Lie Behind The Lie Detector - Maschke, George W & Scalabrini Gino J
Lie Behind The Lie Detector - Maschke, George W & Scalabrini Gino J
Lie Behind The Lie Detector - Maschke, George W & Scalabrini Gino J
by
George W. Maschke
and
Gino J. Scalabrini
AntiPolygraph.org
1st digital edition
Published by AntiPolygraph.org
Acknowledgments............................................................................. ix
Foreword ............................................................................................ x
Introduction...................................................................................... xi
1 On the Validity of Polygraphy.................................................... 1
Polygraph Screening ............................................................. 4
False Positives and the Base Rate Problem .......................... 6
Specific-Issue “Testing” ........................................................ 7
2 On Polygraph Policy ................................................................... 9
Doesn’t the Government Know? ..........................................9
The Joint Security Commission Report............................. 10
The Aldrich H. Ames Espionage Case................................11
The CIA’s Reaction to the Ames Case................................16
The FBI Reacts..................................................................... 16
The Department of Energy Polygraph Program ............... 18
On the DOE False Positive Rate .........................................21
On the DOE False Negative Rate........................................22
The Case of Wen Ho Lee.....................................................23
Other Agencies .................................................................... 25
If They Know Polygraphy Is Unreliable,
Why Do They Rely on It?.............................................. 25
Polygrapher Bias.................................................................. 30
Inflation/Fabrication of Admissions .................................. 31
The Case of David A. Tenenbaum...................................... 32
vi the lie behind the lie detector
5 Grievance Procedures................................................................84
Start Keeping Records......................................................... 84
Write a Letter of Protest .....................................................85
Report Abusive Behavior ....................................................86
File a Freedom of Information Act Request ......................87
Write Your Elected Representatives................................... 91
Investigate Legal Action......................................................92
Post Your Experience on the Internet................................92
Afterword ......................................................................................... 93
Appendix A: Modified General Question “Test”........................... 95
Appendix B: Sample FOIA Request Letter..................................... 97
Appendix C: Minnesota Polygraph Statute.................................... 98
Bibliography................................................................................... 100
Acknowledgments
In this book, you will learn the little-known truth about polygraphy.
You will learn:
• that polygraphy is not science (p. ff.);
• that polygraphy, like phrenology and graphology, is without
scientific validity (p. ff.);
• that our Government’s reliance on unreliable polygraphy
serves to protect spies, undermining—not enhancing—our nation-
al security (p. ff.);
• that polygraph “tests” are actually interrogations (pp. ,
ff.);
• that polygraphy depends on your polygrapher lying to and
deceiving you (p. ff.);
• the simplistic method by which your polygrapher decides
whether you are truthful or deceptive (pp. , );
• that polygraphy is biased against the truthful (p. );
• that polygraph “testing” can be (and has been) easily defeated
through countermeasures (p. )
• how to ensure that you pass your polygraph interrogation
(p. ff);
• how to recognize interrogation tactics and not be fooled by
them (p. );
• what to do if you have been falsely accused (p. ff.);
the lie behind the lie detector
• how you can help put an end to polygraph abuse (p. ff.);
• where to learn more about polygraphy (p. ff.).
(If you face an upcoming polygraph “test” and need to learn what
to expect as quickly as possible, you may wish to proceed directly to
Chapters and [p. ff.] and come back to Chapters , and
later.)
Every year, thousands of law-abiding Americans submit to poly-
graph interrogation. And every year, hundreds—if not thou-
sands—are falsely accused based on their polygraph chart readings
and are routinely denied due process.
Those subjected to polygraph interrogation include employees of,
and applicants for employment with:
• federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, including
the fbi, dea, and U.S. Secret Service (applicants for state and
local law enforcement agencies probably comprise the largest pop-
ulation subjected to pre-employment polygraph screening);
• fire departments (many firefighters and paramedics are sub-
jected to polygraph screening);
• national intelligence agencies, including cia, nsa, dia, and
nro;
• the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps;
• the U.S. Department of Energy.
While the Employee Polygraph Protection Act banned the use
of polygraphy by most of the private sector, our Government ex-
empted itself. Some industries, such as armored car companies,
also received exemptions.
We care deeply about our country and our communities. In writing
this book, our purpose is to help protect the innocent from polygraph
abuse and to help strengthen our collective security by exposing
waste, fraud, and abuse.
We believe that our Government should not, through the polygraph
screening process, lie to and deceive its employees and those seeking
introduction
When we lie, our blood pressure goes up, our heart beats faster, we
breathe more quickly (and our breathing slows once the lie has been
told), and changes take place in our skin moisture. A polygraph charts
these reactions with pens on a moving strip of paper.… The result is
jagged lines that don’t convey a lot to you. But…an examiner can tell
from those mechanical scribbles whether or not you’ve spoken the truth.
