Oklahoma Code § 59-1458

Title 59. Professions And Occupations: Minimum qualifications for registration – Definitions
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A.  The following shall be considered as minimum evidence
satisfactory to the Polygraph Examiners Board that the applicant is
qualified for registration as a polygraph examiner:
1.  Attainment of at least twenty-one (21) years of age;
2.  Citizenship of the United States;

3.  Never having been convicted of a felony crime that
substantially relates to the occupation of a polygraph examiner and
poses a reasonable threat to public safety; and
4. a. hold a baccalaureate degree from a college or
university accredited by the American Association of
Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers, or, in
lieu thereof, be a graduate of an accredited high
school and have five (5) consecutive years of active
investigative experience of a character satisfactory
to the Board,
b. be a graduate of a polygraph examiners course approved
by the Board and have satisfactorily completed not
less than six (6) months of internship training, and
c. have passed an examination conducted by and to the
satisfaction of the Board, or under its supervision,
to determine his competency to obtain a license to
practice as an examiner.
B.  Beginning July 1, 1996, employees of the Oklahoma State
Bureau of Investigation (OSBI) who are employed on that date by the
OSBI as polygraphers shall become licensed pursuant to the Polygraph
Examiners Act without undergoing the testing and training
requirements provided for in subparagraphs b and c of paragraph 4 of
subsection A of this section.  Any person who is employed as a
polygrapher for the OSBI after July 1, 1996, shall be required to
meet the testing and training requirements prior to licensure.
C.  As used in this section:
1.  "Substantially relates" means the nature of criminal conduct
for which the person was convicted has a direct bearing on the
fitness or ability to perform one or more of the duties or
responsibilities necessarily related to the occupation; and
2.  "Poses a reasonable threat" means the nature of criminal
conduct for which the person was convicted involved an act or threat
of harm against another and has a bearing on the fitness or ability
to serve the public or work with others in the occupation.
Added by Laws 1971, c. 140, § 8, emerg. eff. May 17, 1971.  Amended
by Laws 1973, c. 88, § 2, emerg. eff. May 1, 1973; Laws 1985, c.
189, § 6, operative July 1, 1985; Laws 1996, c. 23, § 2, eff. July
1, 1996; Laws 2019, c. 363, § 51, eff. Nov. 1, 2019.

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