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Selasa, 07 Oktober 2014

CANADA - Sex offender supports on a shoestring

Susan Love & Adina Ilea
Susan Love & Adina Ilea
Original Article

09/25/2014

By Erin McCracken

The day the doors to David’s prison cell slid open and he was free after spending five and a half years behind bars for sex crimes against children, he was given a one-way ticket to Ottawa and placed on a bus.

Armed only with expired identification, a little cash earned inside prison and two boxes and a bag containing his few possessions, David arrived in the city with limited prospects.

The challenges he faced reintegrating in society were enormous. There would be hurdles in finding a job and stable housing, securing money and proper identification and abiding by strict supervision rules that kicked in upon his release.

It had been almost six years,” said David, speaking under a pseudonym to protect his identity. “It was overwhelming. Scary, because you’re coming out into society and it’s open, it’s freedom.”

So it was difficult at first, but eventually you blend into it.”

The key to blending in, in part, proved to be two smiling women who met him at the bus stop as planned, – his first introduction to a surrogate network of friends and family who wanted to help him rebuild his life, and in the process, ensure he would not reoffend.

They are among more than 50 volunteers with Circles of Support and Accountability-Ottawa, one of 20 CoSA programs across Canada through which 500 volunteers are helping nearly 200 high-risk, high-needs sex offenders reintegrate in society after prison.

At first I didn’t know what to do. I have no social life,” said David. “There was a bit of boredom, a bit of loneliness, but I was able to talk to CoSA about it.”

Each week, he met with his group of four volunteers to talk about his issues, and spent one-on-one time with each of them by going out for coffee, or watching a movie.

They provided him with friendship and support, referring him to services in the city that could help him.

Positive social supports, experts say, combined with sexual-behaviour counselling and treatment, are key to ensuring former offenders such as David do not fall back into their old patterns, leading to more victims.

After almost a year with CoSA, David seemed to be doing well. He had stable housing at a halfway house for ex-inmates and was taking part in a counselling program there. He had found work.

Sabtu, 02 Agustus 2014

TX - We can do better on sex offender laws

Morning paper an coffee
Original Article

07/17/2014

By Steve Blow

Let’s face it, we’re more sympathetic to the plights of some than others.

Lost puppies and sad children rank right up there atop the sympathy scale. And at the bottom.

Well, can you think of a group lower than sex offenders?

It’s a tough sell, but a national conference is meeting this week in Dallas with the goal of making things a little easier for those convicted of sex-related crimes.

Hang on! Don’t stop reading. You may not be brimming with sympathy, but the truth is that the reformers have a point. And this doesn't just affect the sex offenders.

Our laws have become expensive and ineffective. In our zeal to protect against sexual predators, we might even be making things worse.

The national conference of RSOL — Reform Sex Offender Laws — began with a social hour Wednesday night. It gets down to business Thursday through Saturday, meeting at Skillman Church of Christ in East Dallas.

About 125 people are expected. Virtually all of them are like RSOL executive director Brenda Jones. They come because of a personal connection.

I have a family member still serving time,” she said. “One of the things I promised him is that I would make sure he could have a life when he got out.”

The group’s central message is that sex offender registries have become an enormous burden on the individuals required to register, and they yield no safety benefit for the public.

There’s no statistical evidence that it’s doing any good at all,” Jones said. “And there’s growing evidence that it could actually be doing harm.”

Those on sex offender registries often can’t find a job or a place to live. It drives many into hiding. The pressures can make those with sexual addictions more likely to offend, not less.

As with most things, this began with a good idea: Law enforcement should know where convicted child predators live. But in our zeal to protect kids, the movement went overboard.

The list was made public. Registry was required for more and more offenses. The result: Texas has almost 80,000 people on its sex offender registry.

It was sold as a parent having the right to know there’s a predator next door. But the vast majority of the people on that list never touched a child, never had an offense against a child and may not have even had a sexual offense,” Jones said.

Even public urination sometimes ends up as a sex crime requiring registration.

Mary Sue Molnar of San Antonio leads the reform effort in Texas. She is founder of Texas Voices, an affiliate of RSOL.

Several years ago, my son made some really bad choices. He was 22. The girl was 16,” Molnar said. “He would be placed on the sex offender registry for the rest of his life. He would never be able to serve his time and move on with his life, like any other offender.”

California has almost 100,000 on its sex offender list. And its oversight board wants to make a change. In a recent policy report, the board said:

Research on sex offender risk and recidivism now has created a body of evidence which offers little justification for continuing the current registration system.”

The California report estimated that local governments spend $24 million a year maintaining the sex offender registry. Yet most people never consult it. And most who do take no action as a result.

Nobody is making excuses here for people who commit crimes of any sort. But if safety is what we’re after, we’re not getting our money’s worth.

Sabtu, 28 Juni 2014

RI - Bill would make businesses rethink hiring sex offenders

Paper and morning coffee
Original Article

06/22/2014

By John Mitchell

The Rhode Island General Assembly passed a bill Friday that would fine certain businesses for knowingly hiring a child sex offender.

Target 12 broke the story that prompted action, and now, a new state law is in place to protect children from sexual predators. In the final days of the legislative session, the Alliance for Safe Communities was closely watching its bill about child safe zones.

This all stemmed from Tim White’s investigation with the incident at Hasbro Children’s Hospital,” said Executive Director of the Alliance for Safe Communities Carolyn Medeiros, “where a level two registered sex offender was found employed there, knowingly,” by the hospital.

The Target 12 Investigators found _____ working as an electrician at Rhode Island Hospital and Hasbro Children’s Hospital. The convicted sex offender was labeled as having a ‘moderate risk to re-offend’ by the sex offender board of review. After the story aired, Hasbro Children’s Hospital reported that _____’s employment was terminated.

Under the new law, employers of safe zones will be fined if they knowingly hire a sex offender — including third party contractors — where the victim was a minor. Fines and possible jail time will be handed down to such sex offenders who apply for work at a designated safe zone, including health care facilities intended primarily for minors. The law is not retro-active, so while it was inspired by what happened at Hasbro Children’s Hospital, the penalties do not apply to that case.

We looked at nationwide what was happening,” said Carolyn. “There are 20 other states with similar legislation in place, so this is about Rhode Island catching up.”

There is also an immunity clause, so an employer cannot be sued for not hiring a sex offender under these guidelines.

Selasa, 17 Juni 2014

End of Love (Documentary)

End of Love Documentary
Original Article (Survey)

They are looking for people to interview for this documentary, so if you are interested, take the survey (link above) and contact them if needed.

Matt, Neil, Josh and Zach sought out pornography on the Internet as adolescents. Today they are convicted felons on the National Sex Offender Registry. Their names, photos and addresses are public information available on the Internet. Their residency, movement and employment options are extremely limited.

Law enforcement officials say child pornography possession constitutes the fastest growing prosecuted crime in the US. END OF LOVE is a feature-length documentary about the epidemic of males who are being convicted of downloading child pornography - how it happens and what it says about who we are.

END OF LOVE questions why and how the impulse to seek out child pornography originates in boys and men. Is their on-line sexual exploration and arousal responding to the normalization of sexualized images of underage girls in popular culture? Taking into consideration new discoveries in brain development and addictive behavior, does uncontrolled access to the cornucopia of sexual acts on the Internet at an early age pre-dispose youth to become eventual consumers of child pornography? Or not?

