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2015 Pilot Discussion.

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Res Judicata said:
You're a Junior FO Courtney, and you're going to be one for a long fking time. It will take  you that much longer to recover from the personal bankruptcy we're going to put you in but that's ok. We have plenty of time for you to pay back what you owe.
AntiPolygraph.org Home Page > Personal Statements
Note: this statement originally appeared on StopPolygraph.com.

Polygraph Statement of Mr. Mark C. Doyal

I had always wanted to be an FBI agent. With that singular goal in mind, I enrolled in Southwest Texas State University in the fall of 1988. My major was Law Enforcement with a minor in Economics. I graduated in December 1990 and I took the written FBI exam that next January. I passed and was scheduled for an interview in March of 1991. The interview went great and I achieved a perfect score. However, the FBI determined that I needed more experience and informed me to re-apply in two years. I immediately took the Law School Admissions Test and applied to South Texas College of Law in Houston, Texas. I was excepted for the class beginning in January 1991. I was fortunate in that I was able to obtain employment on a full time basis with the Harris County District Attorney's Office - Economic Crime Division. I remember my new boss asking me after he interviewed me what I planned on achieving with a law career. I immediately responded that I wanted a career with the FBI. Everyone who I met knew that that was my goal.

Working full time for the District Attorney while attending law school at night was tough, but I knew I had to get the right kind of experience and education to make myself the best possible candidate for the FBI. Upon graduation from law school (Dec. 1994), I re-applied with the FBI. I was scheduled to take the written exam on a Monday following the Bar exam. I again passed the written exam and had to wait to be selected for the interview. I wrote letters nearly every month to the applicant coordinator asking to be interviewed and explaining what I was doing each month. Finally, I was selected to be interviewed in Kansas City in July of 1996. Seven of us in our region were selected to go, but only two of us passed the interview process. Myself and another girl. I was on top of the world, knowing that I was about to realize my dream.

The polygraph exam was next, August 7, 1996, in San Antonio, Texas. I knew I had nothing to worry about, since I had never violated the FBI's drug policy and I had not lied on my application. The agent administering the polygraph noted during the pre- polygraph interview that I had attended a university that he believed was a "party school" and that I needed to tell him what drugs I used when I went there. I stated that I had taken none, that I didn't live on campus, I lived in another city, and that I was an older student and wasn't influenced to do such things. He repeated that that couldnít be the case and told me again to tell him what illegal drugs I had done. I countered again that that just wasn't the case and that I was telling the truth. This went back and forth for about 10 minutes and he seemed to be getting upset that I wouldnít admit to taking drugs. Finally he stated that if I was lying he was about to find out. I was upset at the unbelievable accusations he was making. Up until that point I had been treated with the utmost professionalism by the FBI staff, now I was being treated like an accused criminal. After the polygraph was over, he told me I had failed. I almost passed out in disbelief

I wrote several letters to FBI Director Freeh, and in October of 1996 I was polygraphed again, by another agent with the first agent who polygraphed me present. The results were the same, he told me I had failed. I just could not believe it. I had not lied on the polygraph. Even the first agent that had polygraphed me told me as I was leaving that he now believed me, that I was telling the truth. I wrote the Director several more times to no avail, my application was terminated in November of that year. My dreams were shattered.

Finally, as a side note, I later applied with the Secret Service. I did just as well in the testing and interview stages as I had with the FBI. When it came time for the polygraph, the agent administering it asked me if I had been polygraphed before. I told him yes, and under what circumstances and the results. He thanked me for my honesty, unhooked me from the polygraph without testing me and told me that he would have to contact his superiors for their advice. I could not believe it. Two months later I received a form letter stating that I was no longer competitive with the other agent applicants. I am a licensed attorney, professional pilot, have law enforcement experience and with top scores but I was not competitive? Obviously I had been "black balled" by the erroneous polygraph results from the FBI.