—polygrapher Chris Gugas, The Silent Witness,
Whoever undertakes to set himself up as judge in the field of truth and
knowledge is shipwrecked by the laughter of the Gods.
—Albert Einstein
We will expose the trickery upon which polygraphy depends in Chapter
(p. ).
the lie behind the lie detector
We will also discuss “control” questions in fuller detail in Chapter .
on the validity of polygraphy
Polygraph Screening
No one in the Federal Bureau of Investigation is more qualified
than Supervisory Special Agent Dr. Drew C. Richardson to render
an informed opinion on the scientific validity of polygraph screening.
Dr. Richardson earned a doctorate in physiology from George Wash-
ington Medical Center in . The nsa funded his doctoral dis-
sertation research, which related to the use of novel cardiovascular
indices applied to a lie detection task, and he collected his data at
the Department of Defense Polygraph Institute (DoDPI). Dr. Rich-
ardson is a graduate of the DoDPI basic polygraph examiner’s course
and has worked in the Bureau’s now defunct polygraph research
unit.
Speaking before the United States Senate Committee on the Judi-
ciary’s Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts
(Richardson, ), Dr. Richardson testified:
1. [Polygraph screening] is completely without any theoretical
foundation and has absolutely no validity. Although there is
disagreement amongst scientists about the use of polygraph
testing in criminal matters, there is almost universal agreement
that polygraph screening is completely invalid and should be
stopped. As one of my colleagues frequently says, the diagnostic
value of this type of testing is no more than that of astrology
or tea-leaf reading.
The colleague Dr. Richardson refers to here is Professor Furedy. Upon
on the validity of polygraphy
2. If this test had any validity (which it does not), both my own
experience, and published scientific research has proven, that
anyone can be taught to beat this type of polygraph exam in
a few minutes.
3. Because of the nature of this type of examination, it would
normally be expected to produce large numbers of false positive
results (falsely accusing an examinee of lying about some
issue). As a result of the great consequences of doing this
with large numbers of law enforcement and intelligence com-
munity officers, the test has now been manipulated to reduce
false positive results, but consequently has no power to detect
deception in espionage and other national security matters.
Thus, I believe that there is virtually no probability of catching
a spy with the use of polygraph screening techniques. I think
a careful examination of the Aldrich Ames case will reveal
that any shortcomings in the use of the polygraph were not
simply errors on the part of the polygraph examiners involved,
and would not have been eliminated if fbi instead of cia
polygraphers had conducted these examinations. Instead I
believe this is largely a reflection of the complete lack of validity
of this methodology. To the extent that we place any confidence
in the results of polygraph screening, and as a consequence
shortchange traditional security vetting techniques, I think
our national security is severely jeopardized.
4. Because of the theoretical considerations involving false pos-
itive results and because of anecdotal stories told to me by
self-alleged victims of polygraph screening, I believe that the
Bureau is routinely falsely accusing job applicants of drug
usage or drug dealing. Not only is this result irreparably harm-
ing these individuals, but it is likely denying the Bureau access
to qualified and capable employees. Although these individuals
do not have an inalienable right to Federal Government em-
ployment, they do have an inalienable right to just treatment
by their government.
reviewing a draft of this book, Dr. Furedy wrote to clarify that his reference is “to
all forms of the North American [‘Control’ Question ‘Test’] polygraph, and not
just the screening use.”
the lie behind the lie detector
factors being equal, the low base rates of guilt in screening situations
would lead to high false positive rates, even assuming very high
polygraph validity. For example, a typical polygraph screening
situation might involve a base rate of guilt of one guilty person
(e.g., one person engaging in unauthorized disclosure) out of
, employees. Assuming that the polygraph is percent valid,
then the one guilty person would be identified as deceptive but
so would innocent persons. The predictive validity would be
about percent. Even if percent polygraph validity is assumed,
there would still be false positives for every correct detection.
The ota review assumes that a polygraph screening validity rate of
% entails that % of guilty subjects will be detected. But with an
extremely low base rate of guilt, as is the case with espionage, such
an assumption is not warranted. If we allow that not more than one
in a thousand persons examined are actually spies, then an accuracy
rate of at least .% can be achieved by simply ignoring the polygraph
charts altogether and peremptorily declaring all examinees innocent.
Of course, the usefulness of such a “test” for catching spies would
be zero. Yet this is essentially how the remarkably high accuracy
rates claimed for some security screening programs (such as those
of the Departments of Defense and Energy) are achieved! The inter-
pretation of polygraph charts is manipulated so that almost everyone
“passes.”
Specific-Issue “Testing”
As Dr. Richardson testified before the Senate Committee on the
Judiciary, “there is almost universal agreement that polygraph screen-
ing is completely invalid and should be stopped.” However, some
researchers, like Professor Charles R. Honts (an opponent of poly-
graph screening), claim that “control” question “tests” are nonethe-
less highly accurate when used in specific-incident investigations.
