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Councils Using, Or Planning To Use, LIE DETECTOR TESTS On Benefit Claimants

March 10, 2014

A new low. Share. Cover. Shame.

More than 20 councils have used or plan to use controversial lie detector tests to catch fraudulent benefits claimants, despite the government dropping the technology because it was found to be not sufficiently reliable.

Responding to freedom of information (FOI) requests, 24 local authorities confirmed they had employed or were considering the use of “voice risk analysis” (VRA) software, which its makers say can pick out fraudulent claimants by listening in on calls and identifying signs of stress.

Although in 2010 the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) announced it had given up VRA software, the FOI responses show councils have been spending, in some cases, millions of pounds on the technology.

Local authorities have continued to use the system to check whether people are honestly claiming the single person council tax discount, which allows single adults to pay 75% of the amount levied on a family.

Tory-controlled Derbyshire Dales said it had taken part in a county-wide review of council tax in 2011 that had used the technology – a contract worth £280,000 to Capita.

The same company was hired by Labour-run Southwark in south London and was paid £2.5m over three years. The council says VRA technology “was used as one tool to assist in determining the customers’ eligibility for the discount”.

The council said it did not record how effective the scheme had been but did say that its real worth was in making the public aware that it would crack down on benefit cheats. A council minute last year records: “Although [VRA was] used in a minority of cases, a significant amount of publicity was received that assisted in communicating to residents the council’s intention to remove discounts if property occupancy could not be evidenced.”

VRA is supposed to detect signs of stress in a caller’s voice by analysing short snippets of speech, and is still used in the insurance industry to catch fraudsters. Critics say the system is not powerful enough to distinguish cheats from honest callers.

A number of councils – Redcar, Middlesbrough, West Dorset and Wycombe – said they were convinced of VRA’s merits and were considering use of the system in the future.

False Economy, the trade union-funded campaign group that put in the freedom of information requests to more than 200 local authorities, told the Guardian: “It says a lot about council outsourcing – and the benefits-bashing agenda – that this pseudo-scientific gimmick is now making its way in through the back door. Capita is a firm with a long rap sheet of expensive failure. Neither they nor their technological snake oil should be trusted.”

There have been complaints from claimants who were assessed using the technique. In South Oxfordshire two people formally protested after having their voices tested in 2013. The council says that Capita’s system helped reduce the number of people claiming the single person discount by 3%, and would consider using it again.

Voice risk analysis has been mired in controversy since scientists raised doubts over the technology soon after it reached the market. In 2007, two Swedish researchers, Anders Eriksson and Francisco Lacerda, published their own analysis of VRA in the International Journal of Speech, Language and Law. They found no scientific evidence to support claims for the device made by the manufacturer.

Lacerda, head of linguistics at Stockholm University, told the Guardian that VRA “does nothing. That is the short answer. There’s no scientific basis for this method. From the output it generates this analysis is closer to astrology than science. There was very good work done by the DWP in the UK showing it did not work, so I am surprised.”

However, the Local Government Association, which represents English and Welsh councils, said the tool was used to help identify possible fraud. Peter Fleming, chair of the LGA’s improvement board, said: “Councils detect almost £200m-worth of benefit fraud committed every year. Every pound fraudulently claimed by people trying to cheat the system is a pound less that councils have to help those who need it most.

“No one is going to be prosecuted for benefit fraud on the result of voice analysis tests alone. But, in a small number of areas, councils use this technology as part of a wider range of methods to identify cases which may need closer scrutiny.”

The DWP told the Guardian: “Local authorities are free to design their own approaches to preventing benefit fraud.”

In a statement Capita said that, when it “undertakes a council tax single person discount review, councils can choose to use voice risk analysis technology as part of the process. The technology is never used in isolation. It is only used in cases which are deemed ‘high risk’, when earlier stages of the review have indicated that more than one person may be living at the property.”

Capita added: “The selective use of VRA technology is a useful additional tool in the validation process of identifying potentially fraudulent claims for single person discount.

“The decision of whether to revoke benefits is made by councils, based on the range of information gathered during the review process. The removal of claimants receiving discounts that they are not entitled to reduces council spend, enabling money to be directed to those who really need the council’s support.”

8 Comments leave one →
  1. Jacqui Butterworth's avatar
    Jacqui Butterworth permalink
    March 10, 2014 5:46 pm

    About time the government was tried on lie detectors-this is going too far

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  2. Kevin Abraham's avatar
    March 10, 2014 8:40 pm

    If, as a principle, our society is to use lie detectors in circumstances where there is evidence that some people commit fraud, ok.
    But that means, in an equitable society, it should be used for politicians claiming expenses, bankers reporting libor rates and everyone including corporate accountants putting in tax returns, police giving evidence etc etc.
    . If it is unacceptable in the latter case, it should be unacceptable in the former. The only rationale for distinguishing these two would be class war and prejudice.

    Like

    • Anon's avatar
      Anon permalink
      March 10, 2014 8:50 pm

      Problem is lie detector experts claim they have 96.5% accuracy, so theoretically 4 out off 100 are going to be wrong and in a country where we have thousands on benefits its just statistically immoral, how many will die because they made yet another mistake. And a lot of the time they cant be used for Medical reasons. I Have an anxiety disorder, so does that mean when I get one for it and show server signs on paranoia and fail i’m gonna lose the pittance I get to survive?

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  3. me's avatar
    March 10, 2014 8:52 pm

    if its for finding stress in your voice as stated who isn’t stressd when you call these people I know i am.up to half hour waiting to talk to someone, no one will give you an answer to anything and you get the run around hell yes im stressed.

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  4. Miss Castello's avatar
    Miss Castello permalink
    March 10, 2014 9:51 pm

    “used to help identify possible fraud”

    Begs the question why it hasn’t been used to detect and prosecute thieving robber bankers, along with fraudulent MPs expenses claims. We all know why….. one law for us, NONE for them.

    ” The council said it did not record how effective the scheme had been but did say that its real worth” blah blah blah…

    Well, there’s logic for you- hard pressed councils and all of that…….

    Like

  5. Cristina Parker's avatar
    March 10, 2014 11:32 pm

    Can we have lie detector tests for MP’s as well?

    Like

  6. stewilko's avatar
    March 11, 2014 3:19 am

    Reblogged this on stewilko's Blog.

    Like

  7. hugosmum70's avatar
    March 12, 2014 7:03 pm

    these councils need to get their own house in order first. last September my sons 19yr old daughter went to live with him. he informed DSS, his housing association and the council tax benefit/ housing benefit sections. he already was paying 20quid a month council tax and last years was paid up on 2nd jan.or so he thought.then he got a letter stating he still owed 182cquid on top of the 172 he had already paid. on questioning this, it was because our council,HB/CT dept had not amended their records until that week,in other words had taken from September to January for them to sort their records out.and it gave my son only till march to pay off that 182 quid. out of ESA? and the added expense of his daughter on JSA who very quickly got sanctioned. for next to nothing. not once but 3 times within the last 5 months. she is now on her 3rd week of a 6 month sanction, and in fact was told by some woman from the job centre that if she stopped her claim, she could reclaim and the sanction would be drop[ed. nope. it wont. not only will it not be dropped but she now cant even sign on for the 6 months..meanwhile they are surviving on my sons ESA and any help for fuel (gas/electric) or food i can give them. its so wrong.

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