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  sure the voice-stress lie detector doesnt work, but any detective will tell you that it is a great way to force a person to make a confession. (remember when your a cop its how many people you put in jail that gets you raises. it doesnt matter if you jail innocent people)

Original Article

Arguments rage over voice-stress lie detector

Dennis Wagner The Arizona Republic Oct. 10, 2005 12:00 AM

At least 20 Arizona law enforcement agencies are relying on a voice-measuring lie detector for criminal investigations even though experts say the device does not stand up to scientific scrutiny and may prompt innocent suspects to make false confessions.

The Computer Voice Stress Analyzer, or CVSA, purportedly measures FM radio waves produced by muscles around the larynx. Deceptive answers cause stressful "micro-tremors" in the voice that are charted by the device's software program, the manufacturer says.

Yet, independent experts have consistently found the instrument to be dubious, at best, when it comes to separating truth from lies. And, while increasingly more police agencies are using it to interrogate suspects and assess witnesses, they don't use the machine for internal investigations or to screen recruits.

The Department of Defense Polygraph Institute concluded that CVSA produced "dismal results" and "no examiner did better than the chance level."

Two years ago, the National Academy of Sciences reviewed voice-stress studies and concluded there is "little or no scientific basis" to consider the device an alternative to polygraph machines.

And a report done for the International Association of Chiefs of Police found: "Whatever the CVSA may record, it is not stress. . . . The poor validity for the current voice stress-technology should provide a caveat to agencies considering adding voice stress to their investigative toolboxes."

Despite those critiques, the company behind CVSA claims its device is more accurate than a polygraph machine, and has solved hundreds of crimes across the country.

Charles Humble, chairman and chief executive officer of the business known as National Institute for Truth Verification, said voice-stress technology helps detectives target the bad guys during investigations, and clears innocent suspects who might otherwise remain under suspicion. It also is used to check witnesses' veracity.

"We believe the system is 100 percent accurate," Humble added.

Widespread popularity According to the institute, 1,400 American law enforcement agencies have purchased Computer Voice Stress Analyzers in recent years, at $10,760 per machine.

The device is purportedly used in Iraq by counterintelligence forces and at the military's terrorism detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

In Arizona, it is employed by the state Department of Public Safety, Maricopa County Sheriff's Office and police in Mesa, Glendale, Gilbert and Avondale, to name a few. It also has been used in training programs at Fort Huachuca, the Army's intelligence training center in southern Arizona.

The institute's literature identifies research works that seem to endorse the instrument. One study found "100 percent agreement between CVSA and the polygraph." Another concluded it is "accurate when utilized as a truth verification device, and produced a confession rate of 94.8 percent."

Humble acknowledged, however, that no independent testing has demonstrated the machine's integrity. He claimed CVSA cannot be evaluated under laboratory conditions because stressful deviations occur only when an interrogation subject is afraid of prison or the death penalty.

"We never really had the funding to do that, to take it to a university and pay for all the researchers," he said.

Competes with polygraph Peoria police Detective Tom Stewart, who has administered dozens of CVSA exams, said suspects often crack when told they are facing a foolproof deception-detector.

"I don't know if this thing works," Stewart admitted. "But it works for me in getting people to see the light. . . . They deny doing it right up to the point of me asking the first question. Then they break down and say, 'You don't need to do the test. I'm guilty.' "

Before CVSA, Stewart said, police departments had to pay $150 for private polygraph exams or wait days for state examiners to be available. With voice-stress testing, he said, getting confessions is faster, cheaper and easier.

CVSA technology is based on research first conducted by the Army four decades ago. A pair of retired officers took their findings to the public in 1970 with an instrument called the Psychological Stress Evaluator.

Several other machines also hit the market, producing inaccurate results and false convictions. Scandal nearly killed the industry.

In 1988, the institute began manufacturing a new, improved machine that now dominates the market. The company Web site advertises several advantages over polygraphy:

While the CVSA laptop is more expensive, total costs are about half because examiners need only six days of training, compared with eight weeks for polygraphers.

CVSA can evaluate statements, rather than just yes or no answers.

Results are valid even if a subject is sick, drunk or drugged.

The machines are portable and testing can be done with live subjects or recordings.

There are no "inconclusive" results.

But critics say the biggest advantage for detectives is that validity doesn't matter.

"It's complete nonsense," said Richard Leo, a professor of psychology and criminology at the University of California-Irvine who specializes in police interrogations. "It's junk science with a capital J. I think these CVSA machines are dangerous, and they are contributing to the process that elicits false confessions."