(The case of the missing hard drives at Los Alamos National Lab-
oratory in the spring of is an example where polygraphy was
used in the investigation of a specific incident.)
the lie behind the lie detector
You can fool some of the people all the time, and all of the people some
of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time.
—Abraham Lincoln
You can fool too many of the people too much of the time.
—James Thurber
Even if only % looked worse than Ames, this would amount to
, people. It would not be practical to fire or even to investigate
all of these people.
The situation becomes even more problematical when we take
into account the fact that people are tested repeatedly. (Recall
that Ames passed the polygraph not once but twice while engaging
in espionage.) When people take the test repeatedly, the chances
of falsely being found guilty increase. If % of Agency employees
did worse than Ames did on one test, statistically % of the
employees would show a result worse than Ames’ on at least one
test if they were tested every five years over a -year career.
What if we assume that the polygraph is as high as % accurate,
a figure much higher than what scientific studies and experts
have found? This would mean that only % would falsely be
found guilty. These % would have results worse than Ames,
who was determined to be truthful. If only % of those tested
did worse than Ames on one test, statistically over % of employ-
ees would do worse than Ames if tested seven times over a career.…
Clearly, the polygraph does not provide information that would
allow the Agency to correctly identify one or a few spies from
amongst thousands of employees.
From these facts it is clear that any contention that the polygraph
might have been successful in detecting Aldrich Ames—if only
the results had been more carefully scrutinized—is sheer nonsense.
In light of the known facts of the Ames case—even if we make
the most favorable assumptions imaginable regarding the accuracy
of the polygraph—any criterion that would have identified Ames
as suspicious would also have implicated at least half of the other
cia employees over the course of their careers.
The failure of the polygraph in the Ames case came as no surprise
to the scientific experts in the field. As Dr. Charles Honts ()
(a leading supporter of the use of the polygraph in criminal inves-
tigations—but not in screening) stated, “The problems posed by
the inability of national security screening tests to detect deception
are exacerbated by the demonstrated existence of effective coun-
termeasures. Given that polygraph tests used for screening are
likely to be inaccurate with guilty subjects to begin with, the
existence of effective countermeasures virtually assures that a well-
the lie behind the lie detector
was the examiner’s opinion that the polygraph results were incon-
clusive as to those questions. The second question was rephrased
to cover a broader range of activities. LEE was then asked the
follow [sic] two questions:
Q: Have you ever given any of those two codes to an unauthorized
person?
A: No.
Q: Have you ever provided W- information to any unauthorized
person?
A: No.
The polygraph examiner concluded that LEE’s answers to these
questions were deceptive.
However, it has subsequently been reported that the details about
the W- warhead provided by the “walk-in” could not have been
stolen from Los Alamos (if indeed they were stolen at all). Wen Ho
Lee could not have provided the W- information. The fbi thor-
oughly botched this espionage investigation, which at the time of
writing (September ) is on-going.
Other Agencies
Apart from cia, nsa, fbi, and the Departments of Defense and
Energy, other federal agencies such as the U.S. Secret Service, dea,
the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Capitol Police, and the Food
and Drug Administration also rely on polygraphy. In addition, many
state and local law enforcement agencies and fire departments use
polygraphy to screen applicants and to interrogate their current
employees in internal affairs investigations.
est hint of deception, will often make admissions that they might
not otherwise make. Those innocent persons who are falsely accused
in the process are considered “acceptable losses.”
In an article on doe’s decision to adopt polygraph screening (Park,
), physicist Robert L. Park, writes:
The Oval Office tapes captured President Richard M. Nixon
explaining why he had ordered polygraph screening for the White
House staff: “Listen, I don’t know anything about polygraphs
and I don’t know how accurate they are, but I know they’ll scare
the hell out of people.”
In , the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment (ota)
reported:
It appears that nsa (and possibly cia) use the polygraph not to
determine deception or truthfulness per se, but as a technique of
interrogation to encourage admissions. nsa has stated that the
agency “does not use the ‘truth v. deceptive’ concept of polygraph
examinations commonly used in criminal cases. Rather, the poly-
graph examination results that are most important to nsa security
adjudicators are the data provided during the pretest or posttest
phase of the examination”… (Scientific Validity of Polygraph Test-
ing, p. )
On May , the nsa wrote to the White House, “over % of
the information the nsa develops on individuals who do not meet
federal security guidelines is derived via [voluntary admissions from]
the polygraph process.” (National Security Agency, ) And as
previously noted (p. ), the Joint Security Commission acknowl-
edged in its report that many polygraph proponents “contend
that as long as the polygraph elicits admissions to screen out unsuit-
able applicants and actual security risks, questions about the poly-
graph’s validity remain academic.”
