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Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006
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Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Detecting Deception

Steven Van Aperen

Australian Polygraph Services

23rd November 2006

Page 2: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered; the point is to

discover them.

Galileo Galilei

Page 3: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

It is very difficult for theaverage person to lie.

Page 4: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Why do people deceive?

Conditioning

To hide the truth

To protect themselves

Page 5: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Types of lies

“I wasn’t involved in match fixing, I always played to win”

“I studied psychology at University”

“I did not have have sexual relations with that woman Monica Lewinski”?

Page 6: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Lying in Employment

One third admitted to lying on CV47% lied about leisure pursuits28% about their salary19% about personal skills & qualities3% about criminal record

Page 7: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Lying in Employment18% think its necessary to lie on CV’sOne fifth believe employers don’t check6% say that they would just say they made a typing error!30% admit to lying but managers think only one in ten (10%) CV’s contain false information 36% believe it is the responsibility of employers to check accuracy

Page 8: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

What to look for:

Paralinguistic ChangesNon-Verbal (Body Language)Verbal (Lying with words)

Page 9: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

What to look for:

TonePitchRateResponse Latency

Page 10: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Non-Verbal Behaviours

Look for clusters of behaviour Be aware of hand to face gestures

Page 11: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Non-Verbal Behaviours

Research indicates that up to 80% of communication is non-verbal

Page 12: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Non-Verbal Behaviours

Remember our body language will often betray the spoken word.

(Yes/No)

Page 13: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

The eyes have it, or do they?

Page 14: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

The Qualifying Statement

The subjects response may be literally true because they deny some narrow issue of the interviewer’s question

Page 15: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Lying by generalisation

Often a person will lie by generalisation. This occurs when a person may be vague or non-specific in response to a question.

Page 16: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Verbal Responses

Truthful people answer specific questions with

direct, spontaneous and realistic words

Page 17: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Examples of how people deceive

Page 18: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Analysing content and structure

Page 20: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

PN: She’d be very frightened and she’s an elderly lady.

MB: Yeah I got her upstairs so

PN: So you can imagine that the trauma that she’s going through

MB: She’ll be fine I mean they could eat well

Police negotiator (PN) and Martin Bryant (MB)

28th April, 2000 re Sally Martin

Page 21: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

PN: Are you prepared to let me talk to Sally

MB: Ah unfortunately um she’s down stairs with David now I’ve got um another chap with me.

Police negotiator (PN) and Martin Bryant (MB)

28th April, 2000 re Sally Martin

Page 22: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Past & Present Tenses

Singular person past tense vs present tenseLook for changes between past and present tense

Page 23: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

It was Monday night. I was walking down the road. It was getting dark when a man ran up and punched me in the faceIt was Monday night. I was walking down the road. It was getting dark and a man runs up and punches me in the face.

Page 24: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Susan Smith 25th October, 1994

Page 25: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

• “My children wanted me. They needed me. And now I cant help them.” Susan Smith (mother)

• “They’re OK. They’re going to be home soon.” David Smith (father)

Page 26: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

Shapelle Corby “I didn't put it there” (4 times)

“This is not mine”

“I'm innocent” (twice)

“I didn't put it there that’s the bottom line I didn't put it there.”

“They're not my drugs. I didn't put them there.”

“I’m innocent.”

Page 27: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

John Myles Sharpe plea for the return of Anna Kemp & Gracie Sharpe

Did you kill your wife and daughter?

•“I haven't harmed my wife or my daughter”

•“The child belongs with the mother”

Page 28: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

SummaryLearn to understand and read body languageAre questions being answered or is the person being evasive, omissive or dismissive?Observe what the person is doing as well as listening to what they are saying

Page 29: Detecting Deception Steven Van Aperen Australian Polygraph Services 23rd November 2006.

SummaryLook for changes between past and present tensesLook for ‘clusters’ of behaviourRemember we lie by omission rather than commissionPRACTICE!