122 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
122 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
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############################
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# The ZED/NET Presents #
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# #
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# An Introduction to: #
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# #
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# INTERROGATION #
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# TECHNIQUES #
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# #
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# (for phun and profit!) #
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############################
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By The ZED/NET Writer #1
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It is easy to intercept transmissions-but the human brain is still one of the
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safest places to keep information. This phile will help you pull information
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from the bodies greatest fortress.
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Pain
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----
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Pain used to be the most popular sort of interrigation. The thumb screw and
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the rack were famous for "loosening a strong man's tongue." Pain, however, is a
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two-edged weapon. Its infliction may be able to bring quick results-- but a
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victim pushed to extremes of pain may babble anything his questioners wish to
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hear. Torture can also harden a few individuals. They may resist until death,
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or prove poor exhibits at a subsequent trial. Also torture can bring about
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negative propaganda towards the torturer.
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The Five S's
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------------
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1. Stop and search. At checkpoints or randomn searches, clothing is checked
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of weapons, and people are checked against photos to see if they are the
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suspects being searched for.
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2. Segregation. As soon as possible, suspects should be seperated from one
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another. This helps to break down the suspect's will and allows statements
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made by other suspects to be checked. Also it reduces the possibility of two
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or more suspects cooperating together to come up with a clever plan to escape.
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3. Silencing. A bag put over the suspect's head disori- ents and isolates
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the subject.
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4. Speed of interrogation. Initial "safe" questions throw a suspect off
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guard, and quick "unsafe" questions may be answered unknowingly by the suspect.
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5. Safeguard. Thick, steel, locked doors bar escape and crush the suspect's
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will.
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Sensory Deprevation
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-------------------
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In civil custody, the same isolation is used as a tool throughout many
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Western countries. Police forces can deny access to solicitors or friends on
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the grounds that information may be passed to the suspect's associates in
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crime. Techniques of sensory deprivation can aid the proceess of isolation.
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Hooded or crowned with an upturned bucket, the simple lack of light and
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vision can swiftly break a prisoner's grasp on normal realities. The use of
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"white noise"--a recording of sounds across the spectrum, not unlike the hiss
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of escaping steam-- blots out auditory contact with the world. Drugs used by
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Syrian captors of Israeli soldiers remove all sensations of sight, smell,
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hearing and touch, but left the brain active.
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To increase time disorientation, periods of lightness and darkness may be
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varried irregularly. Meals can be produced at odd intervals so a prisoner
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looses track of the days of captivity. Even before a formal interrogation has
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begun, the suspect has already lost contact with reality.
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Confusion and uncertainty are increased if his captors treat him with
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absolute "correctness." Many experts now regard such an approach as more
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effective than abuse or hostillity towards a suspect--which gives him a focus
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for his aggression and a recognizable opponent. The captors should reveal no
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emotion and not talk amongst themselves. They should restrict conversation
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with the prisoner to monosyllabic commands and orders.
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Since Man is a social animal, the surge of relief encountered when he is lead
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into a room and comforted by an apparent friend may overwhelm his determination
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to keep silent.
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Soft Man, Hard Man
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------------------
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The "Hard Man, Soft Man" technique is definately the most interesting form of
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non-drug interrogation to be produced by the twentieth century.
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It is basically this: One interrogator ("The Hard Man") is violent and
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unfriendly. He insults and may physically attack the suspect. The other
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interrogator is nice, friendly, and compassionate. He may offer the prisoner
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something to eat or cigarretes. He also establishes a friendly relationship by
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opening a conversation, rather than by conducting a question-and-answer period.
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One will hurt the subject, the other will comfort the subject, and then the
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"Hard Man" will take over again. Despite awareness of the game he is caught up
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in, the prisoner finds it difficult not to relax and lower his guard with the
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"Soft Man".
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Breaking Alliances
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------------------
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The toughest job of an interrogator is getting the prisoner to break faith
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with his freinds or organization. He must convince him that his group has
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rejected him, or that they have cooperated also, thus exonerating him from
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silence. At his most effective, the interrogator uses a mix of suggestion and
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deprivation to pursuade the captive to identify with the new group that the
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captive represents.
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Lack of sleep is another very effective method of breaking down a suspects
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will.
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Well, have phun with these methods, and remember "A phile is a phile!"
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-------
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-*****-Produced by the ZED/NET
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----*--
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---*---By Writer #1
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--*---- (thanx to special services
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-*****- division and the
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------- Incorporeal Discord)
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Call The Works BBS - 1600+ Textfiles! - [914]/238-8195 - 300/1200 - Always Open
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