After Supervisory Special Agent Drew C. Richardson’s damning
Senate testimony on polygraph validity, Senator Charles E. Grassley
on polygraph policy
Dr. Kerr, who came to the fbi laboratory division without a background in
forensic science, served as director of Los Alamos National Laboratory from
‒.
the lie behind the lie detector
Polygrapher Bias
Special Agent H.L. Byford, an fbi polygrapher, wrote in an e-mail
exchange with the webmaster of NoPolygraph.com (Byford, ):
It only gets tight, when there are indications of drug usage above
the guidelines or drug dealing. I mean, if someone has smoked
marijuana times, he’s done it times. Don’t you agree? Those
who have any doubts about how many times they used are going
on polygraph policy
to fail. Those who are certain that they only tried it once or three
times or five or whatever, will pass.…I got to tell you though, if I
was running the show, there would be no one in the fbi that ever
used illegal drugs!
By SA Byford’s own admission, an fbi applicant who reports that
he smoked marijuana say, about eight times (well within the Bureau’s
limit of times), but cannot precisely recall the number of times,
is going to “fail.”
Inflation/Fabrication of Admissions
Unfortunately, polygraphers not infrequently inflate or fabricate
admissions. This is especially the case when the polygrapher believes
that the charts indicate deception, or is simply biased against the
subject.
The case of Dr. Wen Ho Lee provides a striking example of admis-
sions inflation. Special Agent Lowe, at para. of his affidavit in
support of the fbi’s request for a warrant to search Dr. Lee’s home
(Lowe, ), swore that after determining that Lee had shown
deception on two questions
[t]he polygraph examiner then gave LEE an opportunity to discuss
his answers further. During the discussion, LEE volunteered the
following new information that he had not revealed in the prior
interviews with the FBI or DOE. LEE said that during his trip to
the PRC in , he was approached by WEI SHEN LI, who [sic]
LEE knew to be involved in the PRC’s Nuclear Program. LI came
to see LEE, and asked if LEE could assist him in solving a problem
he (LI) was having. LEE agreed. LEE illustrated what he had pro-
vided to LI in the form of an equation to assist LI in solving his
problem. The polygrapher’s report states that LEE said that this
equation was the same used in two classified codes. LEE admitted
that his assistance to LI could have been used easily for nuclear
weapons development.
Dr. Lee, who had agreed to be polygraphed without the benefit of
legal counsel, made the mistake of trying to explain to his fbi polyg-
the lie behind the lie detector
Predetermined Outcomes
Government officials have also used polygraph “testing” as a pretext
for adverse action in the absence of evidence. Take the case of
former cia lawyer Adam J. Ciralsky, an orthodox Jew who came
under suspicion of having provided classified information to an
Israeli national. In April , National Public Radio reported (Na-
tional Public Radio, ):
Ciralsky was interrogated by cia investigators on numerous occa-
sions and accused of a lack of candor for not disclosing that his
chaperone on a high school trip to Israel at age , with whom he
had not spoken in years, was an Israeli citizen. He was ordered to
take polygraph examinations, which cia officials say he failed.
His lawyers believe that internal cia memos show the test was
rigged. In one, an unidentified cia official writes, “Tenet (meaning
the cia director) says this guy is out of here because of his lack of
candor…subject is scheduled for a poly… Once that’s over, it
looks like we’ll be waving goodbye to our friend.”…
According to the internal memo, Director of Central Intelligence
George J. Tenet wanted Mr. Ciralsky fired. Can there be any doubt
about what the result of Mr. Ciralsky’s polygraph “test” would be?
He “failed,” and was eventually fired in late . Yet the cia has
produced no evidence that Mr. Ciralsky provided any classified
information to any unauthorized person or violated any security
regulation.
A Modest Proposal
Policymakers who mandate polygraph “testing” for others generally
support their decisions on the ground that the jobs of those being
on polygraph policy
Summary
Thus far, we have seen that the “Control” Question “Test” lacks
scientific “control” and is not a standardizable, specifiable “test.”
the lie behind the lie detector
Like the Wizard of Oz, who used deception to inspire fear, polyg-
raphers, too, depend on trickery to instill fear in their subjects. In
this chapter, we will expose the little tricks used by the little men
behind the polygraph curtain.
Polygraph “tests” have three distinct phases:
1. the “pre-test” interview and “stim test”;
2. the “in-test” phase (polygraph exam);
3. the “post-test” interrogation (when applicable).
We will discuss all three phases, exposing the deception on which
polygraphy depends.
the lie behind the lie detector
the source of the noise, or to flee the area, sensing danger to your
well being. Regardless of the choice you make, your body auto-
matically adjusts itself to meet the needs of the situation; your
heart may beat faster, your breathing may change and you may
break out in a cold sweat.
