The Palm Beach Post

Border Patrol may ease lie-detector use in hiring

Acting leader says rule puts agency at disadvanta­ge.

- By Elliot Spagat Associated Press

SAN DIEGO — Seeking to comply with President Donald Trump’s order that it hire 5,000 new Border Patrol agents, U.S. Customs and Border Protection would exempt many job candidates who are veterans or law enforcemen­t officers from a requiremen­t that they take a lie-detector test, according to a memo released by the agents’ union.

T h e m e m o b y K e v i n McAl e e n a n , a c t i n g C u s - toms and Border Protection commission­er, calls the polygraph tests a “significan­t deterrent and point of failure” for applicants and a disadvanta­ge as the Border Patrol competes against Immigratio­n and Customs E n f o r c e me n t t o r e c r u i t employees. ICE, a separate agency that is responsibl­e for deporting immigrants and is under orders from Trump to hire 10,000 people, does not require lie detector tests.

About t wo-thirds of job applicants fail the Customs and Border Protection polygraph tests, more than double the average rate for law enforcemen­t agencies that provided data under open-re- cords requests. Those failures are a major reason why the Border Patrol recently fell below 20,000 agents for the first time since 2009. Many applicants have complained a bout bei ng s ubj e c t e d to unusually long and hostile interrogat­ions.

Any waiver of the lie-detector mandate may require congressio­nal approval due to a 2010 law that introduced the requiremen­t as part of an effort to root out corruption and misconduct after an earlier hiring surge doubled the size of the Border Patrol in eight years.

McAl e e n a n’s memo i s addressed to the Homeland Security Department deputy secretary for approval, suggesting that the Trump administra­tion may not yet back the plan.

CBP officials did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Wednesday. Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, who oversees both CBP and ICE, told reporters Tuesday in Dallas that he still thinks the polygraph is “a good idea,” while acknowledg­ing that it has hindered hiring.

T h e N a t i o n a l B o r d e r Patrol Council, which represents Border Patrol agents, received the memo Tuesday and has been working closely with the agency on hiring plans, said Shawn Moran, a union vice presi- dent. He called the changes to the polygraph requiremen­t “a more commonsens­e approach” and said current failure rates are “ridiculous.”

“Obviously we want to get the best candidates. We want to make sure that we have stringent background checks, but when it comes to the polygraph, that thing, I think, has been far too excessive in weeding out potentiall­y good candidates,” Moran said.

A f o r me r o f f i c i a l wh o played a key role introducin­g the polygraph tests said Wednesday the hiring plan was “a roadmap to further compromise the current and future integrity of CBP.” James Tomsheck, who was the agency’s internal affairs chief from 2006 to 2014, said McAleenan “is attempting to degrade the vetting” to accommodat­e a political mandate.

The memo said the Border Patrol gets 60,000 to 75,000 applicatio­ns a year and has hired an average of 529 candidates during each of the last four years, which translates to a hiring rate of less than 1 percent. It has lost an average of 904 agents a year through attrition, lowering its workforce to 19,627 in January.

The acting commission­er estimated that the Border Patrol would need to hire 2,729 agents a year to hit Trump’s target in five years, accounting for attrition.

 ?? GREGORY BULL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Border Patrol agents ride vehicles near where the border meets the Pacific Ocean near San Diego. Many veterans and law enforcemen­t officers seeking jobs with the agency would avoid taking a lie-detector test under a new proposal.
GREGORY BULL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Border Patrol agents ride vehicles near where the border meets the Pacific Ocean near San Diego. Many veterans and law enforcemen­t officers seeking jobs with the agency would avoid taking a lie-detector test under a new proposal.

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