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US Federal Chief Judge
Supports Use of CVSA
Northern District of New York Chief Judge Norman A. Mordue ruled
that sex offenders can be required to submit to the Computer
Voice Stress Analyzer (CVSA) as part of their post-release
supervision to determine if they are telling the truth, and that
the technique is analogous to polygraph examinations, which have
been accepted by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals as a way
to monitor the activities of those under post-release
supervision.
The 2nd Circuit in
United
States v. Johnson, 446 F.2d 272 (2006),
held that polygraphs were not unreliable, that they could be
validly related to the post-release supervision of an offender
and that they did not deprive a defendant of his rights under
the Fifth Amendment. The same qualities apply to the CVSA
devices, Judge Mordue determined.
Judge Mordue, ruling from Syracuse, N.Y., in
Gjurovich v. United States, 5:01-cr-215,
conceded that federal authorities have acknowledged there have
been questions in the past regarding whether voice stress
analysis is should be legally supported.
"However, as noted by the 2nd Circuit in
Johnson,
when confronted with the same arguments about polygraph testing,
the reliability of the technology and its admissibility as
evidence 'does not bear much on the therapeutic value of the
tool,'" Judge Mordue wrote. "Petitioner argues that the use of
the CVSA is not reasonably related to the purposes of
sentencing. The Court disagrees based on 'the nature and
circumstances of the offense and the history and characteristics
of the defendant.'"
Advocates of CVSA technology say the devices can detect
otherwise inaudible voice inflections in response to questions
that can indicate whether a speaker is being truthful.
Testimony before Judge Mordue indicated that some 1,800 law
enforcement agencies in the United States have the devices
available. Most have been manufactured by the National Institute
for Truth Verification or NITV, a Palm Beach, Fla.-based company
that has been producing the devices since 1997.
Judge Mordue declined to revoke the terms of Ethan J.
Gjurovich's supervised release from federal prison that the U.S.
Probation Office sought following Gjurovich's completion of a
five year, 10-month sentence for transporting child pornography
and possessing child pornography in 2007.
The term also included a three-year period of supervised
release.
The supervision period had required that Gjurovich submit to
regular polygraph exams about his activities in the community.
In August 2008, the Probation Office of the Northern District of
New York sought to modify the terms of his supervision to add
the requirement that he also submit to CVSA exams if asked.
Read more:
http://www.nylj.com/nylawyer/adgifs/decisions/100809mordue.pdf |