When you were growing up, if you are like most people, you
were raised to know the difference between right and wrong.
Quite probably, all of the adults you came in contact with--your
parents, grandparents, relatives, teachers, church officials--taught
you that lying, cheating, and stealing were wrong. Ever since you
were a young child, you have been programmed to know that
lying is wrong. Think about the first time you lied and got caught.
Remember how your body felt during that confrontation. Your
heart may have been racing or you may have been sweating.
However, the responses were automatic; your body adjusted to
the stress of the situation.
People are not always % honest. Sometimes it is kinder and
more socially acceptable to lie than to be honest - such as telling
someone you like their clothes when you really think the clothes
are awful. It is important for you to understand that even though
a lie might be socially acceptable or only a small lie, or a lie by
omission, your body still responds. The recording on the polygraph
will show only the physiological responses. It cannot know what
kind of lie you are telling. Therefore, it is extremely important
that you be totally honest… (pp. ‒)
The above explanation is carefully designed to instill fear. But like the
Wizard of Oz, the polygrapher is making believe. His explanation is
deliberately false and misleading: telling a lie may or may not result
in physiological changes measurable by the polygraph. When the
polygrapher says, “It is important for you to understand that even
though a lie might be socially acceptable or only a small lie, or a lie
by omission, your body still responds,” he really means, “It is im-
portant for me that you believe this to be true.”
Fear is an essential element of all polygraph “tests.” In its
assessment of the Ames case, the U.S. Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence reports, “A former polygrapher noted that without prop-
er preparation, a subject has no fear of detection and, without fear
the lie behind the lie detector
Question Types
“Control” Question “Tests” consist of three distinct kinds of ques-
tions: relevant, irrelevant, and “control” questions.
Relevant Questions
These questions have directly to do with the matter at hand. In
specific issue “tests,” they deal directly with the crime under investi-
gation. If, for example, you are suspected of leaking an embarrassing
memo, then the relevant questions asked during your polygraph
examination could well be:
1. Do you suspect someone of leaking that memo?
2. Do you know who leaked that memo?
3. Did you leak that memo?
With polygraph screening, the relevant questions are more general.
Let us take the fbi’s polygraph screening program as an example.
the lie behind the lie detector
“Control” Questions
These questions are more general, and come in two distinct varieties:
“probable-lie” and “directed-lie.” The probable-lie format is by far
the lie behind the lie detector
In addition, if, like most people, you initially admit to having told
some white lies, your polygrapher may rephrase the question as:
20. Have you ever lied about anything serious?
Don’t be fooled. It’s still a control question. Your polygrapher expects
that your denial will still be a lie, or that you will at least feel anxiety
over whether your denial is completely truthful. Similarly, if your
polygrapher rephrases, “Did you ever cheat in school?” to “Did you
ever cheat in college?” it’s still a “control” question.
lying and that you do not respond when you are telling
the truth.
First I will review those questions used to determine if
you are capable of responding when you lie. I already
know the answer to these questions because we all have
done these things at one time or another. When I ask the
question I want you to think of an occasion when you
did this--don’t tell me about it, just think of a specific
time. Then lie to me and say no.
Before each question preface it with--we have all (e.g.
violated traffic laws)--you have haven’t you (they should
answer yes)--of course. Now think of a specific incident
(don’t tell me). When I ask you ‘Did you ever violate a
traffic law’ I want you to lie to me and say “NO.” When I
ask you this question on the test--I want you to think of
that incident when you lie to me.
Although directed-lie “control” questions are less devious than
probable-lie “controls,” the explanation provided to the subject is
nonetheless false and misleading:
1. “…[W]hen you lie your body responds and I will be able to
see the response, just as I did during the demonstration.”
Your body may or may not produce physiological responses mea-
surable by the polygraph when you lie.
2. “For various reasons (sick, tired, using some medication) some
people lose their capability to respond.”
If you were to “lose [your] capability to respond” physiologically,
you would have such severe health problems as would preclude
you from sitting for a polygraph exam. If you are physically
capable of sitting down for a polygraph “test,” your body is “ca-
pable” of responding physiologically.
the lie behind the lie detector
9. Did you ever say anything in anger that you later regretted?
10. Did you ever brag about yourself to impress others?
Irrelevant Questions
Irrelevant questions are concerned with nothing of importance. In
both probable-lie and directed-lie “tests,” the subject is instructed
to answer these questions truthfully. DoDPI teaches polygraphers
to explain irrelevant questions thus (Dollins, ):
…Explain and review the irrelevant questions. Use the following
explanation example as a guideline.
