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Evidence keyed to Fisher
U.S. v. Crumby
Facts
Defendant worked at a bank in Arizona; after the bank was robbed, police arrested Thomas Riley (Riley), who claimed that Defendant had acted as the “inside man” in the crime. Defendant, subsequent to the robbery, submitted to a polygraph test and answered questions about his involvement in the robbery. The test was administered by Tom Ezell (Ezell), a former polygrapher for the local police department. According to Ezell, Defendant, “passed the test . . . [and] truthfully stated that he did not commit the crime in question.” Defendant seeks to introduce, as scientific evidence, the results of the polygraph test at his trial for bank robbery and aid and abet.
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