I will probably always be effected by the injustice of what happened. I wrote a final letter to Director Freeh this summer asking for another polygraph. I even offered to pay all expenses associated with retaking it if I were to fail. I guess I still haven't accepted that you can fail a polygraph while telling the truth. Or the fact that the FBI could make this kind of mistake. I had always looked up to that agency as the pinnacle of professionalism. I received the same form letter back that I had received almost two years earlier. It is a shame, since all I wanted to do was to have a chance to serve my country and make my family proud.



Sincerely,



Mark C. Doyal



AntiPolygraph.org Home Page > Personal Statements
 
"Myself and another girl. I was on top of the world, knowing that I was about to realize my dream."



Kind of like the NIC
 
Res Judicata said:
You're a Junior FO Courtney, and you're going to be one for a long fking time. It will take  you that much longer to recover from the personal bankruptcy we're going to put you in but that's ok. We have plenty of time for you to pay back what you owe.
Pay back what you owe??
Better ask your legal brain trust of Vasin,Koontz and Ferguson. The ones who cost you 2 million for Addington1. Mitchell knew all about the TA and seperate ops.
I guess Mitchell skipped class the day they may have discussed the risk and reward of a merger coming out of left field before you got a JCBA from the first.
Perhaps they were discussing litigating paper cuts and sidewalk falls or vaginal mesh tort that day at Phoenix Summit.
Either way, young Mitchell, 2004 hire, really screwed you over.
 
Res Judicata said:
You're a Junior FO Courtney, and you're going to be one for a long fking time. It will take  you that much longer to recover from the personal bankruptcy we're going to put you in but that's ok. We have plenty of time for you to pay back what you owe.
I don't believe a misspelled word he writes. He is obsessed with the polygraph of Mark Doyal for some reason.

Res, did you see the discussion on the pilot who may still be on this property who was under suspicion for murdering an US Attorney? This case is still unsolved and there is a $1 million reward for info on this case. The article points out the pilot's violent nature, (comments made by prosecutors). The comments by the prosecutors certainly raise questions. Considering recent events shouldn't this be a concern to AA? Shouldn't they try to find out who the accused pilot is and ask questions?

Pilot didn't kill Wales, lawyer says

FBI to reveal new details today on prosecutor's death 5 years ago

By PAUL SHUKOVSKY, P-I REPORTER

Published 10:00 pm, Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Tuesday, rejecting the notion that he held a grudge against Wales and protesting the government's inquisitionlike investigation.
"This is Richard Jewell all over again," Seattle attorney Larry Setchell said, referring to the man wrongly suspected in the 1996 Olympics bombing.
Setchell's client, a 45-year-old commercial pilot who recently moved to Snohomish, has been in the FBI's cross hairs since Wales was shot to death in his Queen Anne home five years ago today.
Next week, Setchell said, the pilot will provide agents with handwriting samples -- hoping to prove he wasn't the author of a bizarre, anonymous letter sent to the bureau earlier this year by someone claiming to be a hit man hired to kill Wales.
After the Oct. 11, 2001, slaying, federal authorities launched a massive manhunt. If Wales was killed because of his job, he would be the first federal prosecutor murdered in the line of duty.
But in an interview with the Seattle P-I, Setchell said the FBI has "no science" connecting the pilot to the scene of the killing.
"They took everything from his house and they have nothing connecting him to Tom Wales. If they did, he wouldn't be walking the streets," the attorney said. The P-I isn't identifying the pilot because he hasn't been charged with a crime.
Making his most extensive comments on the case to date, Setchell likened it to the Atlanta Olympics bombing investigation, which has become synonymous with FBI blunders. Jewell, a security guard at the games, was named in national news reports as the focus of the federal investigation, only to be cleared.
In the Wales case, FBI agents have searched the pilot's homes three times and hauled away clothes, cars and most of his shoes. They got the airline he worked for to ground him. They've also intercepted his phone calls, put him under surveillance, interviewed friends and neighbors -- even talked to the women he was dating. He has since remarried.
Despite the pilot's assertions of innocence, investigators consider him a "vengeful, calculating, controlling" man who had a strong motive to kill Wales.
In 2001, Wales prosecuted the pilot, his business partner and others on charges that they improperly modified a surplus military helicopter for civilian use. Wales ultimately dropped the charges after an expert witness for the government was shown to have lied in another, similar case to the Justice Department, Federal Aviation Administration and the court, Setchell said. An internal investigative report from the Department of Transportation's Inspector General obtained by the P-I confirms that the expert witness lied.
Setchell said his client, who spent more than $100,000 in legal fees, felt "profound frustration" over the prosecution. "How could there not be? He hadn't done anything wrong."
But Setchell said that he and his client "never once blamed Tom Wales."
The pilot later sued the government, alleging that Wales' prosecution had been improper.
In a response to that suit filed shortly before Wales was killed, prosecutors said the pilot had a "violent and retributive nature" and was trying to ferret out the names of government witnesses in order to "avenge himself."
Setchell said two of the witnesses were the pilot's ex-wife, with whom he had a contentious divorce, and a former business partner who had an ax to grind.
While Setchell insists "there weren't bad words" between his client and Wales, a federal criminal justice source said that in the middle of the helicopter case -- after Wales had talked to the pilot's ex-wife -- the pilot angrily confronted Wales in person and told him to stop talking to her.
Setchell flatly denied that. "It never happened," he said.