The final diagnostic questions you may hear are ones you
will answer truthfully so that I can see how you are re-
sponding when you tell the truth. It will be obvious that
you are telling the truth.…
The rationale provided to the subject is a lie. The purpose of the
irrelevant questions is not so that your polygrapher “can see how
you are responding when you tell the truth.” In both probable- and
directed-lie “control” question “tests,” the irrelevant questions are
not scored at all!
Irrelevant questions commonly appear at the beginning of a poly-
graph question series (usually the first two questions) to soak up
the initial stress of the polygraph interrogation. As with the sacrifice
relevant question, polygraphers expect that even truthful subjects
may react to the first questions in a series merely because they are
first. Irrelevant questions are also used as buffers between various
scored questions (that is, relevant and “control” questions).
Common irrelevant questions include:
1. Are you now in (name of the state in which you are located)?
2. Is today (today’s date)?
3. Do you sometimes drink water?
4. Are you sometimes called (your name)?
polygraphy exposed
Just Say No
The surest approach to avoid a false positive outcome is to refuse to
submit to polygraph interrogation. However, this approach may
have serious adverse consequences. If you refuse to submit to a
polygraph screening interrogation, you may be denied employment,
and if already employed, you may lose your job.
Barland, Gordon H. Unpublished manuscript. Department of Defense
Polygraph Institute, . Cited in London & Krapohl, .
the lie behind the lie detector
If, however, you stand accused of a crime, “just say no!” You have
little to gain and much to lose: if you “pass,” the police may well
continue to suspect you regardless; if you “fail,” it will only confirm
their suspicions. As John A. Larson, a pioneer of polygraphic lie
detection lamented:
I originally hoped that instrumental lie detection would become
a legitimate part of professional police science. It is little more
than a racket. The lie detector, as used in many places, is nothing
more than a psychological third-degree aimed at extorting confes-
sions as the old physical beatings were. At times I’m sorry I ever
had any part in its development.
In refusing to submit to polygraphic interrogation, you may ad-
ditionally use the “complete honesty” approach described below.
Complete Honesty
A second approach is to be completely honest with your polygrapher.
Tell him that you know the lie behind the lie detector. Explain to
him that you understand that the true purpose of the “stim test” is
to dupe you into believing in the validity of polygraphic lie detection.
Tell him that you understand the trickery behind “control” question
“tests”—whether probable- or directed-lie. Explain that you under-
stand the difference between “control,” relevant, and irrelevant ques-
tions and that you have studied and know how to employ polygraph
countermeasures. Give him a printout of this book to prove it in a
way that he will not be able to later deny. Explain to him that you
are not a suitable candidate for polygraphic interrogation, and request
that your polygraph “testing” be waived.
One of the authors of this book knows of a Department of Defense
employee whose polygraph screening was waived when he explained
6
Cited in J.H. Skolnick, “Scientific Theory and Scientific Evidence: An
Analysis of Lie Detection,” The Yale Law Journal, Vol. ⁽⁾, pp. , .
Cited in Lykken () at pp. ‒.
polygraph countermeasures
The Commission’s report is available on-line at:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/library/moynihan/index.html
the lie behind the lie detector
Polygraph Countermeasures:
How to Pass a Polygraph “Test”
(First, if you haven’t read Chapter , go back to page and read it
carefully.)
The key to “passing” a polygraph “test”—that is, to producing a
“truthful” chart—is to produce stronger physiological responses
when answering the “control” questions than when answering the
relevant questions.
We Americans have a thriving folklore about how to beat a poly-
graph “test.” You may have heard that you can pass by taking drugs
such as meprobamate, by rubbing antiperspirant on your fingertips,
or through meditation or hypnosis, or by wiggling your toes, or
flexing your arms, or coughing. Forget these. They are prescriptions
for failure.
Perhaps the most widely-known countermeasure is the old tack-
in-the-shoe. While this countermeasure (if properly applied) can
be effective, polygraphers have developed counter-countermeasures
for it (the simplest being to simply make the subject remove his
shoes).
Read on to learn how to pass your polygraph interrogation.
Make No Admissions
Rule number one is to make no admissions! While the lie detector
cannot detect lies (it only records physiological responses), any ad-
missions you make will be duly noted by your polygrapher. Admis-
sions that may seem minor to you can be spun out of all proportion
by your polygrapher. He sees admissions as trophies. Don’t give
him any.
The only exceptions to this rule are that, during the “pre-test”
interview, you may make minor admissions regarding the “control”
questions only, such as stealing candy when you were a child, or
lying to your parents, or taking pens home from work. But go no
further.
In addition, if you are submitting to a directed-lie “control” ques-
tion “test” such as the tes format used by the Departments of
Defense and Energy, you should not stubbornly deny having ever
committed one of the common human failings used in the directed-
lie “control” questions such as violating a traffic law, or having told
a lie, even once in your life, etc. (See p. for a list of common
directed-lie “control” questions.)
