Just How Good Was That Ford Polygraph?

By: - September 27, 2018

The nation just watched Judge Brett Kavanaugh and Dr. Christine Blasey Ford testify about Dr. Ford’s allegations that Judge Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her 36 years ago. Part of Blasey Ford’s supporting evidence for her claim is that she took and passed a polygraph test on August 7th of this year. How does it compare with other polygraphs, and what can it tell us?

Not a Science

There is a reason polygraphs are not admissible in court. They are unreliable and subjective. Their effectiveness depends on a number of factors, including the overall state of mind of the test subject, the identity and background of the interviewer, and the types of questions. The experience of the interviewer and the interviewer’s understanding of the test subject play an outsized role in obtaining and interpreting the results.

In the later years of the Reagan administration, Secretary of State George Schultz threatened to resign rather than take a polygraph. He rejected congressional attempts to require them at the State Department. His objection, he said in congressional testimony, was that they were not reliable. “If they were reliable,” Schultz said to somewhat nervous chuckles, “the wife of every member of Congress would have one.” That ended that policy proposal.

George Schultz polygraph
Former Secretary of State George Schultz. (Credit: Wikimedia Commons/USG)

It is inaccurate to call polygraphs “lie detectors.” They don’t detect lies, they detect stress while telling a lie. If a person feels no stress while telling a lie, the machine will not detect it.

The polygraph looks scientific, because it measures bodily (galvanic) responses while the test subject is talking. The machine is hooked up to various points on the body, to measure heart rate, blood pressure, perspiration, and breathing. The theory is that if a subject believes you can tell she is lying, she will feel stress at the thought of being caught.

Interpreting the test is also subjective. According to William Iacono, a polygraph expert quoted in The Washington Post, senior executives in intelligence agencies almost never fail polygraphs, but 30 to 40 percent of new applicants do. That is not just because the executives lead totally exemplary lives, it’s also because no polygraphist wants to accuse the CIA Director or Deputy of lying.

Errors: From False Positives to Sociopaths

Most people feel stress when they fear that a lie may be exposed. Ethical people feel stress when they lie. A large minority of people feel stress when they know someone thinks they are lying, even if they are telling the truth. Those people generate false positives. Unfortunately for them, they can even get trapped in a cycle where they anticipate the question, and generate an increased stress response each time they answer it.

Polygraph tests are manna from Heaven for subjects with certain psychological disorders. They have nearly no effect on sociopaths, psychopaths, or people with borderline personality disorder. Anyone who is not overly burdened with a conscience or empathy has no trouble lying, and therefore no trouble passing a lie detector. But they also are easy to pass when the test subject feels no connection with or respect for the test administrator.

The Soviet Informant

Old Sovietologists remember a case from the 1970s that illustrates the importance of the polygraph administrator, or polygraphist. The CIA had recruited a mole within the Soviet military, who was passing them sensitive information.  Each time the U.S. government conducted an operation on the basis of the information; however, it proved faulty.

Supervisors in both Washington and at the relevant diplomatic mission suspected that the mole was a double agent, purposely passing us false information. He was given several polygraphs, and passed them all quite easily. They even brought him to Washington to have him tested with their best equipment and by their best polygraphists. He passed them all easily, but his information still seemed suspect.

Washington requested a background and psychological workup on the agent. He was from one of the Central Asian republics, and was Muslim. Washington found a Muslim polygraph administrator, and sent him overseas to interview the agent. He introduced himself to the subject, they discussed their mutual faith and background, and then he administered the polygraph.

The Soviet agent failed the polygraph spectacularly. He had no trouble lying to Americans who also were infidels; they were unworthy of his respect on both counts. But he felt stress when lying to his coreligionist, to whom he felt some level of duty.

It’s Not Just the Polygraph, It’s the Questions and the Administrator

The real key to an effective polygraph is understanding the background and mindset of the subject. An effective polygraphist will administer a drug screen and a psychological screening, in addition to obtaining a comprehensive biographical file. Dr. Ford’s polygraphist, Jeremiah Hanafin, told CBS News that he interviewed her at length before the test. This explains her rather cryptic remark that the test took a long time and seemed to cover her life history.

It also explains the apparent contradiction between that statement and the test results released by her attorneys, which showed only two short, very general questions. She was referring to the general biographical interview, and the test results showed only the two actual questions that were administered in her polygraph. During the biographical interview, Hanafin would have been monitoring her responses to determine a baseline against which to measure her responses.

As a side note, Dr. Ford said she cried a lot during that interview. It is difficult to see how Hanafin could calculate an accurate baseline measurement while she was crying. The effect on her perspiration, blood pressure, heart rate and breathing would reflect stress, just as guilt or fear about lying does.

