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I heard a rumour that MPAC is starting to use the Polygraph test....Any truth to this?
tannerthehammer said:I heard a rumour that MPAC is starting to use the Polygraph test....Any truth to this?
Which is why CSIS has been told for years by the oversight committee to get rid of this test for new applicants.Pinto said:I certainly hope this is nothing more than a false rumour, considering that polygraphs don't really work...
The Supreme Court of Canada has rejected the use of polygraph results as evidence in court.
Polygraph tests have failed in the past at capturing (later to be) known spies; Aldrich Ames passed two polygraph tests while spying for the Soviet Union.
No scientific study has been published that offers convincing evidence of the validity of the polygraph test.
Meaningless pseudo-science that looks good in movies but has no real use, IMHO.
Cheers!
Wesley Down Under said:Sure, it can't be used in court, but it is used in investigations with great success. Many businesses (some Armoured Car companies too) also use them. Ya, some people can fool it, but most, like you and I cannot. Thinking we can, and risking a job (or unearthing a dark secret that some may keep) on it is too big of gamble for most.
If you're going to start throwing around Supreme Court rulings regarding something, you should at least have a knowledge as to what the reasoning for the ruling was. This is a good place to start: R vs Beland.Pinto said:The Supreme Court of Canada has rejected the use of polygraph results as evidence in court.
The results of a polygraph examination are not admissible as evidence. The polygraph has no place in the judicial process where it is employed as a tool to determine or to test the credibility of witnesses. The admission of such evidence would offend well established rules of evidence, in particular, the rule against oath‑helping, which prohibits a party from presenting evidence solely for the purpose of bolstering a witness' credibility, the rule against the admission of past or out‑of‑court statements by a witness and the character evidence rule. The polygraph evidence is also inadmis‑ sible as expert evidence. The issue of credibility is an issue well within the experience of judges and juries and one in which no expert evidence is required.
Pinto said:Polygraph tests have failed in the past at capturing (later to be) known spies; Aldrich Ames passed two polygraph tests while spying for the Soviet Union.
Pssttt! Don't say "machine" to a polygrapher, I found out the hard way that it's an instrument.GreyMatter said:The machine...
Xerox brand lie detector
A judge admonished the police in Radnor, Pa., for pretending a
Xerox copy machine was a lie detector. Officials had placed a metal
colander on the head of a suspect and attached the colander to the
copier with metal wires. In the copy machine was a typewritten
message: "He's lying."
Each time investigators received answers they didn't like, they pushed
the copy button and out popped the message, "He's lying." Apparently
convinced the machine was accurate, the suspect confessed.
recceguy said:Oh, sorry. I thought the thread was "Polygraph Humour". My mistake. I'll leave now.
I don't think anyone is saying we should be "relying" on a polygraph for anything. Just because someone is being polygraphed as part of an investigation or application process doesn't mean nothing else is done. It's also already been established that most of us agree it's a tool with potential pitfalls. Unlike "CSI: Hollywood" many of the tools we use are also imperfect but it doesn't mean they aren't useful in any given situation.Cardstonkid said:...
The CIA and the FBI and many regional Canadian police forces rely on polygraphs. This is a very serious mistake. Sociopaths / psychopath's, and trained evaders will not be caught by this machine, BUT trained interrogation officers have a real chance of success. So IF there is reliance on this faulty technology there is a good chance that bad guys are having a good day.
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