Mind Games
Your polygrapher/interrogator may play little games with you to
establish his dominance. Upon entering the polygraph room, you
should find that it is skillfully orchestrated for interviewing and
interrogation. The room will be sparsely furnished, with a table for
the polygraph instrument, a chair for the polygrapher, a chair for
you to sit in while connected to the polygraph instrument, and,
quite possibly, a third chair for you to sit in during the “pre-test”
phase. Your chair for the “pre-test” interview will in all likelihood
be stationary, while your polygrapher’s chair will probably be wheeled
for his ease of movement, placing you at a psychological disadvantage.
Upon entering the room, you may find that the chair you are to
sit in is facing the wrong direction or in the wrong location. By
directing you to move the chair, your polygrapher may subtly dem-
onstrate that he is in control.
Your polygrapher may instruct you to remove your coat and hand
it to him, whereupon he will remove it from the room. He does this
to make you feel as though you are being psychologically “stripped.”
And by taking your coat out of the room, he wants you to feel that
he now controls a piece of you.
Do not be intimidated by your polygrapher’s little mind games.
Play along. Let your polygrapher think that he is in control.
argument with him about the validity of this voodoo science! Polyg-
raphy is his profession, and if you question it, he will take offense
(and be more likely to conclude that you are deceptive).
If you’ve been polygraphed before, you can mention it. But don’t
tell your polygrapher that you’ve read this book or that you’ve
done research on the Internet and visited such websites as AntiPoly-
graph.org, NoPolygraph.com, and StopPolygraph.com! If you admit
to having researched polygraphy, your polygrapher will become
suspicious. His next questions may well be, “Why have you educated
yourself so much about polygraphs? Do you have something to fear
from them?” Instead, provide a general answer to his question about
what you know about polygraphy, such as:
• I heard on T.V. that they’re almost always accurate when
used by a skilled examiner. Is that right?
• A friend of mine in law enforcement said not to worry, just
go in and tell the truth, and you’ll have no problem!
• I understand that polygraphs are a lot more accurate than
those voice stress analyzers. (Polygraphers generally hold the com-
peting voodoo science of Computerized Voice Stress Analysis
[cvsa] in utter contempt.)
• I read in the paper that the polygraph has been constantly
improving with time, and that the latest computerized polygraphs
are very reliable.
• When I was in grade school, a polygraph examiner came
and gave a demonstration to my class and showed us how the test
is done using my teacher as a volunteer. She lied about a card she
had picked from a deck, and the polygraph examiner caught her
lie and was even able to figure out exactly which card she had
picked!
• I heard it caught O.J. in a lie! (Virtually no one in the poly-
graph community believes O.J. Simpson to be innocent of the
murder of his ex-wife, Nicole.)
the lie behind the lie detector
Chart-Recording Manipulations
We will discuss chart recording manipulations to control both the
breathing and cardio channels of the polygraph instrument. But
before applying chart-recording manipulations, it is essential that
you be able to distinguish “control” questions from relevant ques-
tions. (We discussed “control” questions in Chapter at pages ‒.)
Review these pages if necessary. Note that in directed-lie formats
such as the tes, your polygrapher will identify the “control” questions
for you: they are the ones which he will instruct you to answer
falsely.
Breathing Countermeasures
Your polygrapher will attach the polygraph’s electrodes to your
ring and index fingers, the pressure cuff to your arm, and place one
pneumograph tube around your chest and the other around your
polygraph countermeasures
Cardio Countermeasures
In addition to the breathing countermeasures described above, you
can enhance your cardio (heart rate and blood pressure) response
to the “control” questions with the following, additional counter-
measures:
polygraph countermeasures
An Anecdote
During the Department of Energy’s public hearings on polygraph
policy (U.S. Department of Energy, b), Dr. Gordon H. Barland,
who is in charge of countermeasures training at DoDPI, attempted
to convince his audience of scientists and engineers that nowadays,
polygraphers are able to detect countermeasures such as those we’ve
discussed in this book:
We now are training our examiners how to detect people who are
trying to manipulate their results, and we have learned a lot about
how people go about doing that.
Earlier this year we published a case where Doug Williams had
given information to a person on how to beat the polygraph, but
he was not successful.
But Dr. Barland forgot to mention that the person “was not success-
ful” because he admitted to having employed polygraph counter-
measures! Had he not made this admission, he would have “passed.”
DoDPI itself uses Doug Williams’ manual, “How to Sting the
Polygraph” in its countermeasures training. (Mr. Williams has grant-
ed DoDPI permission to make copies free of charge.) No one at
DoDPI has come up with a reliable method for detecting these
countermeasures, and Dr. Barland’s misleading statement before
an audience of top-notch atomic scientists and engineers is testimony
to the polygraph community’s consternation over polygraph coun-
termeasures.
