136 lines
6.1 KiB
Plaintext
136 lines
6.1 KiB
Plaintext
(TCC) West Coast Division
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P R E S E N T S:
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Interrogation Techniques for Fun and Profit!
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It is easy to intercept transmissions. But the human brain
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is still one of the safest places to keep information. This file
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will help you pull information from the body's greatest fortress.
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PAIN
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Pain used to be the most popular sort of interrogation. The thumb
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screw and the rack were famous for 'loosening a strong man's
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tounge'. Pain, however, is a two-edged weapon. Its infliction may
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bring quick results - but a man pushed to extremes of pain may
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babble anything his questioners wish to hear. Torture can also
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harden a few individuals. They may resist until death, or prove
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poor exhibits at a subsequent trail. Also torture can bring about
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negative propaganda towards the torturer.
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THE FIVE "S'"
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1. STOP AND SEARCH: At checkpoints or random searches. Clothing
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is checked for weapons, and people are checked against photos to
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see if they are the suspects being searched for.
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2. SEGREGATION: As soon as possible, suspects should be
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separated from one another. This helps to break down the
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suspect's will and allows statements may by other suspects to be
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checked. Also it reduced the possibility of two or more suspects
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cooperating together to come up with a clever plan of escape.
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3. SILENCING: A bag put over the suspects head disorients and
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isolates the subject. (We will get into more of this later)
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4. SPEED OF INTERROGATION: Initial 'safe' question throw a
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suspect off guard, and quick 'unsafe' questions may be answered
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unknowningly by the subject.
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5. SAFEGUARD: Thick, steel, locked doors bar escape and crush the
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subject's will. You can also go further and handcuff the subject.
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When you handcuff a subject, make sure that the handcuffs are
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lock up and that the subject has his/her palms facing out. Place
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the handcuffs on the joint between the hand and the arm. This
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way, even if the subject happens to have a key, it makes it more
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difficult for the subject to escape. The object here is to crush
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the idea of escaping and making the subject feeling helpless.
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If you are going to bind the subject, make sure you do it right.
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Immobilize him by tying him up in a chair with both feet and hands.
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SENSORY DEPRIVATION
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In civil custody, the same isolation is used as a tool throughout
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many Western countries. Police forces can deny access to
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solicitors or friends on the grounds that information may be
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passed to the subject associates in crime. Techniques of sensory
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deprivation can aid the process of isolation.
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Hooded or crowned with an upturned bucket, the simple lack of
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light and vision can swiftly break a prisoner's grasp on normal
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realities. The use of "white noise" - a recording of sounds
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across the spectrum, not unlike the escape of hissing steam,
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blots out auditory contact with the world. Drugs used by Syrian
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captors on Israeli soldiers remove all sensations of sight,
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smell, hearing and touch, but left the brain active.
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To increase time disorientation, periods of lightness and
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darkness may be varied irregularly. Meals can be produced at odd
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intervals so a prisoner looses track of the days of captivity.
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Even before a formal interrogation has begun, the suspect has
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already lost contact with reality.
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Confusion and uncertainty are increased if his captors treat
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him with absolute "correctness". Many experts now regard such an
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approach as more effective than abuse or hostility towards a
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subject, which gives him a focus towards a subject and a
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recognizable opponent. The captors should reveal no emotion and
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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 such a social animal, the surge of relief when
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he is led into a room and comforted by an apparent friend may
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overwhelm his determination to keep silent.
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SOFT MAN, HARD MAN
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The 'Hard Man, Soft Man' technique is definitely the most
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interesting form of non-drug interrogation to be produced in the
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twentieth century.
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It is basically this: One interrogator ('The Hard Man') is
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violent and unfriendly. He insults and may physically attack the
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subject. The other interrogator ('The Soft Man') is nice,
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friendly and compassionate. He may offer the subject something to
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eat or cigarettes. He also establishes a friendly relationship by
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opening a conversation, rather than conducting a question and
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answer period. One will hurt the subject, the other will comfort
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the subject and et al. Despite awareness of the game he is caught
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in, the prisoner finds it difficult not to relax and lower his
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guard with the 'Soft Man'. After this, is an easy task to get the
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subject to answer 'unsafe' questions.
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BREAKING ALLIANCES
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The toughest job of an interrogator is getting the prisoner
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to break faith with his friend or organization. He must convince
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him that his group has rejected him or that they have cooperated
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also, thus exonerating him from silence. As his most effective,
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the interrogator uses a mix of suggestion and deprivation to
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persuade the captive to identify with the new group the captor
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represents.
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MISC.
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Here are a few more ways of breaking down a person's
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will to resist.
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1) Lack of sleep.
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2) Sodium Penathol (Truth serum)
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3) Dousing a subject with water and then subjecting him to
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electric shocks. I should warn you to make sure that you use low
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amperage, as ONE amp can kill a person that has been doused.
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4) Staking the subject down over a gopher hole and then smoking
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the gopher out.
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5) Keeping the subject constantly cold or hot.
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Well, that is about it from here. If you know of some more
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nice methods, pleas let me know at Pirate's Xchange or The Dead
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Zone.
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Pirate's Xchange - (805)/485-2913
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