SD - My Voice: Treatment, not prison, answer for sex offenses

Letters to the editor
Original Article

06/16/2014

By Georgina M. Schaff

On behalf of our 4,000-plus members, the Dakota Reform Sex Offender Laws Family Solutions is asking South Dakota Senate candidates to make this issue a campaign priority.

Our mission — promote medical research, legislation and education to provide an empirically based, rational approach to dealing with sexually related offenses and stop the cycle of abuse to protect all children.

According to the Department of Justice, most child sexual-abuse victims are molested by family members or close acquaintances. About 40 percent of crimes take place in the victim's own home, and 20 percent take place in the home of a friend or relative. Your children are more at risk from your family, your friends and you than from convicted sex offenders.

While I was growing up in the Dakotas, incest was common. The abuser was confronted by family members and the inappropriate behavior stopped, a method that was very successful. I know from personal experience that the behavior can be changed and the abuser can be stopped, with the support of family and loved ones.

History has proved that incarceration and labeling does not protect all children. The Unified Judicial System Annual Report and the Crime in South Dakota report published each year by the Division of Criminal Investigation verify the number of new offenses each year while another child is victimized.

For an "offense" of any sexual nature, America law does not hesitate to destroy the family structure, slowly bankrupts the family and might force the family on public assistance (paid by taxpayers). Often the accused is provided additional legal resources through the court (paid by taxpayers). Citizens are incarcerated (health insurance, room and board paid by taxpayers), and once their sentence is served, they are released back into society, labeled with the registry as to where they can live and have difficulty finding jobs.

Tax dollars could be spent on prevention with a focus on changing the behavior and stopping this cycle of abuse. The Dakotas are known for their compassion and the opportunity to reach out and help those less fortunate.

We must take the "weapon" away, the "law" that provides the power and control over their victim. "If you tell I will have to go to prison, you will never be able see me and our family will be divided." Replace that "law" with, "If you tell, I will have to change my behavior or go to jail."

Early intervention is the only true way to protect all children who are being sexually abused by a first-time offender, and many can live with their family with respect and dignity while confronting their wrongdoing.

Among intervention benefits:
  • Protect all sexually abused children with a promise of resources to change the behavior and stop the abuse.
  • Behavior therapy is covered by most insurance, not the taxpayer.
  • Children would be encouraged to immediately report.
  • Future, additional victims will be prevented.
  • Taxpayers would save billions on prosecution, incarceration and the registry.
  • Cover-ups would be eliminated if treatment were the first option.
  • Overcrowding in prisons would be eliminated.
  • Families would not have to face a lifetime of shame.
  • Many lives would be saved for those who choose suicide.

Dakota RSOL Family Solutions' Mission is for legislation for a confidential family intervention for first time nonviolent sex offenses.

Georgina Schaff of Lemmon is a Dakota RSOL Family Solutions State Affiliate Organizer.

Jumat, 07 Februari 2014

GA - New business owner looking for employees just out of jail

It's About Time Vegetables and More
Original Article

02/06/2014

By Jim Wallace

ALBANY (WALB) - An Albany businessman hopes to fill his new business with employees who are on probation.

Willie Ross says if more businesses hire folks getting out jail it will reduce crime.

Ross said he knows men and women getting out of jail have a hard time finding a job. He thinks giving them a chance will improve the community.

Fredric Barnes said finding a steady job since getting out of jail has been tough.

"I want to work. Because that's the only way you are going to have something," said Barnes. "I done been down that road over some years, and I'm just trying to do better."

Willie Ross, in the process of opening his new business at 313 West Broad Avenue, said when Barnes came in asking for work, his story touched him.

"He was in tears," recalled Ross. "Saying he didn't want to rob nobody or he didn't want to steal nothing from nobody. So why not give him a chance."

A chance to rebuild their lives is what most people coming out from behind bars want, but a job can be the toughest part of starting that process.

Willie Ross said he understands their problem, and believes if these people get jobs they will not return to crime. So he is putting his new business and money on the line, to give some folks that chance.

"I have 9 positions open, and I'm going to try to fill as many of them as I can with people who are on probation," said Ross. "That can't be hired nowhere else."

Ross said he calls his new business "It's About Time Vegetables and More", because his father George Ross tried decades ago to open a vegetable stand downtown, but no one would rent him a store because of his race. Barnes said he is glad that Ross is providing an opportunity for him.

"The Lord finally just blessed me, when Mr. Ross came, talked to me, and said are you ready to go to work," said Barnes "And I said, yes sir."

Ross challenges other business owners to do the same.

"I think if everybody pulled together like I'm trying to, then we'll have a better Albany," said Ross.

Ross will open his new store March 1st.

IN - Homeless sex offenders to be out in the cold

Homeless Shelter
Homeless Shelter
Original Article

02/06/2014

By Douglas Walker

MUNCIE - A Muncie pastor is seeking the public’s help in trying to find shelter for a small group of convicted sex offenders who are soon to lose their nightly home.

Steve Graves, pastor at Fountain Square (Facebook) and Industry United Methodist (Facebook) churches, said Thursday the men have been told they can no longer stay at a Christian Ministries shelter at 401 E. Main St.

That’s due to state law that forbids those convicted of some sex-related crimes from living within 1,000 feet of places frequented by children. In the case of the Main Street shelter, that would apparently apply to a small downtown park, the Carnegie Library and a daycare facility, Graves said.

We don’t question the law,” the pastor said, adding he was “baffled” as to why state officials apparently feel they have no responsibility to help the men survive.
- If the law is wrong you should question it!

The edict that effective Sunday, the men can no longer stay at the Main Street shelter came not from Christian Ministries, but from state officials.

Graves said he is aware of the low regard many citizens have for convicted sex offenders, and that their proximity can be troubling, especially for families with children.

But we’re a society that believes in redemption, and second chances,” he said. “We’re still human beings.”
- Not anymore!

A man who has lost everything is capable of anythingGraves said because of the stigma of their crimes, the men have difficulty finding work, and that the residency restriction complicates their efforts to find lodging. In recent weeks, weather conditions have made the pursuit of overnight shelter a life and death proposition.
- We wonder if that is their goal, to have ex-offenders die?

Desperate people will do desperate things,” Graves said.

The pastor at first thought as many as eight offenders would be left without lodging beginning Sunday, but four of the men have since found at-least temporary lodging.

That leaves Graves — and those who have come to his assistance, including Paula Justice, Mayor Dennis Tyler’s administrative assistant — two more days to find a place for four men to stay.

Graves is asking anyone with a property that could be used — essentially any structure with heating that would not violate the 1,000-feet restriction — and where cots could be set up to give the men a place to sleep.

The pastor can be contacted at (765) 228-7404.

They don’t expect the Taj Mahal,” he said. “Just a roof over their head.”

Graves became aware of the men’s plight through a convicted sex offender he met through his church, _____.

_____ was convicted of child molesting in Grant County in 1995. The former Marion resident has since returned to prison for parole violations, and two convictions — also in Grant County, in 2003 and 2008 —for failing to register as a sex offender.

