The ones they picked and paid for while refusing the FBI's, of course.
Morning RR
Yep, the ones pretty much confirmed reliable now with the DNA evidence.
Gelb is no slouch.
http://denver.rockymountainnews.com/extra/ramsey/0525rams1.shtml
Edward Gelb, a respected California-based polygrapher, said he administered two tests to John Ramsey and three to Patsy Ramsey earlier this month. Both were asked whether they killed JonBenet or knew the killer. Patsy Ramsey also was asked whether she wrote the ransom note found in their home.
"What are the chances that two separate individuals would take a series of five polygraph examinations and pass them all and yet be lying?" Gelb said. "You're going to find it's somewhere between four in 1,000 and one in a trillion."
The Ramseys paid for the tests.
Gelb's findings were reviewed and confirmed by Cleve Baxter, founder of the Central Intelligence Agency's polygraph unit and creator of polygraph scoring techniques considered industry standards.
The Ramseys were given what are known as single-issue examinations, where all questions in a test are designed to mean the same thing, Gelb said. Each test took two to three hours. The results cannot be skewed by drugs, so no screening was done, Gelb said.
The tests are 97-98 percent accurate, said Robert Lee, director of operations for Axciton Systems, which makes the computerized polygraph instrument used by Gelb.
The first test asked the following: Did you inflict any of the injuries that caused the death of JonBenet? Regarding JonBenet, did you inflict any of the injuries that caused her death? Were those injuries that resulted in JonBenet's death inflicted by you?
In the second test, Gelb asked: Do you know for sure who killed JonBenet? Regarding JonBenet, do you know for sure who killed her? Are you concealing the identity of the person who killed JonBenet?
Patsy Ramsey was given an additional test about the ransom note: Did you write the ransom note that was found in your house? Regarding the ransom note, did you write it? Is that your handwriting on the ransom note found in your house?
"Final conclusion: Based on extensive polygraph examination, neither John nor Patsy Ramsey were attempting deception when they gave the indicated answers to the relevant questions," Gelb said.
Baxter said his review confirmed Gelb's conclusion. "I could not fool the polygraph examination myself if a serious issue were involved. And I've been in the field a long time," he said.
Gelb bristled at the suggestion that the questions weren't tough enough.
"These questions are soft? What would you ask?" Gelb said, adding that the single-issue tests have the greatest validity of any polygraph. The questions are designed to force the subject to focus on the topics that pose the greatest threat to them, he said.
The exams were nerve-wracking because so much was at stake, Patsy Ramsey said.
"I had JonBenet's face in my mind from the moment I went into that room," she said. "And I just kept saying, 'This is for you, honey. Because we're going to find out who did this.
"And whatever I have to do, I will do."'