Oct 11, 2001 - The United States Department of Justice is offering a reward of up to $1,000,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for the murder of AUSA Thomas Crane Wales.
 
Richard Anderson impressed Judge Silver as much as he did the Snohomish Police. AA better pray they never have to answer some awkward, (Germanwings) questions about this guy.
 
Metroyet said:
Richard Anderson impressed Judge Silver as much as he did the Snohomish Police. AA better pray they never have to answer some awkward, (Germanwings) questions about this guy.
You just sailed into very dangerous waters.
 
Luv this one also...


"I found the AMERICA WEST AIRLINE drug trafficking trial fascinating. Patrick Thurston, Vice President of Operations AMERICA WEST, Bob Russell, Chief of Pilots, and Carl Wobser, a captain, all pleaded guilty to multiple counts of narcotics trafficking."



"I watched Assistant U.S. Attorney James Lacey prosecute both rounds of this case. The three AMERICAN WEST pilots had all plea bargained out."
 
Hey we can do this all day but the bottom line is you have no, nor ever will have the NIC. Why, because one of you idiots did not take it when it was offered to you, now you condemned all the west pilots to another long stagnant time period locked in that dust bowl PHX. You screwed up and made the wrong choice, AA has upward movement along with the east. Geez guys wake up.


Did Marty go to that Arizona Summit Law school also?
 
Metroyet said:
GFY Mike/Richard,
Just look at him and his clone, Luv. They can dish it out but they can't take it. They know they are going to have a tough time in arbitration. That's the reason they are trying to divide the West pilot group and somehow splinter us prior to the arbitration. It's not going to happen. They know the Nic hangs over their heads, they have a lawsuit against their officers. It pleases me to no end that they are on the receiving end of what they dished out for so many years.

I think we should all be there in court with our Liberty ties in court, just to rub it in their faces a bit more. What do you think Metro?
 
Claxon said:
The west pilots used john scherff obtained addresses (illegally copied from a company computer and found to be a non essential company id breach {after 627 thousand dollar id theft protection spent} by doug parker in a "internal investigation") for East pilots in their latest suit against USAPA representatives. 
 
Tune in soon. doogie, lawyer up.
Claxon said:
Your insinuation that Anderson is capable of suicide with an aircraft is over the line.
Listen here Claxfud, you make some accusations yourself. If they were true, why weren't they fired or arrested?

STFU and crawl back in your hole.
 
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