He became a Muncie resident through the efforts of the state Department of Correction, who allowed him to stay at a “DOC Assist” facility — for recently released sex offenders with nowhere else to go — in the Old West End neighborhood. (A DOC official said recently the department was no longer operating any DOC Assist homes in Muncie or Delaware County.)

After his eligibility to stay at the Powers Street house ended, _____ for a time lived under the East Jackson Street bridge. The church congregation later bought him a tent to live in, but this winter has not been conducive to tent residency.

He has done some part-time work at the two churches where Graves ministers, and is hopeful his Social Security pension — for a mental disability — will be restored.

For now, though, his primary concern is having a place to sleep on Sunday night.

The system is messed up, big time,” _____ said on Thursday.

While Graves’ priority is finding a place for _____ and the other three offenders to stay in the short term, he said efforts must be made to solve the residence issues for offenders on a long-term basis.

This is a community problem,” said Graves.

The Muncie pastor is no stranger to trying to solve government-related problems — or to dealing with convicted criminals, for that matter.

Before he entered the ministry seven years ago, Graves worked both as an administrative assistant to then-Gov. Evan Bayh, assigned to health and human services, and as a probation officer.

Selasa, 04 Februari 2014

IL - Lawmakers eye reforming sex offender laws

Illinois State Fair
Original Article

02/04/2014

By T.J. Fowler

SPRINGFIELD - Illinois legislators are looking to fill in some gaps in the state's sex offender laws.

Two proposals have been introduced this spring that would broaden rules for Illinois' registered sex offenders after two separate incidents revealed holes in existing state law.

One of the plans would require that sex offenders update their registration with the Illinois State Police if they lose their job.

"We're trying to clarify that an update is required when you lose a job, just as it is when you change jobs," said state Sen. Jason Barickman, R-Bloomington, who is sponsoring the plan. "This law says that the change in employment would include the loss of a job as a reportable event."

Barickman and state Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, introduced the proposal after a court case in McLean County revealed a problem with the language in existing state law.

"In this case, someone had not updated their registration status after they lost their job," he said. "The state's attorney's office filed charges saying they had failed to update their status."

"The judge dismissed that case, I believe, because the statute says 'change in employment,' rather than 'loss of employment,' so we're trying to clean that up," he added

Barickman said the change would reflect the original goals of the registry.

"I think it was likely that the original intent was the people who drafted this sex offender registration process to include the loss of a job as an event that should be reported," he said.

Another proposal would ban sex offenders from attending county fairs.

"The law states right now that they're unable to work for a county fair and they're unable to be a vendor at a county fair because of the different children's activities there," he said. "But it doesn't say that they're unable to attend a county fair."

Smiddy said that officials from Whiteside County asked him to look into changing the law after a problem arose at a county fair there.

"They had an incident last summer when a registered sex offender was at a fair around children," he said. "It was an issue for them, and when a state's attorney comes to me with this type of issue, it's something we need to act on."
- Okay so an ex-offender was at a fair having fun like everybody else, so did he commit a crime?

The new law would not restrict sex offenders from attending state fairs.
- So which is it?  Above you say it will ban them, then here you say it won't?

Last summer, legislators passed a law banning sex offenders from playgrounds in fast-food restaurants. As the list of restricted areas for sex offenders continues to grow, Smiddy said he doesn't have a problem adding a new one.
- Yeah he doesn't have a problem with violating someone's rights, as long as it's not his.  Most sexual crimes occur in the victims own home and by their own family, not at a state fair or other park.

"Attending the county fair is geared more toward families," he said. "A lot of children are there. They have a lot of children's events, like tractor pulls and stuff, attached to these things."

"I just don't believe that a registered sex offender should be allowed to go to those areas where children are present. It was something that we needed to address."
- We're confused.  So can they or can't they go to a state fair?

The legislation is Senate Bill 2912 (PDF) and House Bill 4280 (PDF).

See Also:

Minggu, 02 Februari 2014

FL - Colony of Outcasts: Some sex offenders find refuge in Fort Myers woods

Ery day we're shufflin'!
Ery day we're shufflin'!
Original Article

Florida, and across the country, these draconian laws have been creating these types of homeless camps. Take Julia Tuttle for example (And here).

02/01/2014

By Janine Zeitlin

A camp hidden off Veronica Shoemaker Boulevard is the only place in area some sex offenders have to go

_____ unzipped his pup tent, his abode in a patch of wilderness off Veronica Shoemaker Boulevard in Fort Myers.

He grabbed a flashlight and his ID and stowed them in a book bag hitched over his shoulders.

He was a Boy Scout, he said, but that did not prepare him for this.

It’s survival of the fittest,” said _____. He is 46, but looks older.

A hammock stretched between melaleuca trees is the most comfy spot for his 250-pound frame. His kitchen is an upside-down grocery cart fashioned into a grill for coffee and soup. A wooden palette is his coffee table.

On this afternoon last month, _____ was in pursuit of a hot meal. He stepped onto a worn path hemmed by slash pine trees. He passed the camps of his neighbors, who reside under makeshift hovels of tarps and tents in this small colony of homeless people.

But this camp is unique: its inhabitants include sex offenders, who said the Lee County Sheriff’s Office directed them to this hidden spot about a quarter mile east into woods that run along a trail. The woods sit across from the city’s Trailhead Neighborhood Park and abut the Sienna at Vista Lake complex of one- and two-bedroom apartments, where on this afternoon young men played football in the parking lot.

_____ had lived there since October. He had struggled to find someone to hire him after five years in federal prison for possessing child pornography. And it was difficult for him to retain jobs because of mental illness.

He said the sheriff’s office showed him the camp location.

They’re trying to give us a safe haven,” _____ said. “They keep a close eye on us.”

The sheriff’s office refused to comment on the assertions.

Sheriff Mike Scott has directed his personnel not to answer questions from this newspaper. “As you know, we don’t entertain interviews or answer questions with The News-Press,” spokeswoman Tiffany Wood wrote in an email.
- Except if it suits them!  Police are always having press conferences, etc.  But this makes them look bad, so of course they aren't going to speak with the news media.

But Fort Myers police and social service providers said they’ve also been told it was the sheriff’s office that sent them there.

This much is for sure: Law enforcement knows about the camp. Last year, the sheriff’s office tallied about 120 routine calls checking on sex offenders near the intersection where the camp is located, mostly occurring after another camp of sex offenders off Ortiz Avenue was disbanded by city police at the property owner’s request. Since May, at least 10 transient sex offenders and one sexual predator have registered to the camp, records show. Six are currently registered there with convictions that range from sexual battery to lewd behavior toward children, according to a check Friday of Florida Department of Law Enforcement’s sex offender public registry.
- So I guess Florida is still playing the sex offender shuffle (Here & Here)?

Offenders can register as homeless without a precise address. The camp meets state requirements, which say that sex offenders can’t live within 1,000 feet from a park, playground, child care facility or school, though last week Fort Myers police said they found a few people living too close to the trail, which qualifies as a park. The sheriff’s office told the police they would move them, police said.
- Come on, a trail is not a park!

Over the past years, residency restrictions for sex offenders have grown increasingly harsh across the nation. But the question of where they can live is less easily answered. Yet, it’s one that more Florida cities will have to confront as some experts expect the number of homeless sex offenders to multiply.

