Original Article
10/17/2014
By Puck Lo
Frank Lindsay, 62, is a father, small-business owner and avid surfer. He’s also one of 105,000 people in California — and 760,000 nationally — listed as a sex offender. In accordance with federal law, his name, photograph and home address appear in a public, online offender registry. In 1979, Lindsay, then 27, was convicted of lewd and lascivious acts with a minor under the age of 14.
“I thought I could do whatever I wanted,” Lindsay says. “Add on some alcohol, and I was a real asshole.”
Today, Lindsay considers himself a reformed man. He says he hasn’t had a drink in 30 years, is a Taoist and advocate for restorative justice — encouraging violent people to make amends for their actions. But, he says, “It seems that I can never be forgiven.”
Few groups are as widely despised as sex offenders. Activities prosecuted as sex offenses vary by state, but can include public urination, consensual sex between teenagers, streaking, prostitution, downloading child pornography and rape. In some states, law-enforcement officials distribute flyers to notify neighbors of registrants’ convictions. Some registrants are prohibited from using the Internet. In 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that indefinite detention at psychiatric hospitals — or “civil commitment” — of sex offenders is constitutional.
The first law requiring sex offenders to register publicly and for life was passed in California in 1947 and targeted gay men, according to Andrew Extein, executive director of the Center for Sexual Justice. But many of today’s laws have their origins in the late 1970s, when feminists and social conservatives worked together to publicize high-profile “stranger danger” attacks on children, says Roger Lancaster, anthropology professor at George Mason University and author of “Sex Panic and the Punitive State.”
Beginning in the mid-1990s, several laws went into effect that changed how sex-offense cases were prosecuted. In 1994, states were required to create databases of sex offenders. Two years later, Megan’s Law, named for a 7-year-old in New Jersey who was brutally raped and murdered by a neighbor with two previous sex convictions, allowed states to make those registries public. States passed their own versions of the law; in some cases, they required that neighbors be notified of paroled offenders’ previous convictions. Later laws moved those sex-offender databases online, created a national registry, required lifetime registration of people 14 years old and up and imposed harsh mandatory minimum sentences for crimes involving children.
But almost 20 years after the passage of Megan’s Law, criminologists and judges, along with a burgeoning movement of sex-offender registrants and their families, are challenging not only the constitutionality of the laws but their effectiveness in reducing sexual assault. In January, a California court ruled in favor of a paroled sex offender who had argued that city and county “child-safety zone” ordinances prohibiting people in the registry from using parks, beaches and similar recreation areas were an unconstitutional form of banishment. In April, the state Supreme Court upheld the ruling by declining to review it.
See Also: California Reform Sex Offender Laws
New Life Style
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Prostitution. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Prostitution. Tampilkan semua postingan
Rabu, 05 November 2014
CA - Sex-offender laws are ineffective and unfair, critics say
Label:
California,
ChildPorn,
CivilCommitment,
ConsensualSex,
Internet,
MegansLaw,
OnlineRegistry,
Prostitution,
Registration,
Streaking,
TeenageSex,
UrinatingInPublic
Lokasi:
California, USA
Rabu, 14 Mei 2014
MI - Buying Sex Could Land You 25 Years on the Sex Offender Registry

Maybe we can then put all the politicians, celebrities and police officers on the online registry so they can see first hand what it's like?
05/12/2014
A move is underway in the Michigan Legislature to crack down harder on those who hire prostitutes.
Supporters of the effort say too often, prostitutes are arrested and those who hire them are not.
The effort is part of a move to fight the growing problem of human trafficking in Michigan.
A key bill in the package defines soliciting for prostitution as a tier II registrable offense, which would put the offender's name on a registry for 25 years.
Other parts of the package include creation of a registration system for sex industry workers, to help prevent the movement of workers from strip clubs to prostitution.
Hearings began last week in Lansing in the Senate Families, Seniors and Human Services Committee. More will be scheduled in the future.
