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Polygraph used for Christine Ford known to give incorrect results.
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In accordance with industry accepted best practices we ask that users limit their copy / paste of copyrighted material to the relevant portions of the article you wish to discuss and no more than 50% of the source material, provide a link back to the original article and provide your original comments / criticism in your post with the article.
[quote:Coming Soon:MV8zOTA5NjcwXzcwNDk5Nzg4Xzg2NzA1N0Mx] [quote:TheEndBeautifulFriend:MV8zOTA5NjcwXzcwNDk5NzQxXzUzMTlBMDY5] Polygraphs are legally inadmissable in court anyway because they're not accurate enough. Lie detectors DO NOT work on psychopaths which means many liberals could spin lies to the outer planets and still pass a lie detector with flying colors. Normally, when a person lies their conscience automatically physically causes a brief, tiny little glitch in the nervous system, which the machine picks up. But psychopaths, by definition, have no conscience so the machine doesn't detect anything, so it simply won't work on an actual monster. [/quote] Yes we know that people can manipulate lie detectors and they don't work well with sociopaths. But here we have one that will take a failed test and make it seem the person passed. [/quote]
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The polygraph examiner stated that he used Lafayette LX4000 software but did not specify what hardware. Assuming it was also the Lafayette LX4000 hardware, there are problems with that model.
[
link to www.mcclatchydc.com (secure)
]
The Air Force’s Office of Special Investigations noticed a problem as early as 2002, the year the LX4000 hit the market. A spokeswoman said her law enforcement agency was concerned that it could change the outcome of tests, and sought out Lafayette officials.
David Reisinger, a veteran federal polygrapher, said he first witnessed a problem with the LX4000 in 2005... Reisinger pressed the company to look into it because he saw it could change the outcome of a test depending on the setting.
He notified his supervisors, and Lafayette pledged to fix it. Years and dozens of examples later, the company still hadn’t, he said.
“I felt the manufacturer had given us the runaround and was never completely straightforward about what was going on,” Reisinger said. “I didn’t think we could trust them anymore.”
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