It’s in their best interest to escape scrutiny and go to a place where they have less probability of being identified,” said Duane Dobbert, an FGCU professor in the department of justice studies and author of “Halting the Sexual Predators among Us: Preventing Attack, Rape, and Lust Homicide.” “You can live outside here and you can avoid and evade public scrutiny because we’re a warm climate.”

A 2013 study by four university researchers, “Transient Sex Offenders and Residence Restrictions in Florida,” called for reconsideration of such restrictions. They cited them as a factor in contributing to higher rates of homelessness in sex offenders. It pointed to housing instability as a risk factor for recidivism, which is lower for sex offenses than other types of crimes.

Hop on the Merry-go-round
When someone has stable housing and a good relationship where they’re with family and supported by the community, recidivism drops dramatically,” said Gail Colletta, president of Florida Action Committee, a nonprofit that advocates for reform of sex offender laws. “We make it difficult for them to get a job and find a place to live. We do everything we can to keep them from being productive citizens.”
- Well they need ex-offenders in the merry-go-round prison system so they can continue to rake in the money to keep the prison injustice system alive, and so politicians / organizations can exploit the issue for their own gain as well.

In Lee County, no homeless shelters will accept sex offenders because of children on their properties. But who wants a homeless sex offender in the woods near their home or the park where their kids play? Where can they go and who decides where to put them?
- Apparently the sheriff departments decide where to start homeless camps?

There’s always a solution,” said Dennis Fahey, a criminal justice professor at Edison State College. “But the question is is anybody interested in finding a solution.”
- Sure there is, eliminate the residency restrictions, and no, they don't want a solution!

Must report

By law, sex offenders must report to their local sheriff’s office either twice or four times a year. If they don’t have a place to stay, they must report within 48 hours. The Lee sheriff’s six-person sexual offender and predator unit regularly checks to make sure offenders are living where they register. In Lee County, there are about 625 sex offenders compared to 74 sexual predators. Sexual predators have been convicted of a sexually violent offense. There are more than 200 sex offenders in Collier and 25 predators.

The city doesn’t have a specific sex offender ordinance, so Fort Myers Police Lt. Randy Jelks said the police enforce the 1,000-foot restriction.

Keep calm and play dumb
The camp origins are a mystery to police, who discovered it in the city late last year.
- We doubt this, but when you are in the spotlight, play dumb.

It did raise our concern given the proximity to a park and the proximity to an apartment building,” said Capt. Jim Mulligan of the Fort Myers Police, who has been monitoring it.
- So now, just wait and see, since the media has done this report, the Gestapo will come out in force to shut down the camp, and thus the shuffling will continue!  Another homeless camp will pop up elsewhere, until the fire gets hot again.  Florida has been doing this for years now.

Sgt. Tracey Booth, who is in charge of the sheriff’s sex offender and predator unit, told city police no one in her office has directed the homeless sex offenders to the location, city records show.
- We also doubt this.  Some ex-offender needs to get this on audio recording to show they know all about this, but we are not sure about the laws on recording someone without their knowledge in this state, but like we said, play dumb when the fire gets hot!

Florida Department of Corrections spokeswoman Misty Cash said her agency played no role. She declined to facilitate interviews on the matter but responded to written questions.

We don’t know how these offenders came to know about this camp. They reported to us their address, which did not violate any local ordinances, Florida Statutes or the conditions of their court ordered supervision,” she wrote.
- Didn't you know that ex-offenders are all knowing?  They know everything, especially where homeless camps are.  Come on, you expect us to believe this?  We are not sheeple!

A review of Booth’s emails shows she did wish to keep the location quiet from the city.
- You just got burned!

On May 28, Sgt. Booth wrote Sgt. Roger Valdivia of the Fort Myers Police about a Fort Myers lieutenant ordering sex offenders off Ortiz to relocate.

Its (sic) incidents like this that is the reason I want to work together,” Valdivia responded.

The next day, Booth sent an email to a detective in her unit, Stuart Foreman, asking if everyone had been relocated.
- Yep they are still shufflin'!

City will be having Code Enforcement, enforcing a ‘no camping within the city limits’ ordinance. So we will have to see what happens to the new location,” she wrote. “I will not be advising the city of the new location.”

Her email included a list of four offenders at the camp with this description: “living in the wooded area approximately ¼ East of the Trailhead fire station on Veronica Shoemaker.”

Foreman replied: “I’d hate to move these guys again, it’s a real pain in the $%^.”

In a later email, she instructed her unit to “show” a soon-to-be transient offender to his new address in the woods, which later appears as the camp off Veronica Shoemaker.

Fort Myers Mayor Randy Henderson called on law enforcement agencies and city and county leaders to cooperate on a better resolution than using a specific area as a “dumping ground.”

That’s a bigger issue we need to come together and solve,” he said. “It’s impossible to overdo oversight on this.”
- It's real easy to solve....  Get rid of residency restrictions!

What’s not an option is moving them around like a checkerboard.”

Prison release

_____ emerged from the camp onto a trail frequented by bikers and walkers. He crossed the street toward the park he steers clear of because it’s against the law for him to enter and headed south to catch the bus to the Salvation Army for a meal.

After his April prison release, _____ stayed at Char Ann-Juanita apartments in south Fort Myers, one of the few places that accepts sex offenders, according to social service providers. But he could no longer pay the rent. One October morning, he remembers visiting the Lee County Sheriff’s Office to inform the sex offender unit he was going to be homeless. He was ready with a tent, tarp and few bags of clothes.

They told him he could go to the camp off Veronica Shoemaker, he said, and escorted him to an opening in the brush.

Probation office isn’t really thrilled about this but that’s where the sheriff’s office put me so it legally allows me to be here,” _____ said.

No matter how people feel about sex offenders, he pointed out that they still need housing and services to help them rebuild productive lives after their convictions.
- Then like we said, exterminate the residency restrictions!

How strenuous do you have to make something before a person just wants to climb in a box and put the nails in themselves?

(Earlier this week, _____ was arrested for violating his probation, which called for him to find work, a stable home and show up to regular appointments.)
- How can you find work when you are homeless and do not have transportation?  This just shows how the merry-go-round system works, they need people in and out of prison to keep the money flow going!

There’s no extra state requirements for homeless sex offenders, according to FDLE. The sheriff’s office does have homeless sex offenders sign a letter saying Lee County has no designated land for them and that sex offenders and predators living on undeveloped private property have 45 days to obtain a certified letter stating that they have permission to be there. But some guys have been on the spot longer.

Trespassing signs

No trespassing sign
Around December, Fort Myers police began contacting property owners of the wooded area about erecting no-trespassing signs, which they need before they can permanently oust the offenders. The bulk of the land belongs to a land-holding company, Serena Park LLC, which was contacted by the city. Mike Kerver, the company’s vice president, expected to have the signs up soon.

Once the signs are up, police plan to give the offenders a few days to pack and will work in tandem with an advocate for the homeless to try to help them.
- So the police put them there, fires get hot, now they are going to kick them out?  Stay tuned for encampment #2 coming soon....

We’re trying to balance everybody in this,” said Mulligan. “I know people don’t like sex offenders in their neighborhoods. They’re not anybody’s favorite.”
- You are just trying to put out the fire.  If the media never said anything about this, then this homeless camp would still be there, but that's just our opinion of course.