Label:
Michigan,
Prostitution,
RegProstitution
Lokasi:
Michigan, USA
Sabtu, 25 Januari 2014
TX - El Paso County probation officer (Timothy McCullouch Jr.) charged in alleged sex-trafficking ring had contact with victims through his job
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Timothy McCullouch Jr. |
01/25/2014
By Aaron Martinez
A former El Paso County juvenile probation officer charged in connection with a sex-trafficking ring worked with the underage girls he allegedly forced into prostitution, according to court testimony Friday.
Timothy McCullouch Jr., 28, had 10 documented incidents dealing with the two teenage girls, ages 15 and 17, according to testimony by Julio Lara, a special agent for Homeland Security Investigations which spearheaded the investigation.
Lara testified during a detention hearing for McCullouch in federal court.
McCullouch had contact with the girls at the Samuel F. Santana Challenge Academy, Lara said. The academy, operated by the probation department, is a military-styled program combined with treatment that relies heavily on education and counseling for high-risk juvenile offenders, according to its website.
Officials for the juvenile probation department declined to comment on the case.
Earlier this week, Roger Martinez, head of the juvenile probation department, told the El Paso Times he was advised by lawyers not to disclose any information about McCullouch.
McCullouch no longer works for the El Paso County Juvenile Probation Department, McCullouch's lawyer Sherilyn Ann Bunn said during the hearing. He is a former defensive back for the University of Texas at El Paso football team from 2005 to 2007, according to a UTEP player biography and the El Paso Times archives. McCullouch is originally from Long Beach, Calif.
Bunn had no further comment after the hearing. During the hearing, Bunn said McCullouch maintains he never forced anyone into sex or took any money.
Lara said McCullouch denied meeting the girls as part of his work and said he did not know the ages of the girls during an initial interview. Lara said investigators have evidence that McCullouch filled out transfer paperwork with the date of births of the victims.
Investigators also interviewed other probation officers who identified the victims and confirmed McCullouch had worked with the girls.
McCullouch told investigators during the interview that he first met the two victims at an El Paso-area hotel room with Richard Gray, Lara said. Gray, 24, was also charged in connection with the alleged sex-trafficking ring.
According to Lara, McCullouch told investigators he tried to have sex with the girls but did not force them. The teenage girls, identified only as A.J. and L.A., told investigators McCullouch and Gray forced them into prostitution. McCullouch allegedly was in charge of prostituting A.J., Lara said.
McCullouch faces charges of conspiracy to commit sex trafficking and sex trafficking of children. McCullouch's alleged role in the sex-trafficking ring occurred from June 27, 2012, to July 10, 2012, according to the indictment.
Prosecutors asked U.S. Magistrate Judge Norbert Garney to deny McCullouch bail because he had contacts within law enforcement and the probation department and could use those connections to find the teenage girls. Prosecutors said they believe McCullouch could pose a threat to the victims. Also, prosecutors argued that McCullouch was a flight risk.
Garney denied bail.
McCullouch, also known as T.J., and Gray, known as Crenshaw, are two of five men charged in the alleged sex-trafficking ring. Gray and the other men charged, who are Deion "Memphis" Lockhart, 25; Brandon Shapiro, 21, aka "Chicago" and "B'radd; "Tai Von Trigg" Lynch, 20; and Emmanual "E Jay" Lockhart, 23, are members of the Folk Nation-Gangster Disciples street gang, authorities said.
El Paso Police Department's Gang Unit identified McCullouch as a gang member, Lara testified. It is not known whether McCullouch was a member of the Folk Nation-Gangster Disciples street gang.
The alleged sex-trafficking ring ran from May 2012 to March 2013, the indictment charges. McCullouch and the other men allegedly forced girls and women to work as prostitutes in El Paso, Albuquerque, Las Vegas, Colorado and Killeen, Texas, officials said in a news release.
Prosecutors alleged the men held the victims against their will and would beat them if they did not work as prostitutes.
A victim being threatened and forced into sex-trafficking by a person they know and trust is nothing uncommon, said John Martin, executive director for the Paso del Norte Center of Hope.
