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Showing posts with label WALTER I. MCCOY. WILLIAM M. MARSTON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WALTER I. MCCOY. WILLIAM M. MARSTON. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

"TRUTH-METER HAS NOT BEEN DEVELOPED ENOUGH"

JUDGE WILL NOT PERMIT LIE-DETECTOR OPERATOR TO TESTIFY IN MURDER TRIAL

Washington, D.C. (JFK+50) On July 20, 1922, Chief Justice Walter I. McCoy* "over-ruled all efforts...to place on the witness stand Dr. William M. Marston** of American University, operator of the 'truth-meter.'"

So the lie-detector*** "will not be used in the murder trial of James Alphonso Frye...charged with killing Dr. Robert W. Brown...two years ago."

Justice McCoy does not believe the lie-detector "has been developed to the point where its use should be permitted in a court of law."  He left open the possibility that one day in the future that situation might change.

*Walter Irving McCoy (1859-1933) was born in Troy, New York & graduated from Harvard Law School.  WIM served in U.S. Congress 1913-1914, Associate Justice 1914-1918 & Chief Justice 1918-1929 Supreme Court of the District of Columbia.

**William Moulton Marston (1893-1947) was born in Saugus, Massachusetts.  WMM was the inventor of an early prototype of the lie-detector.

***Lie-Detector, a.k.a. polygraph, measures & records physiological indicators while a person is asked & answers questions.

The polygraph was invented by John A. Larson in 1921 & is used in only a few countries, U.S., Canada, Israel & Japan.  Today, polygraph tests are still not admissible as evidence in court.

JFK+50 NOTE

William M. Moulton not only invented the lie-detector, he was also a comic book writer who developed the character 'Wonder Woman,' and that is no lie.

I have had a polygraph test once in my life.  It was required to be hired as a part-time employee of Radio Shack in the 1980s.  

SOURCE

"Bar Lie-Detector At Murder Trial," The Evening Star, Washington, D.C., July 20, 1922, Chronicling America, Library of Congress, www.loc.gov/

 
 
Walter I. McCoy
D-New Jersey
Harris & Ewing Photograph
Library of Congress