Added Steve Drizen, legal director at Northwestern Law's Center on Wrongful Convictions: "The problem is that an innocent suspect volunteers to take the test and, when told that he failed, reaches the point of hopelessness where he can be easily persuaded to confess."

False confessions Stewart, the Peoria detective, said he is convinced an innocent suspect would not confess "unless maybe he's a little bit off, a little crazy."

Defense lawyers and researchers point out that criminal suspects frequently are "a little bit off" due to mental illness, drug addiction or alcoholism.

Drizen said death-penalty reviews and DNA evidence have exposed "legions of false confessions" made after prolonged interrogations and failed lie-detection exams. Because detectives are legally entitled to lie during questioning, often fabricating witnesses and evidences, some suspects lose a sense of reality.

They want to be good citizens. They are eager to cooperate. After failing a lie-detector exam, Drizen said, some inexplicably embrace crimes they never committed.

The result: Detectives waste time on the wrong suspect, justice is eroded, tax dollars are squandered, and the real culprit is never apprehended.

Despite the controversy, use of voice stress analyzers is proliferating. As Humble put it, "We're growing almost dramatically."

Vallejo, Calif., police Cpl. Harry Bennigson, who heads the Pacific Association of Certified Stress Analysts, said the machine gets results.

"I'm convinced it works," he said. "What I like about it is we actually clear a lot of (innocent) people that we otherwise would not be able to clear."

Despite such testimonials, Arizona police departments do not use CVSA for internal affairs investigations.

The state's Peace Officer Standards and Training agency, which regulates law officers statewide, does not allow voice-stress screening of certificate candidates.

Robert Forrey, standards and certification manager, said only polygraph exams are accepted because CVSA science is unproven.

Most of the Arizona CVSA examiners contacted for this story would not comment publicly.

Still, Humble insists that the criticism and damning research come mainly from polygraph advocates who are hell-bent on slandering CVSA to protect their lucrative lie-detection market.

Frank Horvath, former president of the American Polygraph Association and a justice professor at the University of Minnesota, denied the claim.

"It's just marketing hype. If they actually worked, you can bet your life I'd be using them," Horvath said.

He expressed shock that military and counterterrorism officials may be using CVSA, and warned about the nation gathering false intelligence.

"I believe the manufacturers know that they are just a gimmick, a toy," he added.

"It just misleads investigators."

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/1010voicestress-side.html

Phoenix case is example of innocent confessing

Dennis Wagner The Arizona Republic Oct. 10, 2005 12:00 AM

At the heart of the debate over voice-stress analysis is the possibility that innocent people will confess to crimes they never committed.

Consider what happened in June 2003, when Maricopa County sheriff's detectives developed a lead on one of their biggest unsolved murder cases.

A woman told investigators that 51-year-old machinist Robert Louis Armstrong was the triggerman in a triple homicide that occurred on Easter 1998.

The informer purportedly passed a Computer Voice Stress Analyzer test.

Armstrong, with a history of brain damage and drug abuse, had no idea why he was picked up for questioning. He denied knowing victims Ronald Hutchinson, Dewey Peters and Crystal Allison, who were gunned down while enjoying beer and a bonfire along the Agua Fria River bottom.

He swore that he was visiting his mother in Oregon.

Detectives told Armstrong he got the date wrong. They had physical evidence and a witness. They showed Armstrong pictures of the bloodied victims. They suggested he must have blacked out, and offered scenarios to explain his involvement.

Armstrong wept and pleaded. He said he was a good person.

After several hours, detectives offered Armstrong a CVSA exam. He eagerly agreed.

"I'm not trying to beat it," he noted minutes later.

"You didn't," replied a detective, laughing. "It caught ya, OK?"

"(But) I was in Oregon," Armstrong protested.

"That was one of the questions you failed."

Armstrong cried out to God for forgiveness. Then, with details provided by deputies, he told of a drunken slaughter: "I just panicked and started shootin' everything," he said. "I'm sorry. I deserve to die."

Armstrong spent a year in jail, awaiting trial and a possible lethal injection.

Then his defense team discovered bus company records placing the defendant in Portland, Ore., at the time of the killings.

The state's lead witness, confronted with that evidence, recanted.

Armstrong was freed. He is suing the Sheriff's Office, which declined comment for this article.

Buddy Rake, Armstrong's attorney, said: "It's so easy to abuse the voice-stress analyzer.

"We know of other instances where they extracted confessions from people who were not guilty."

Reach the reporter at dennis.wagner@arizonarepublic.com or (602) 444-8874.