"This is what trafficking is, and it happens quite regularly," Martin said. "When you look at a person in a trusted position, like a parent or in a case like the one we are talking about, someone using their office. So when you have the information that he was having contact to these individuals through his office, it is not surprising."
The numbers to call and report suspected cases of trafficking are the National Human Trafficking Resource Center at 1-888-373-7888 and the Center of Hope at 231-8882.
Jumat, 18 Oktober 2013
FL - Former Haven Police Officer (Paul Bryant IV) gets 5 Years For Having Sex With Prostitute While On Duty
Paul Bryant IV |
What do you know, yet another cop from Florida busted for a sex crime. Question is, will he be on the sex offender registry for life? We doubt it!
10/17/2013
By Jason Geary
BARTOW - A former Winter Haven police officer was sentenced Thursday to five years in prison for charges related to having sex with prostitutes while on duty.
Circuit Judge Catherine Combee also ordered Paul Bryant IV to serve five years of probation following a hearing that included testimony from Winter Haven's police chief and a former “working girl.”
Bryant's arrest last year was the result of a three-month long investigation by the Winter Haven Police Department and Polk County Sheriff's Office.
Bryant, 30, had been a member of the police department since August 2009 and earned an annual salary of $41,080. He resigned after his arrest in December.
David Lopez, a PCSO detective who helped investigate the case, said he questioned Bryant and he initially denied the allegations.
When confronted with evidence, he admitted to his actions, but he didn't show remorse, Lopez said.
“He was more concerned with his face being plastered across the news,” Lopez said.
Bryant pleaded guilty in August to false imprisonment, disclosing confidential criminal justice information and three counts of soliciting prostitution.
At Thursday's hearing, one woman testified that she is no longer a “working girl,” but she was at the time that she had sex with Bryant.
She said Bryant asked her for sex while on duty, and he was wearing his law enforcement vest, badge, radio and handgun.
“I didn't want to go to jail,” she said. “I was scared so I did what I did.”
The woman said she was “devastated” by Bryant's actions.
“It's really bothered me to think that a police officer would do that,” she said.
She was asked why it made a difference to her since she had sex with other people for money.
“Because police officers are supposed to uphold the law,” she answered.
Winter Haven Police Chief Gary Hester testified about the importance of law enforcement agencies working to maintain the public's trust in them.
“It's absolutely essential,” Hester said. “The authority that we have is granted to us by our citizens, and it's painful anytime a member of the law enforcement community violates that trust the citizens place in us.”
Hester described such incidents as having the potential to drive “a wedge” between officers and the communities that they swore an oath to protect.
One prostitute testified that Bryant told her that he could be her “friend on the street” and even warned her to “take the day off” to avoid a prostitution sting.
Any officer who leaks information about undercover operations can place the safety of fellow officers at risk, Hester said.
“That's kind of the ultimate betrayal for a sworn law enforcement officer to potentially place a coworker and fellow officer at risk because of them leaking information on an undercover operation,” he said.
Label:
CrimePolice,
Florida,
OffenderMale,
Prostitution
Lokasi:
Bartow, FL, USA
Selasa, 25 September 2012
PA - Former policeman sentenced for abetting sex trafficking scheme
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Ronald Miko |
09/25/2012
By Joel Hendon
An FBI press release of September 24, 2012 announced that Ronald Miko, 37, of Reading, Pennsylvania, was sentenced today to 38 months in prison for obstruction of a criminal investigation. Miko was a police officer in the city of Reading when he utilized a room in a house at which convicted federal defendants Paul Sewell and Michael Johnson operated a prostitution business that trafficked females who were under the age of 18. Between May 2, 2011 and June 7, 2011, Miko wired money to Johnson’s federal prison account to prevent the communication of information to criminal investigators regarding Miko’s involvement in that business.
In addition to the prison term, U.S. District Court Judge C. Darnell Jones ordered three years’ supervised release with 450 hours community service and a $1,000 fine.