But, then what happens? There are scant places for sex offenders to legally live apart from the woods, the south Fort Myers apartments that accept sex offenders and pockets of Lehigh Acres, the local administrator for the Department of Corrections told The News-Press in 2012. The department declined a recent interview request. Mapping of sex offenders’ locations show they reside in pockets throughout Lee County.
- They live in the woods and in clusters due to the residency restrictions!  Eliminate that and the problem will surely vanish, or a huge dent put into it!  But hey, we can't look "soft" on sex offenders now can we?

Local social service providers could not offer housing options for homeless sex offenders and neither could the state’s homelessness director.

It’s hard to get people to come forward to help that group of people and want to establish housing, but it is a public safety concern,” said Janet Bartos, executive director of the Lee County Homeless Coalition.

Nonprofit organizations do provide food, counseling and outreach to homeless sex offenders.

There’s not an easy answer because of the background that they have,” said Ann Arnall, director of Lee County human services.
- So why don't you hire a night guard to watch the place while everybody sleeps?

There’s not a high level of sympathy either. If somebody is going to start a program, who is going to support it?

This week, on an afternoon of welcome sunshine, Priscilla Morley flipped through a magazine at a Trailhead Park picnic shelter. Morley was unaware of the camp just a walk away.

It’s a concern because this is a park for kids,” said Morley, 40, a nurse. “As long as they don’t come into the park, I’m OK. You just have to watch your kids from anybody.”
- You should do that in the first place!

See Also:

Kamis, 30 Januari 2014

NJ - Trying to Ban Sex Offenders from Social Media Is a Waste of Time

Social Media
Original Article

01/29/2014

By Jason Koebler

New Jersey has become the latest state to try to regulate how (and if) sex offenders can use social media, an increasingly tricky problem facing legislators around the country. But privacy experts say the laws are problematic, and probably unconstitutional.

The proposed bill would require all sex offenders in New Jersey to disclose the fact on all of their social media accounts.

A similar measure was introduced, but not passed, last year. The measure has been pre-filed for the 2014 legislative session. Donna Simon, an assemblywoman who sponsored the bill, said anyone caught violating the law, if passed, could face a $10,000 fine and 18 months in prison.


Sex offenders are very sneaky and despicable,” she said. “What they will do is they will have a myriad of screen names and other identities to use for communicating to children.”
- Underage children are not suppose to be on Facebook based on their terms of service.  Why don't you teach kids in school, or better yet, the parents be parents and teach their own children about the sharing of personal information online or talking to people they do not know?  A major study was done years ago that shows most children are approached by their peers about sex, not a stranger, although that does happen.

Of course, stopping even a small number of sexual assaults is a laudable goal, but in many cases, laws that limit social media access are quickly struck down in court, making the whole exercise nothing more than a waste of time and money. A year ago, a federal appeals judge ruled that an Indiana law that banned sex offenders from using instant messaging, social networking sites, and chat programs was unconstitutional. In that decision, a federal judge wrote that the law “targets substantially more activity than the evil it seeks to redress.”

Nathan Wessler, an attorney with the ACLU, says that New Jersey’s proposed law is a similar overreach. The law would require sex offenders to disclose all of their online accounts to law enforcement, including E-mail addresses, screen names, social media accounts, message board handles, and more. Similar provisions in laws passed in Indiana, Nebraska, Georgia, Utah, California, and Louisiana have been struck down. A law banning sex offenders from social media was struck down in North Carolina last year, but a New Jersey ban on social media for sex offenders that are out on parole was upheld.

The reporting requirement is particularly problematic, because you have a right to engage in anonymous debate online,” Wessler said. “You have the right to ask about embarrassing medical matters online to write on the Facebook page of the Mayo Clinic or post on message boards. The government is requiring people to turn over these anonymous identities so they can watch what they’re doing online even when it’s protected anonymous political speech.”

Wessler says that besides being unconstitutional, the requirement is “onerous and impractical,” because it requires disclosure of things such as randomly-generated email addresses from Craiglist and disclosure of accounts that may have long-since been forgotten about.

The New Jersey law is modeled on a law passed in 2012 in Louisiana and goes a step further, too. It “requires person who are required to register as a sex offender to provide notification of that fact on social networking sites” and also has to include “notice of the crime for which he was convicted, the jurisdiction of conviction, a description of his physical characteristics, and his residential address.” The offender must also link to their sex offender profile on a social networking site.

That’s a lot of information, and a lot of it is impossible, logistically, to follow through with, Wessler says.

It is literally impossible to include all that information in 140 characters, so anyone on the registry who wanted to use Twitter would be automatically violating the law,” he said, forcing people to “choose between complying with this restriction or giving up the ability to engage in conversation in what has become the new town square.”

Some social media networks, such as Facebook and Match.com, already ask that sex offenders not register for their sites in their terms of service.

All of this may sound overly sympathetic towards sex offenders, but laws that do mainly superficial things such as trying to ban sex offenders from social media run the risk of diverting attention from other prevention efforts. The stereotypical image of a creepy old man preying on unknowing children is a popular—and certainly scary—one, but in reality, few sex offenders use social media to perpetrate their crimes.

Numbers suggest that Internet-initiated sex crimes account for a salient but small proportion of all statutory rape offenses and a relatively low number of sexual offenses committed against minors overall,” according to a 2008 study published in American Psychologist (PDF).

More than 90 percent of sex offenders personally know their child victims, and in over 50 percent of cases, the perpetrator is a family member—far from a creepy stranger they met online.

These laws end up being counterproductive,” Wessler said. “They’re not tailored at all to addressing the harm the state should be concerned about. Anytime a legislature relies on inaccurate stereotypes of the problem, they’re diverting attention away from ways to address the real problem. It can create a false sense of security and divert law enforcement resources.”

And, if the goal is to rehabilitate sex offenders who have served their time in jail, requiring them to abstain from social media can seriously hinder that. Because sex offenders often have a difficult time finding jobs, many are self-employed and start their own businesses. If they want to start a social media page for their business, they’d be required to comply with the law.

A lot of times, they’ll try to make their own goods and sell them online or start a business that you can’t successfully do without marketing online,” Wessler said. “Complying with this is probably going to completely destroy their ability to promote that business online.”

Kamis, 23 Januari 2014

GA - New state law gives ex offenders hope for landing a job

Employment for ex-offenders
Original Article

This is excellent, but does it also include ex-sex offenders? If the video at the end of this article doesn't play, click the link above, which has more than one video available.

01/23/2014

By Devin Knight

ALBANY (WALB) - A new state law is a beacon of hope for job seekers with a criminal history.

Albany Second Chance hosted workshops for ex-offenders Monday at Albany Technical College and Albany State University. Speakers from the Georgia Justice Project said state is the second worst in the nation for barriers that keep ex-offenders from finding jobs, but they hope the Record Restriction Law will help.

Many of the hundreds of people crammed together in the Albany Tech Kirkland Conference Center were seeking a new beginning.

"Who doesn't wish they could go back and make it right, you know? But it is what it is," said Frankie Scott, Albany Resident. He, like many others at the Cleaning Up Your Criminal Record workshop, has a criminal history.

