(dissenting). Respectfully, I dissent from the majority’s reversal of defendant’s bench-tried conviction. I think it highly improper that a copy of the polygraph examination report was placed in the circuit court file by the prosecutor. I also think that the prosecutor improperly injected evidence of the polygraph examination in other ways and may well be subject to sanctions. Nonetheless, I would affirm. The trial court stated that it was uninfluenced by the polygraph examination. Trial courts can be expected to be aware of the rule of People v Becker, 300 Mich 562; 2 NW2d 503 (1942), People v Davis, 343 Mich 348; 72 NW2d 269 (1955), and People v Barbara, 400 Mich 352; 255 NW2d 171 (1977), which held that results of a polygraph examination are not admissible at trial. Trial courts can also be expected to be aware that "[t]he basic rationale for the Barbara Court’s conclusion was that the polygraph technique had not received the degree of acceptance or standardization among scientists which would allow admissibility.” People v Ray, 431 Mich 260, 265; 430 NW2d 626 (1988).
If the point in Barbara is that polygraph examination results are inadmissible because they are too unreliable, then it escapes me why a trial judge who becomes privy to them either inadvertently or through the improper conduct of a litigant would wish to rely on them. No thinking judge wants to rest his or her decision as a trier of fact upon unreliable evidence. The trial judge should be expected to ignore such evidence — as the trial judge in this case stated he did and as trial judges as triers of fact do every day with respect to other inadmissible evidence without being tainted in their decision making. And what of the sentenc*237ing judge who in response to a challenge strikes an uncounseled conviction from a presentence report? The judge has been exposed to unreliable information concerning the defendant, but surely that judge is not precluded from sentencing the defendant. See, e.g., United States v Cesaitis, 506 F Supp 518 (ED Mich, 1981). As a panel of this Court stated in People v Jones, 168 Mich App 191, 194; 423 NW2d 614 (1988):
A judge, unlike a juror, possesses an understanding of the law which allows him to ignore such errors and to decide a case based solely on the evidence properly admitted at trial.
See, also, People v Butler, 193 Mich App 63; 483 NW2d 430 (1992), wherein a panel of this Court held that the Bruton1 rule was not applicable to, a bench trial.
It is true that Barbara requires that in a bench trial a case be reassigned to another judge if the judge granting the motion for a new trial has heard polygraph examination results.2 This rule, I *238take it, is a prophylactic measure and, in my view, is not applicable where a trial judge as finder of fact has heard polygraph results through inadvertence or even through the improper presentation of a litigant, but has not relied on them. Even this prophylactic rule of Barbara is unrealistic in my view for reasons discussed below and its continuing vitality is at least subject to question. See, e.g., Liteky v United States, 510 US —; 114 S Ct 1147; 127 L Ed 2d 474 (1994); People v Cobbs, 443 Mich 276, 283; 505 NW2d 208 (1993).
Finally, the idea that a trial judge in a properly conducted bench trial in which there has been not a wisp of a hint of a mention of a polygraph would be unaware that a defendant failed a polygraph when the examiner testifies as to defendant’s inculpatory statements amounts to something of a fairy tale. Trial judges know from experience who the police polygraph examiners are and why they are testifying. Moreover, in criminal sexual conduct trials, judges are aware of MCL 776.21(5); MSA 28.1274(2)(5) and that competent defense counsel advise defendants of their statutory right . to a polygraph examination and that, though non-prosecution is not a rule etched in granite, relatively few criminal prosecutions proceed where the defendant has passed the statutory polygraph examination. Should this awareness disqualify experienced trial judges from conducting bench trials in criminal sexual conduct cases? I think not.
I would affirm.
Bruton v United States, 391 US 123; 88 S Ct 1620; 20 L Ed 2d 476 (1968).
I would urge our Supreme Court to reconsider this aspect of Barbara. Indeed, while I am briefly in the business of urging reconsideration, I would urge that our Supreme Court revisit all of Barbara in an appropriate case. The Barbara decision rests heavily on the test for scientific evidence set forth in Davis, supra, and Frye v United States, 54 US App DC 46; 293 F 1013 (1923). The decision of the United States Supreme Court in Daubert v Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc, 509 US —; 113 S a 2786; 125 L Ed 2d 469 (1993), in which Frye is abandoned as a touchstone suggests to me that the time is ripe for a reconsideration of polygraph evidence. If the goal of trials is to find the truth and to do justice, then it may well be that under proper conditions and when proper requisites are met, polygraph examinations conducted by skilled and trained examiners may be scientifically reliable enough to help our system of justice in some cases achieve more accurate and just results in the first instance in our courts of law, beyond the mere granting of new trials in some instances, when with the help of the polygraph it appears as if the initial trial effort went awry. See, e.g., People v Mechura, 205 Mich App 481; 517 NW2d 797 (1994).