What Hanafin did not do, according to any public comments about the process, was administer either a drug screen or a psychological profile. Many medications will dampen the stress responses picked up by the polygraph. Xanax and other anxiety medications, and blood pressure medications, are especially effective in masking stress responses.

The Psychological Screen

Anyone truly interested in obtaining a reliable result would not pick the polygrapher without first conducting a psychological screen. That would have suggested what type of polygrapher to recruit. It also would have informed the polygrapher what types of questions to ask to provoke stress responses and to induce baseline “truth-telling” responses.

All we know for sure about Dr. Ford’s general ideological background is that she went to one of the women’s marches in 2017. Although it was billed as a march for science, it was an overtly political, anti-Trump event. We also know that she considers herself a survivor of a sexual assault; that forms a significant part of her identity.

Assume for a moment that Ford is generally Leftist in her ideology, and that she feels a closer kinship with Leftist or liberal women than she does with, say, white males who are retired law enforcement officers, like Jeremiah Hanafin.  Would her test responses have been different if her polygrapher had been female?

What if Ford had been interviewed by a Leftist woman who shared her political feelings? What if it had been a woman who had experienced sexual harassment or a sexual assault, or survived an actual rape? We would have far more confidence in the reliability of the results.

Like computer programming, polygraph output is only as reliable as the data entered. Unfortunately, this polygraph was paid for by her attorneys, and seems to have been designed to ensure a negative response. It is quite useful as a public relations tool, but is unreliable as a measure of the truth.

  • RSS WND

    • WATCH: 'Red state people are more likely to murder you': RFK Jr. comments spark backlash
      (FOX NEWS) -- Republicans are hammering independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over a resurfaced video where he says individuals in red states are more likely to commit heinous crimes and "murder you." In a resurfaced video, posted by former President Donald Trump's MAGA War Room X account Wednesday, RFK Jr. is seen making… […]
    • 'Lord of the Flies': Today's campus crazies
      By Ed Thompson Seventy years ago, William Golding wrote "Lord of the Flies," a brutal novel that sent shivers down our collective spines by exposing the raw hate and brutality hiding in the dark corners of the our minds. Showing that such evil could be present in a group of young school-age children made the… […]
    • For Dems, the 'October Surprise' came in 2023
      On Oct. 7, 2023, to be precise. That was the day on which the White House understood it could not control all the would-be victims in its shaky intersectional coalition. That was the day the crescent "C" on the COEXIST bumper sticker decided to wage unholy war on the Star of David "X," the day… […]
    • WATCH: Prince William gives rare Kate Middleton health update as princess battles cancer
      (FOX NEWS) -- Prince William has given a rare update on his wife, Princess Kate Middleton, who is battling cancer. On Tuesday, the Prince of Wales made a stop at James’ Place Newcastle in England, where he was greeted by well-wishers. His wife has postponed public-facing duties while receiving treatment. Prince William gives an update… […]
    • Pro-Hamas protests: A sinister national campaign
      The Western Roman Empire had a long reign. Its death spiral began in 200 B.C. and by the early Middle Ages had been completed – the result of barbarian invasions and the movements of Germanic peoples. Sadly for the Romans, by the time they realized the barbarians were at their gate, it was too late… […]
    • What Putin told Tucker that our 'leaders' ignore
      The United States of America has an enemies list. We are waging proxy wars against Russia and indirectly against the best interest of Israel. Lumping those two nations on an enemies list is a task that requires evil intent or stupidity, or both. But there it is. Go figure. Our government's enemies list is topped… […]
    • Trusting China invites another pandemic
      It's one thing to die from natural causes. Worse, to die from a disease leaked by Chinese scientists in a lab and allowed to wipe out millions. That is now almost certainly the explanation for the origins of COVID-19. And even worse? U.S. taxpayers paid for it. The U.S. government hasn't learned a thing. Disease… […]
    • Mom whose toddler heard 'monsters' in the wall makes terrifying discovery
      (BBC NEWS) -- When three-year-old Saylor Class began complaining of monsters in her bedroom, her parents thought it was just a figment of a child's overactive imagination. But then a beekeeper discovered tens of thousands of honeybees above the girl's bedroom. A girl complained to her parents for months that there were monsters in her… […]
    • Why privileged students are LARPing as terrorists
      America's college campuses are in a state of complete meltdown – at least in blue states, where administrators cater to the whims of these America-hating dolts. But why are these students – the most privileged people in literally world history – LARPing as terrorists and stanning for murderous groups like Hamas, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad… […]
    • Blinken meets with genocide perpetrator … but doesn't use 'G' word
      When Secretary of State Antony Blinken held a press conference last week to announce that the State Department was releasing its 2023 country reports on human rights practices, he said the People's Republic of China was engaging in genocide in Xinjiang Province. "The report documents atrocities reminiscent of humanity's darkest moments," Blinken said. "In Sudan,… […]
  • Enter My WorldView