"I'm not going back. I got a wife and six kids. So...you know, it keeps my head up but it gets hard," he said.

He was convicted of two felonies more than a decade ago; one for cocaine possession and another for forgery. "You get rehabilitated, but you're still persecuted."

Off probation since 2010, Scott hasn't found a job in over three years because of his crimes.

"We know every year about 400 people return to Dougherty County from prison from federal and states. And when they return, they face several issues. And employment is one of them," said Dr. Charles Ochie, Albany Second Chance Founder & CEO.

Those with misdemeanor charges face similar challenges.

"I have no luck whatsoever. Nobody calls back. Just no luck," said Kasheem Dawson, Albany Resident. Dawson moved to Albany 6 months ago from the Virgin Islands, and hasn't been able to find work.

But organizers say Georgia's Record Restriction Act implemented last July could help offenders. "If they come back six months without a job, most of them will go back to prison again, 'cause an idle man is a devil's workshop," said Dr. Oachie.

People with less serious convictions can file an application with the District Attorney to prevent employers from seeing past charges.

"One of the key things that one of the individuals was talking about was banning the box. That little box when you check off offender that plays a big role here in the city of Albany, as well as the state of Georgia," said Vincent Alston, Workforce 44 Case Manager.

He said employers often won't follow up with applicants who check the box, or are found to have a criminal past. And removing that option, he said, could allow employers to see the potential of each applicant. "But look at what they're doing now. Look at the credentials they obtained. Look at the opportunity and the skills and the experience they can offer your company."

Scott and others with felonies can't apply and face a tough road to care for their children. "So as long as I keep them...keep involving myself in their life, they'll turn out better than I did, and that's my goal," he said.

But steady work, some say, is the final phase of rehabilitation.

During the workshop, a speaker with the Criminal Justice Project said 3.7 Million Georgians have criminal histories. They also said 1 in 13 individuals are under correctional control in Georgia, compared with the national average of 1 in 33.

Albany Second Chance says community support will play a major role in rehabilitating offenders.

See Also:

Jumat, 08 November 2013

AR - Sex Offenders, Experts Question Effectiveness of New Restrictions (Poll)

Questions
Original Article

Please click the link above and take the poll as well.

11/06/2013

LITTLE ROCK - After serving their time, some sex offenders can be on another list for the rest of their lives.

Convicted sex offenders are required to register with their local law enforcement office for at least 15 years, often much longer than that.

Now some registered sex offenders and their families are saying this branding is doing more harm than good.

"Sam," a registered sex offender who asked to have his identity concealed, calls every day a battle.

"No sooner did we move and the house was getting egged," he says. "They spray-painted on the porch that I need to move. Why keep attacking me?"

Another registered sex offender we'll refer to as "C," says he sees the same struggles.

"Two kids in the area accused me of fondling them," C says. "You want to crawl into a hole and you're afraid."

The Arkansas House of Representatives passed legislation earlier this year prohibiting level three and four sex offenders, considered the most likely to re-offend, from swimming areas and playgrounds in state parks.

They also can't live within 2,000 feet of any school, day care, public park or youth center.

These men say the restrictions, along with the sex-offender stigma, make it nearly impossible to find a steady job and safe place to live.

"Sir, many of our employees are going to be uncomfortable with your working here, so we're not going to be able to hire you," C recalls hearing from a prospective employer.

Spouses of sex offenders say these restrictions also tear apart their families, frequently hurting the most vulnerable.

"I can't tell you how many times my daughter has come home crying because children told her she shouldn't be allowed to live with her dad because he's a rapist," says Carrie Moore, who is married to a registered sex offender.


"It's been really hard. We live in a mobile home," Lynn Gilmore says. "We will never have the American Dream."

Lora Morgan, Director of Arkansas Time After Time, works with legislators to change sex-offender laws, saying current laws can force an offender to commit other crimes just to stay on their feet.

"So a sex offender, they might have done 5, 10, 15 years in prison, then once they got out, the day they're released, that's when their 15 years starts on the public registry," Morgan says.
- We are not sure, but we believe the 15 years starts once the person is off probation / parole, not once they get out of prison.

University of Arkansas-Little Rock professor Dr. Tusty ten-Besel says there are some misconceptions about sex offenders.

"Previous research has shown us that less than 10 percent will actually commit another sex crime," she says.
- Recidivism studies.

Dr. ten-Bensel is interviewing registered sex offenders to also find out if current law and rehabilitation programs are working effectively.

"If these laws are helping, 'Wonderful,' that's what we'll say. If it's not, then maybe we need to go back and revisit these laws to make it more effective," she says.

It may be years before all the information for her research is gathered, but the offenders we talked to say whatever it shows, life on the list will likely never change.

"We are the low-hanging fruit on the trees," C says.
- Sex offenders are today's scapegoat!  No other ex-felon has to register for life and told where they can and cannot live.

Are sex offender laws prohibiting convicted men and women from becoming a productive part of society?
- Take the poll at the link at the top of this article.  Our opinion, YES!

Sabtu, 19 Oktober 2013

CANADA - Calling a sex offender 'friend' Circles of Support & Accountability helps reintegrate and reduce risks

Otto and Florence Driedger volunteer with one of 25 Circles of Support and Accountability in Regina and area to provide positive support to recently released sex offenders.
Otto and Florence Driedger
Original Article

10/19/2013

By BARB PACHOLIK

Friends, family, a job, a place to live, they're the trappings of a life most people take for granted - unless you're a released high-risk sex offender.

They are the pariahs of the Canadian criminal justice system, both inside and outside prison walls.

The recent panic and school lockdowns surrounding high risk Alberta sex offender _____, who went on the lam after cutting off his monitoring ankle bracelet, is a tangible example of the anxiety they instil.

But few will be locked away forever. The correctional system is built on the notion of rehabilitation - go to prison, get some help and you ideally come out a reformed criminal, ready to re-join a society you have been away from for years, sometimes decades.

But society is waiting with closed doors not open arms because you're a sex offender, seemingly reformed or not.

If you're alienated and unable to weave your way back into the fabric of society, the risk of falling back into old habits, under the old pressures, of ultimately reoffending goes up. But few people want to risk opening the door - to a job, to an apartment, even to a shopping mall at times - because you might reoffend.

Tom is living that catch-22.

He looks so altogether ordinary - a kindly middle-aged face, groomed, simply dressed. He speaks well, likes a good game of bridge and has a gentle wit.

The picture contrasts sharply with an image of the younger version of this man, captured in reports and old news clippings - angry, addicted, out of control, and seemingly without conscience as his terrifying, violent crimes left a string of damaged victims.

Never finishing one sentence before adding a new one, he has now served more than three decades - most of his adult life - behind bars. His victims - none of whom were children - would likely say it still isn't enough; the law has deemed otherwise.

He's now trying to create a life in Regina, "outside the wall," as he calls it.

When first released, his reputation preceded him after he became the subject of a public disclosure warning in Regina. Another smaller community was up in arms when word got out that he was considering a move there.

He doesn't begrudge the police for putting out a warning, which also urges the public against vigilantism.

"They're letting the public know there's a person like myself in their community," says Tom, who agreed to speak to the Leader-Post on the condition he not be identified. He is real; the name "Tom" isn't.

