary was going to win.

I'll give all of this to the national media for publication if no one takes this seriously. I'm certainly not going to worry about exposing myself. If I have to go down in history as the most horrible human being on the planet for my daughter's sake, then sobeit. One way or the other, someone is going to be held accountable for what has happened to my daughter.
Ridding the Legal System of Corrupt Polygraphers one Civil Suit at a time. I'm coming for you Bobby Jones of Woods and Associates in Arlington Texas.

Jack R

Hello

In some states they have discontinued polygraph examiner licensing due to the cost in managing the licensing.

Some of the bigger states being

Georgia

Florida

Both states have a large APA membership base.  They have seminars for ongoing training and other topics.

APA Chapters also have designated training and certification for Sex Offender Testing.

At the end of the day if he or she is conducting a large number of tests per year why even have the follow up certification.  It is basically a revenue generator for the local APA chapters.

CA, NY, DC Metro/Northern VA have large state APA memberships and polygraph licensing in those areas.  Due to the politics in these three states will keep licensing alive for many years to come. 

One possible way is to nationalize polygraph examiner certification.  APA could provide a Certified National Polygraph Examiner designation. 

As large as the APA is they could implement and manage a program like this, and working through the local APA Chapters for the purpose of quality control and assurance.   

Just a thought.

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