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The Polygraph Test -
Does It Work?
Does the polygraph test, otherwise
known as the lie detector test, work? Melvin Foster may not think
so. Back in 1982, after profilers thought a taxi driver might
be the Green River Killer, they targeted Foster as a suspect,
partly because he drove a taxi. He generously agreed to a polygraph
test, which he failed.
The problem was, he was innocent.
Meanwhile, over a period of about
two to three years, the Green River Killer murdered four dozen
or more women near Seattle and Tacoma, Washington. During this
time, Gary Leon Ridgway was briefly a suspect, and he was given
a polygraph test. The test, done in 1984, determined that he
was telling the truth about his innocence. He was free to keep
killing, and he did.
It wasn't until 2001 that DNA
evidence (and other evidence) proved Ridgway was the killer.
In 2003 he confessed and pleaded guilty to 48 of the murders.
Melvin Foster was finally cleared after more than 20 years.
The police never could gather
enough evidence to arrest or prosecute Foster (difficult when
the suspect is innocent). But unfortunately, Foster was under
a cloud of suspicion the entire time. According to an article
in the King County Journal, in 2003, Foster asked the King County
Sheriff's Office to finally "apologize and return his rock
tumbler and all the rest of the stuff police took from his home
in 1982."
It would be nice to think that
this doesn't happen often, but how do we know? There are certainly
many other stories about innocent people pointed at as guilty
due to a failed polygraph test, but those are just the ones where
the truth comes out. Had Ridgway not been caught, many would
still think Melvin Foster was guilty.
How many other cases are left
like that, with a cloud of suspicion over an innocent man or
woman? What do people think when you fail a polygraph test? They
think you are guilty, of course. But what about the more common
"inconclusive" result. Well, you didn't pass, so you
must be guilty or know something, right? Isn't that what we really
think when a criminal suspect or "person of interest"
in the news can't pass the test?
Do you think the test at least
points out the real criminals along with few innocent people
it wrongly labels? Think again. Consider the fact that numerous
famous spies passed the polygraph tests they were given (Ignatz
Theodor Griebl, Karel Frantisek Koecher, and Jiri Pasovsky, among
others). Also consider the fact that many hardened criminals
have proven their ability to lie and still pass the test.
"The US is, so far as I
know, the only nation which places such extensive reliance on
the polygraph....It has gotten us into a lot of trouble."
- Convicted spy (double-agent) Aldrich Ames, who passed two polygraph
tests while spying for the Soviet Union.
Most scientists think there is
no scientific basis for the polygraph. It is junk science. Of
course, any lie detecting technique which points at enough possible
liars will identify some of them. But what if you are telling
the truth? The bottom line is that you're gambling with your
reputation if you rely on the polygraph test to prove your innocence.
Excerpted from: How
To Beat The Lie Detector Test. For the specific countermeasures
you can take to pass a polygraph test, visit 99Reports.com using
the link above.
A shortened version is included
as Chapter10 of "You
Aren't Supposed To Know - A Book Of Secrets."
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Bonus 4: Lying: Signs
Of Lying And How To Trap A Liar
You can spot
a lie, prevent lies from being told, trap a liar and get a confession.
Now imagine how useful that will be. Indications
of a lie, micro-expressions, the "implied defense,"
what to watch for in person's initial reaction to a question,
how to spot a "forced" smile and more.
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