Doug Williams is a former police polygrapher who has been teaching people
how to produce “truthful” polygraph charts for more than twenty years. The
method he teaches in his tutorial, “How to Sting the Polygraph” (Williams, )
is consistent with what you’ve read in this book.
London & Krapohl, .
polygraph countermeasures
Keep Notes!
As soon as your polygraph interrogation is over, take detailed notes
for your personal records. You might take a portable tape recorder
with you for this purpose and leave it in your car, briefcase, or
purse. Often, you will not be told whether you passed or failed
before you leave. If you have employed the methods described in
this book, you should have handily passed. But you may have made
a mistake. Or your polygrapher may have decided even before asking
his first question that you are not going to pass. In the event you
are later told you failed or that your results were inconclusive, your
contemporaneous notes will be of great importance.
chapter five
Grievance Procedures
US DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
950 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NW, SUITE 4706
WASHINGTON DC 20530-0001
Keep in mind that the foia applies only to federal agencies. If your
polygraph was with a state or local agency, check your local laws.
Each state has its own public access laws that should be consulted.
foia requests must be in writing (once again, send everything
certified mail, return receipt). See Appendix B for a sample foia
request. Although the foia mandates that a government agency
must make a determination on a request within working days of
receipt (which may be extended by an additional working days),
many agencies routinely fail to comply with the requirements of
the foia. Agencies frequently take months or even years to make a
determination on requests for materials regarding polygraph exam-
inations. Sometimes, agencies never respond at all. You may receive
the lie behind the lie detector
Department of Energy
http://www.hr.doe.gov/es/foia.htm
http://www.senate.gov
Also, write Senator Charles Grassley and the members of the Senate
Committee on the Judiciary’s Subcommittee on Administrative
Oversight and the Courts. Senator Grassley is the chairman of this
subcommittee, which is responsible for the oversight of federal law
enforcement agencies, and he has expressed interest in this issue.
Mailing addresses for members of this subcommittee may be found
at:
http://www.senate.gov/~judiciary/aoctest.htm
[name]
[address]
[telephone number]
Freedom of Information Act Request
[agency name]
[agency address]
rates were high (% and % respectively). Most of the re-
spondents believed that polygraphic lie detection is not the-
oretically sound, claims of high validity for these procedures
cannot be sustained, the lie test can be beaten by easily learned
countermeasures, and polygraph test results should not be
admitted into evidence in courts of law.
The entire article may be downloaded in Adobe Acrobat (pdf)
format ( mb) at:
http://www.nopolygraph.com/validity.pdf
Reid, John E. and Fred E. Inbau. () Truth and Deception: The
Polygraph (“Lie-Detector”) Technique. Baltimore: Williams &
Wilkins Co., .
In their section on “deception responses” (p. ff.), the authors
provide details on the breathing responses described in this book,
along with illustrations of pneumograph tracings.
Richardson, Drew Campbell. () Opening Statement before the
U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary’s Subcommittee on Ad-
ministrative Oversight and the Courts, September . Avail-
able on-line at:
http://www.nopolygraph.com/drewtest.htm
Dr. Richardson of the FBI laboratory division warned the Sub-
committee that polygraph screening “is completely without any
theoretical foundation and has absolutely no validity.” His warn-
ing has gone unheeded.
Saxe, Leonard. () “Lying: Thoughts of an Applied Social Psy-
chologist.” American Psychologist, Vol. (), No. , pp.
‒.
the lie behind the lie detector
On-line Resources
American Polygraph Association
Back issues of the apa quarterly Polygraph and other apa publi-
cations may be ordered from this site:
http://www.polygraph.org
AntiPolygraph.org
AntiPolygraph.org, the publisher of this book, is dedicated to
abolishing polygraphy. Find out how you can help. Updated
versions of The Lie Behind the Lie Detector will be made available
here:
http://antipolygraph.org
NoPolygraph.com
This site provides a wealth of information on polygraph screen-
ing, especially as used by the fbi, and has an active message
board where visitors may post questions or share their experi-
ences. Updated versions of The Lie Behind the Lie Detector will
also be made available here:
http://www.nopolygraph.com
Polygraph for Screening
This web page maintained by Professor Charles R. Honts of
Boise State University provides studies on polygraph screening
in Adobe Acrobat (pdf) format:
http://truth.boisestate.edu/raredocuments/screening.html
Sting Publications
Doug Williams’ manual, “How to Sting the Polygraph” may be
ordered via this website. Mr. Williams also provides a frequently
asked questions list and testimonials from his customers:
http://www.polygraph.com
StopPolygraph.com
Provides documentation of polygraph abuse, especially by the
U.S. Secret Service. Updated versions of The Lie Behind the Lie
Detector will also be made available here:
http://www.stoppolygraph.com
ttt
About this book
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