"I'm not out here to hurt anybody. What I done was very horrible," he readily admits.

With plans announced recently by the Stephen Harper government to create a publicly accessible national sex offender registry, even more people like Tom will be under a microscope.

"There are steps I've taken now to ensure things like that will never happen again," he says.

His key to finding his way - and hopefully success - is a group of community volunteers who aren't afraid to call a sex offender "friend."

"I've been out twice before. I always reoffended and went back in. This is the longest period of time I've been out. And that's because of COSA."

Circles of Support and Accountability or COSA began informally in Regina in the 1990s to assist people like Tom. It's essentially a circle of friends with volunteers from all walks of life who meet regularly with an offender, try to show him a "positive path," challenge him when he veers from it, and hopefully reduce his risk. In COSA, Tom is known as a "core member" not an offender.

"The one thing I don't think people understand is it takes a community to help a person reintegrate," says Amanda Richter Goddard, co-ordinator for COSA's South Saskatchewan branch, based in Regina. "Our mandate here is we don't want anymore victims ... And providing that accountability and supportive relationship to these guys has shown to be the way to help them reintegrate safely."

What began informally with one offender who remains involved in COSA to this day - "he's never reoffended," Richter Goddard quickly adds - became an official organization in 2002.

In that time, COSA in the province's south has worked with 25 core members. In more recent years, COSA groups have also formed in Saskatoon and Prince Albert.

"Right now we have a 95-per-cent success rate," Richter Goddard says of the 25 circles in Regina and area. That means 24 have never reoffended sexually or otherwise, excluding breaches of court-ordered conditions, such as breaking curfew or drinking.

One federal study found "most sexual offenders do not re-offend sexually over time." After 20 years, 73 per cent of sexual offenders had not been charged with, or convicted of, another sexual offence, the report notes.

"It's really hard to sit down and statistically show community members that people who have offended sexually have the lowest recidivism rates," says Richter Goddard. "It doesn't matter to people."

Otto Driedger has been with COSA since the beginning, was a consultant when it began nationally, and is currently a volunteer in Tom's circle, one of 15 active circles in southern Saskatchewan. A retired University of Regina human justice professor, Driedger recalls all too clearly the high price of helping a paroled sex offender.

"He was stoned," interjects Driedger's wife Florence, who is also in Tom's circle. She means that quite literally.

When a core member, whose offences involved children, was forced by residents to move from a neighbourhood, Driedger returned the next day to collect the man's belongings. A resident hurled stones at the professor.

"That was the most intensive kind of a thing we've had. And that was in the beginning. There's been a lot of public education since then," says Driedger. Still, they speak of one core member who isn't allowed in a Regina shopping mall - not because of anything he's done but because of the trouble his presence might stir up.

The Driedgers and Richter Goddard talk of the "barriers" offenders face in trying to move from long-term prisoner to lawabiding citizen.

Many of the fellows - all the core members are men - have trouble finding work. Florence recalls one who was on the job for three days with a major Regina company - until his record check came back and head office directed the employer to cut him loose.

"When you have those kinds of situations, it really deflates a person. You don't have the self esteem," she says.

Tom has been fortunate to find work. His employer knows he was in prison and for how long - but not necessarily for what crimes. "She just says, 'At least you're here everyday.' " It's a minimum wage position, and he'll need to do better if he's to afford his own apartment some day. He has put out a lot of applications. "It's very hard to find jobs - especially if you're a sex offender," says Tom.

Driedger has, on occasion, met the criticism head on, meeting with community members to explain COSA's approach.

"If you have a person in your community who has offended sexually - if you are hostile toward, alienate him even more, then there's a much higher risk of him reoffending than if you relate to the person in a positive kind of way. And take precautions," he says.

"Now, nobody can assure that it's not going to happen, but you can minimize the possibility by not having alienation," he adds.

Florence recalls a core member who once confessed, "I don't know what's normal." So institutionalized, the man thought the woman who served his morning java at a local coffee shop must be coming on to him with her smiles and pleasantries. The circle enlightened him on common courtesy.

COSA tries to have both men and women in a circle. "Persons who have offended sexually - some of them have a feeling that women are sex objects," says Driedger, adding the circle helps them relate to women as people.

And for offenders who have suffered sexual abuse in their past at the hands of a man, being able to build a positive relationship with a male is also crucial.

When he arrived at a Regina halfway house a few years ago, Tom joined COSA on the recommendation of his parole officer and a fellow parolee.

"I came to Regina and I only knew three people, so getting involved with COSA was really helpful for me. It introduced me to a whole new range of other people."

Like an arranged marriage, the initial meeting was nerve-racking. "But I figured that, after listening for a while, that it was in my best interests to be open and honest right away," he adds.

From the tentative first steps grew a friendship that saw Tom and another core member host a barbecue at the Driedgers' Regina home. "Where else would you have people from COSA, parole and police all mingle in the same setting," says Tom, adding that he and the other member wanted to say thanks.

The program has won the support of Regina police.

"In talking with our own people - people who understand and appreciate the role of COSA members and volunteers - they give people a lot of credit for their patience and their generosity and their willingness to work with people that most of society would shun," says police spokesperson Elizabeth Popowich.

In addition to being a positive role model, volunteers can help with routine things many take for granted - getting a bus card, shopping for groceries, going to a bank, making a doctor's appointment, or - as Tom quips at one point - sort out why a so-called "zero-dollar" cellphone still costs money. "If someone has been removed from society and incarcerated, all these little things can become stressors," Popowich says. "And it might become an opportunity for failure."

Popowich likens COSA's role to watching a pot of liquid on the stove.

"Nobody can predict when the liquid inside will reach its boiling point. And if we wait until we see the bubbles rising, it might be too late. But COSA - it's like they're in there and they're testing the water and identifying hot spots and trying to take measures to even things out again. And the testing comes through all of those interactions, the time spent with the core members."

Asked about his successful reintegration this time, Tom says another key difference was his decision not to return home. It helped him avoid falling back into old patterns of drug and alcohol use. He also meets weekly with a psychologist to tackle his own abuse issues from his past.

And for friendship and support, Tom meets regularly with his circle. Sometimes, they do little more than play bridge and swap stories. But it's a normalcy Tom never expected to find on the outside.

"It's not so much people I can turn to. It's people I can trust, because the trust issue is a big thing," says Tom. "They're one basic concern is my welfare - to make sure that I don't reoffend, to make sure I'm still on the right track."

Offenders join COSA voluntarily; it's not mandated by any parole or court order. In fact, Driedger says he would refuse a circle to an offender who was using it strictly to manipulate the system.

But even some who come willingly don't stay.

"Some (circles) have voluntarily closed due to the fact that they don't want to be involved. Maybe they aren't ready for it. Maybe they're not ready to be accountable," says Richter Goddard.

Upon joining a circle, the core member and volunteers sign a "covenant." Typically, the offender agrees to be honest, and abide by parole or court conditions, such as staying away from alcohol or drugs; the circle volunteers agree to respect the person and be available to him. "It's kind of a written agreement on how a friendship is," says Richter Goddard.

Before a core member signs on, he has to sit with the circle and give a brief history of his offences and his life. "It keeps you honest and helps be honest with others," says Tom.

