Polygraph Failures Continue To Mount
It seems incredible that some law enforcement agencies as well as
the U.S. government continue to rely on the polygraph as a
truth verification tool in spite of the very high profile
and notable failures of the device. This is especially true
in light of the recently published report by the National
Academy of Sciences. The NAS conducted a study of the
polygraph that was commissioned by the U.S. Department of
Energy. In most of the studies of the polygraph that the
NAS reviewed, they found that the Department of Defense
Polygraph Institute (DoDPI) and their affiliates manipulated
the studies to indicate a high accuracy rate. In fact, the
NAS recommended that the DOE discontinue conducting
polygraphs, as they are prone to very high error rates. The
NAS report stated: “Issues of conflict of interest reflect a
serious structural problem with polygraph research.” Some of
the very notable failures of the polygraph are:
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The Green River Killer, Gary Leon Ridgeway, pled
guilty to murdering 48 women in the Seattle area over a
twenty-year period. Ridgeway was given a polygraph
following the murder of his fourth victim and passed
the polygraph exam. He was then dropped as a
suspect and went on to kill another 44 women. He is
listed as the most prolific killer in U.S. history. If
the polygraph had been accurate, his reign of terror
would have ended after his fourth victim. The failure of
the polygraph to detect Ridgeway cost 44 women their
lives.
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The ‘Angel of Death’,
Charles Cullen, as
described in recent articles, working as a nurse,
murdered as many as 40 people over a ten year period by
giving them lethal injections. After his first victim
died, he was considered a suspect and asked to take a
polygraph test. He passed the polygraph test and went
on to kill at least another 39 people. The failure
of the polygraph cost 39 people their lives.
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Aldrich Ames, while working in a very sensitive
position at the CIA, became a traitor and over a long
period of time, sold information as well as the names of
the operatives working in the Soviet Union to the KGB.
Aldrich Ames was able to continue his treachery because
he was easily able to pass his periodic polygraph
examinations. He said “There is no trick to
(passing the polygraph) it, just smile and make the
examiner think you liked them.” Eleven CIA operatives
identified by Ames were executed by the KGB and untold
harm done to our national security due to the failure of
the polygraph and the CIA’s dependence on it.
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While working as an analyst for the Defense Intelligence
Agency, confessed Cuban spy Ana Belen Montes passed
polygraph exams over her sixteen-year career. After
she was caught, she admitted that she had given very
damaging information to Cuban Intelligence. According to
her plea agreement, she agreed to divulge the details of
the information and the FBI decided to give her a
polygraph to validate her information, a move that
former FBI Supervisory Agent Dr. Drew Richardson called
“Unbelievably stupid.”
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In May, 1978, police arrested four Chicago-area men on
charges of murdering a suburban man and his fiancée.
All of the suspects said that they were innocent, but
no real doubt existed about their guilt: After all,
three of them had failed a polygraph exam.
Eventually, a jury convicted the Ford Heights Four, as the
public came to call them, for these brutal slayings, and two
defendants received death sentences. But in 1996, DNA
evidence exonerated all four. All four had spent eighteen
years behind bars, two of them on death row, because of the
failure of the polygraph.
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In 2002, an Ohio court officially cleared Jimmy Williams
after he spent 10 years in prison for the rape of a
ten-year old girl. Because the defense attorney had
stipulated to allowing the results of the polygraph
tests to be admitted into court, the jury had heard that
he failed the polygraph and convicted him. The now
22-year-old accuser admitted that the rape never
happened.
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In 2004, detectives suspected Kevin Fox of the
molestation and murder of his four-year-old daughter. Fox agreed to take a polygraph exam, which he was told
he failed. He was then interrogated and as a result,
he confessed. Fox spent eight months in prison on a
capital murder charge before DNA evidence cleared him.
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CIA Analyst, Larry Wu-tai Chin also
regularly passed
polygraph examinations before he was arrested for
being a spy for China.
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Many of the Iraqis that gave pre-war intelligence on
weapons of mass destruction were given polygraphs to
validate their information. Most all passed and
the information was accepted as valid. It was later
learned this information was not accurate.
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The Washington Times reported an individual in Iraq that
was involved in the weapons program was shown two
pictures. In one, officials cut his image out of a photo
of workers at a weapons factory. He agreed that the
cutout image was of him. They showed him the full photo,
with his image restored. This time, he denied that he
was in the photo. When given a polygraph concerning
that issue, the polygraph did not catch him in this
blatant lie.
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The Washington Post reported that one week before Saddam
Hussein’s sons were killed in a shoot out, an individual
came to military intelligence and told them that he knew
where the sons were hiding. He was given a polygraph
test concerning the information. He failed the
polygraph and was sent on his way. One week later,
the owner of the house that the first individual had
identified came and said that the sons were hiding in
his house. Special Operations personnel took the house
down and killed Hussein’s three sons that had been
hiding in the house for some time.
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Failed Polygraph sends
innocent man to prison for 15 years...Read
PDF here

-
The $1.8 Million Polygraph
Failure…
Read
here
-
Federal Government Admits
Polygraph Can Be Beaten! ...Read
here
-
CVSA Proves Accuracy
Over Polygraph
in Jessica Lunsford Case…
Read
here
Besides the polygraph being responsible for allowing severe
damage to be done to our national security by it’s failure
to identify spies, the Innocence Project has documented
literally hundreds of cases where individuals failed
polygraph tests and then spent many years in prison before
being exonerated. Some of these individuals spent most
of their lives in prison for crimes they did not commit.
Some of these individuals did not make it off death row.
As previously stated, in light of these dramatic failures by
the polygraph, it seems inconceivable that our intelligence
agencies and some law enforcement agencies still rely on
what has been documented and declared by the U.S. Supreme
Court (U.S. v Scheffer) as a very flawed instrument. And,
due to the influence welded by the Department of Defense
Polygraph Institute, much of which is behind-the-scenes,
most of these agencies are not allowed to acquire the
Computer Voice Stress Analyzer® (CVSA®
), even though almost the entire U.S. law enforcement
community has already made the switch and have validated it
as the “Gold Standard” for truth verification. In fact,
there are now more law enforcement agencies utilizing the
CVSA®
than the old polygraph.
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ABOUT CVSA®
Important Notice
The US Government has officially
classified the CVSA®II as a Restricted Crime Control Technology
For more information click on one of the
following links:
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