The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Terrorist lie detector test plans defended

SECURITY: Justice secretary backs counter-terrorism measures proposed by government

- FLORA THOMPSON

The justice secretary has defended plans to make terrorists take a lie detector test to prove they have reformed and are not planning to carry out another attack.

Plans to introduce “polygraph testing” were announced by the UK Government as part of a wave of measures being described as a “major overhaul” in the way terrorists are punished and monitored – including tougher sentences to see them locked up for longer – in the wake of the London Bridge attack.

When questions were raised over their accuracy, Robert Buckland insisted lie detectors were important to identify “sleepers” and that they will not be the only measure used.

He told Sky News: “You can get people who are in effect sleepers for many years and then suddenly back come the hatreds and the prejudices and we see atrocities like the one we did at Fishmonger­s’ Hall.”

Pressed on accuracy of the tests being as low as 60%, Mr Buckland said: “I’m not pretending on their own, polygraphs, lie detectors, are the be-alland-end-all, which is why what we are also doing is doubling the number of specialise­d counter-terrorism probation officers... improving training, getting more psychologi­sts in there, specialist imams as well will be working with these people.”

Meanwhile he told BBC Breakfast the proposal was “not a new concept”, with detectors introduced about seven years ago to assess the risk posed to the public by sex offenders.

He insisted it was a “sensible measure in order to help maximise the understand­ing of the risks that some of these prisoners pose to society” which would not form part of a criminal investigat­ion or evidence used in court.

Some experts have questioned the credibilit­y of polygraph tests, claiming there are ways of cheating to manipulate the results.

Professor Aldert Vrij, a senior lecturer in psychology at Portsmouth University who has written extensivel­y on the subject, told the BBC in 2018: “It does not measure deception, which is the core problem.”

Others have suggested because taking the test is a stressful experience this could provide the wrong results by indicating an innocent person is lying.

The FBI reportedly asks new staff to submit to a test when they join but according to the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n “there is little evidence that polygraph tests can accurately detect lies”.

More details of The Counter Terrorism (Sentencing and Release) Bill were released less than two months after convicted terrorist Usman Khan embarked on a killing spree after attending a prisoner rehabilita­tion programme while out on licence halfway through a 16-year jail sentence. Saskia Jones and Jack Merritt were both killed and Khan was shot dead by police.

“You can get people who are in effect sleepers for many years and then suddenly back come the hatreds and the prejudices and we see atrocities.

JUSTICE SECRETARY ROBERT BUCKLAND

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Police at the scene of the London Bridge terror attack in November.
Picture: PA. Police at the scene of the London Bridge terror attack in November.
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