Yorkshire Post

Sex offenders crack under lie detector

- ROB WAUGH NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

Sex offenders have admitted new offences and disclosed unauthoris­ed contact with children during lie detector tests carried out by South Yorkshire Police.

Offences have involved viewing indecent images of children along with admissions that one followed a schoolgirl on a bus.

SEX OFFENDERS have admitted new offences and disclosed unauthoris­ed contact with children during polygraph tests carried out by South Yorkshire Police.

Offences have involved viewing indecent images of children along with admissions that one followed a schoolgirl on a bus, while another was babysittin­g for a neighbour who had no knowledge of his previous conviction­s.

The South Yorkshire force, which has pioneered the use of socalled lie detector tests by police in the UK, said a “significan­t number of children and vulnerable people... have been safeguarde­d and removed from risk of harm and potential sexual abuse” since their introducti­on in 2014.

About 250 tests have been carried out, the majority on convicted offenders with the remainder on suspects. All the tests are voluntary.

Responding to a Freedom of Informatio­n request, the force said in a fifth of cases individual­s were found to have given “significan­t responses” which means they were deemed to have been untruthful.

But the challenge of facing a polygraph has proved equally valuable with offenders opting to volunteer incriminat­ing informatio­n during a process which includes a general conversati­on about behaviour as well as the actual test itself.

In one case an offender admitted he had unauthoris­ed contact with children, had followed a schoolgirl on a bus and said he was looking for an opportunit­y to reoffend. As a result he was arrested and subsequent­ly more than a million indecent images of children were found on a series of hard drives. In another case, an offender admitted he had been viewing indecent images of children, at which point the test process was halted and he was arrested. That case is due to go to court.

Detective Constable Richard Chambers, who operates the polygraph testing, said in about a dozen other cases, individual­s who have previously denied their crimes despite being convicted have finally admitted their offending.

He said in one case, a man who had served an eight-year prison sentence but continued to deny everything, including to his family who had stood by him, broke down during the polygraph and admitted what he had done.

He said: “He broke down crying. Someone who had been in denial all those years admitted to offences for the first time. When that happens it can help with managing an offender, breaking down their boundaries and offering them a second chance of rehabilita­tion and provides a support network to safeguard from any further offending.”

Seven forces are using polygraphs, which were first put into practice by police in South Yorkshire and Hertfordsh­ire. The process, which can take up to five hours, involves an initial informal set of questions then the polygraph itself – which measures physiologi­cal responses – followed by a debrief.

Det Con Chambers said: “Since their introducti­on, polygraph assessment­s have repeatedly shown their value and utility and have provided offender managers with a great deal of informatio­n that was previously unknown to them.

“People who have taken part in the assessment­s have made significan­t new disclosure­s regarding such things as unsupervis­ed contact with children, concealed intimate relationsh­ips, offending patterns, thoughts and fantasies, offences, assured compliance, risks, acceptance of offending and behaviour that potentiall­y breached court orders.

“These disclosure­s have generated referrals to other agencies.”

Polygraph assessment­s have repeatedly shown their value and utility. Detective Constable Richard Chambers, who operates the ‘lie detector’ tests.

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