02/12/2026
Human Lie Detector or J.A.M.? (Just a Mom)
After nearly twenty years of practicing law and fourteen years of motherhood, Campoli has earned a reputation for something beyond trial advocacy: she reads people exceptionally well.
Over the course of her career, she has cross-examined hundreds of witnesses, gathered evidence in the field, dissected written statements, and tried nearly sixty jury trials. She has watched stories unfold in depositions and unravel under cross-examination.
Through it all, one truth has remained constant:
People tell on themselves.
Not always dramatically. Not always immediately. But inevitably.
Lie detection, as Campoli practices it, is not theatrical. It is disciplined observation grounded in years of studying human behavior and motive. At the center of that analysis are three universal drivers: power, money, and love. Once a person’s stake in one of those categories is identified, the reason for distortion often becomes clear.
The most common tell is inconsistency. A story shifts between interviews, depositions, and trial. Truth tends to remain stable. Lies require maintenance; and maintenance forces more lies.
Another indicator is factual impossibility. When a narrative conflicts with objective evidence, it cannot survive. Facts do not negotiate.
Body language also speaks volumes: a tightened jaw, defensive posture, sudden anger at simple questions. The body often reacts before the mind crafts its next answer.
Physical tells round out the pattern: nervous ticks, perspiration, repeated sniffing, unnecessary coughing, even yawning. The body always keeps score.
Yet some of the most revealing lessons did not come from a courtroom. It came from motherhood.
The most effective liars are not always nervous. Some laugh. Some joke. Some perform ease to disarm scrutiny. Children, especially, test boundaries and experiment with their delivery of partial truths. Parenting sharpens sensitivity to tone, timing, over-explanation, and strategic humor.
In many ways, parenting is cross-examination without the stenographer.
So is Campoli a human lie detector?
Not exactly.
She is a student of patterns; of motive, evidence, language, and behavior. After decades in the courtroom, she does not simply listen to what is said. She studies how it is said, when it is said, and why.
Whether in a deposition or at a kitchen counter, the principle remains the same:
The truth leaves clues.
And this mom knows where to look.