If a core member heads in a direction that could lead to trouble, the circle volunteers will call him on it.

"In jail we say, you cannot con a con," says Tom.

"Well it's the same thing here when you start working with your core members. After a while, you get to know them, and they get to know you so well that they can tell when there's something that's not right."

Richter Goddard says if the behaviour was troublesome enough, the circle may consult with parole officials or police.

"They agreed that they could have friends that would call them out on their bad behaviours," she says.

Driedger is quick to add that volunteers walk "a fine line."

The circle is based on friendship, not surveillance.

But, he adds, "We all have circles of support and accountability. I always say, if I'm going to do something stupid, my wife is the first one that will tell me."

Richter Goddard recalls one core member who was challenged by his circle when they feared he might hurt himself or others. "They've had to get the police involved to make sure he hasn't hurt himself. And he still comes back because he knows that somebody cares for him - and I think that's something that he's never had."

Asked if the community is safer because of COSA, Driedger replies, "We cannot give assurances." Adds Florence, "We can't assure that of our next door neighbour."

But they point to a study that suggests high risk sex offenders who were involved with COSA were 83 per cent less likely to reoffend than those without a circle.

Tom says he's only one offender but is proof COSA is working for him. "This is the longest I've been out."

For the first time, he's actually finished a sentence on the outside. He recently moved out of a halfway house and into a private residence he shares with friends.

"It's how badly you want to stay out. I like it a lot better out here than I do inside. The people out here are a lot friendlier than the ones inside the wall."

Selasa, 08 Oktober 2013

NY - Counties face challenge of housing sex offenders

Home
Original Article

10/07/2013

By Jeremiah Horrigan

They're destitute, without jobs or much hope of securing one. They're homeless and without much hope of finding one.

They're the people no one wants to employ or live near: level 2 and level 3 sex offenders — men and women who are legally required to report their presence to local authorities for the rest of their lives.

When they're released from prison, or move from another area, it falls to county Social Services departments to place them. Frequently, they wind up in small, family-run motels and boarding houses. And they have to report that address to authorities or face penalties, including arrest.

In the past year alone, 14 sex offenders — including 10 in Liberty in July — have been picked up for failing to register where they live, as required.

Their sometimes-clustered presence in some of the region's motels and boarding homes has prompted fear, anger and lawsuits in communities across the region, the state and the country.

And nowhere in the mid-Hudson has the outcry of late been louder than in the Town of Wawarsing in Ulster County.

Emotional, legal issues tangle
Wawarsing comprises five hamlets and the Village of Ellenville. According to the latest figures available from the state's Public Registry of Sex Offenders, there are currently 29 level 2 and level 3 sex offenders living in those communities. Only the City of Kingston, with 37, has more registered sex offenders in Ulster County.

The tiny and very rural hamlet of Kerhonkson is home to 17 sex offenders, according to the registry. Six of those offenders now reside at the Colonial Motel on Route 209.

To town Supervisor Scott Carlsen, those numbers strongly suggest that something's out of whack with the way indigent sex offenders are housed in the county.

Carlsen is recently retired from a career as an administrator in the state's correctional system, including years as a counselor in several sexual offender programs.

Housing sexual offenders in rural communities like Kerhonkson, he said, isn't good for offenders nor the community.

"They (sexual offenders) don't have cars. In order to get the services they need, they have to bike or hitchhike. Even from a therapeutic model, it makes no sense to me."

And, he says, the situation only gets worse when sex offenders are allowed to congregate.
- Worse how?  Due to new crimes being committed (doubtful) or public hysteria?

"I'm unaware of any study of any treatment that it's a good thing to stick a dozen of these guys together in a single facility."
- And there is no study to show it's a bad thing either!  People think that ex-offenders living together that they are going to devise a mass molestation plan or something, which is so ridiculous.

But there is little legal recourse available. Some, like the Town of Wallkill, or Middletown or Village of Ellenville, have passed laws that limit sex offenders from living near schools, playgrounds and parks.

Following the village's lead, the Wawarsing Town Board implemented a statute a couple of years ago that limits to 30 the number of days a person may reside at a town motel. Three of the town's motels, Carlsen said, have abided by the law. But not, he said, the Colonial.

After the motel's compliance became a campaign issue in 2011, with Republican candidates claiming that 12 sex offenders were residing at the Colonial, owner Shahida Rizvi filed suit in federal court contending the statute prevents her from operating her business.
- You'd think people would see politicians for what they are by now.  Fear, children and ex-sex offenders are their scapegoats! They will use and exploit any issue to get elected or to look good to the sheeple of the country.

In a 31-page brief, Rizvi's lawyer Mark Stern argued that the town "fully intends to prevent (Rizvi) from operating her business through the mechanism of fines, criminal charges and criminal penalties."

Carlsen's anger only worsened when a convicted criminal — who was not a registered sex offender — was placed by county Social Services at the Colonial and arrested and charged with raping a woman last August.

Carlsen called the incident "nothing short of an outrage and criminal" on the part of Ulster County Social Services.

He accused the departments of violating the town's statute.

Michael Iapoce, director of the county's Social Services Department, sees the situation very differently.

Homelessness a key problem
Every county in the state must find housing for any individual, regardless of their criminal history, if they say they are homeless.

As far as Iapoce is concerned, that's the bottom line when his Social Services Department deals with homeless people.

And while his department has taken a lot of heat for housing indigent sex offenders, he said there's a public "misperception" that Social Services has more authority and responsibility than it actually does.
- If you stop the insanity then maybe ex-offenders can get a job and live somewhere else, but the very laws the idiotic politicians are passing is what is causing all these problems, not the ex-offenders!

Sex offenders are emerging from a highly structured prison environment, he said; the services they require are determined by the county's Probation Department and state Department of Corrections.

Marijane Knudsen, the department's director of economic support, said that prisoners being released into communities — especially sex offenders — need better discharge plans to guide their re-introduction to society.

She also said there are larger issues, including the need for better housing for anyone who needs it.

"No one deserves to live in a hotel. Everyone should have access to permanent, safe housing," she said.

That need, said Nancy Schmidt, can be a pivotal aspect of what she called "an age-old problem."

Lack of jobs compounds issue
Schmidt is deputy director of the county's probation department. The lack of stable housing and job opportunities for sex offenders, she said, are the two biggest factors affecting the successful integration of an indigent offender into society.

Housing availability are sometimes prohibited by the very laws that are aimed at protecting children from predators, such as laws that restrict sex offenders from living near schools, playgrounds and parks.

In a city like Kingston, Schmidt said, that reduces the potential housing choices considerably. Rural, isolated locations like Kerhonkson are at least less likely to pose a threat to children living nearby.

And yes, she said, while Social Services is responsible for housing homeless sex offenders, there are times when the department will allow housing sex offenders in a facility with other offenders.

Sometimes, it's a better choice than having an offender move from "couch to couch" or live in a car or a tent, where supervision is more difficult and the threat of a recurrence could be increased.

"Without employment or stable housing, there's a higher risk of a return," she said.

And with a sigh, she summarized the situation in two words:

"It's tough."
- Not really!  Get rid of the residency restrictions and take the registry offline, then many can integrate back into society, get a job, home and move on with their lives.

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