Ronald R. Miko, 38, told U.S. District Judge C. Darnell Jones II that he never expected to be addressing a judge about committing a crime. "I know what I did is wrong and I accept full responsibility," Miko said, "I am embarrassed before everyone in my life.” (The Reading Eagle)
"The defendant was a sworn officer who took an oath to protect the community," Assistant U.S. Attorney Michelle L. Morgan said. "Instead, he openly associated for several years with a person actively engaged in egregious crimes - crimes which ultimately resulted in the exploitation of children." (Ibid)
The case was investigated by the Allentown Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Berks County District Attorney’s Office. It was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Michelle L. Morgan.
Selasa, 24 April 2007
Former officer sentenced in sex assault - Antoniak Gets Probation

04/24/2007
Former Omaha Police Officer Scott Antoniak has been given five years probation for his conviction of sexually assaulting a prostitute while on duty. He was found guilty of First-Degree Sexual Assault earlier this year and sentenced on Tuesday.
In addition he was ordered to perform 250 hours community service; must see psychologist; must register as a sex offender and must write a letter of apology to the women involved as well as Chief Thomas Warren and the police department.
Violation of any of the terms would make him subject to up to 50 years in prison.
The charges were related to an incident in 2005.
The woman says Antoniak stopped her, discovered a warrant for arrest and gave her a choice between pointing out drug deals, providing him with oral sex or going to jail.
The former officer faced up to 50 years in prison in the case.
Belinda Corleyturnipseed lives in the neighborhood Antoniak was working when the incident happened and says, "I felt he abused his power and it's detrimental to our community as a whole."
Antoniak's attorney, Mike Fabian says, "Scott Antoniak underwent a number of psychological evaluations and tests. All showed Scott to be no or low risk to society."
Assistant County Attorney John Alagaban helped prosecute Antoniak. He says Antoniak's sentence is within the guidelines laid out by state law but the county attorney's office will examine the Judge Joe Troia's decision.
Senin, 23 April 2007
Collier deputy fired after probe reveals sexual images on his Web site

04/19/2007
For about seven years Collier County sheriff’s Deputy David E. Rich, a motorcycle enthusiast, maintained a Web site chronicling his and his wife’s experiences at outdoor motorcycle events.
The Web site, which he said was meant only to be viewed by friends but had more than 50,000 hits, contained an online message board and photos of people having a good time at the events.
But in December, Rich, 38, was fired after an internal investigation revealed the Web site not only contained photos of people having innocent fun, but also of nude women and women performing oral sex. Also, during a separate investigation stemming from a failed polygraph test, Rich admitted to having witnessed online pornography involving minors, authorities said.
Rich, who is now employed with the private investigation firm Ortino Investigations, described the Web site as a “hobby-type fun thing,” and said the photos of women engaging in oral sex were posted inadvertently or were overlooked, a Sheriff’s Office report shows. And he said in an appeal that polygraph tests are extremely subjective and claimed the examiners who administered the test had a conflict of interest.
The investigation into Rich’s Web site began in July when the Sheriff’s Office received an e-mail from someone identified only as “Deputy Dan” who directed authorities to Rich’s site.
“Is this the type of person who you employ?” the letter writer asked.
When investigators opened the site they saw a photograph of a Florida motorcycle license plate licensed to Rich. The site also had a link to a page containing a collection of thousands of photographs, the investigation revealed.
Several of the photographs depicted nudity and oral sex. Others showed Rich with women in various stages of dress, from exposing their breasts to nude, the report said.
“I will volunteer and say that there’s, looking at that, there’s some pictures I did not realize that were not that, that really should not have been on this site,” Rich told investigators.
Rich told investigators that he placed warnings on the site to indicate the images were only appropriate for adults, designed the site to trigger parental software and used software to prevent search engines from pointing to his site, authorities said.
When investigators asked if he thought the site was appropriate for a member of the Sheriff’s Office, Rich replied, “Wouldn’t it be under the First Amendment protection?”
He told investigators he had the site for seven years.
“I think it’s OK,” he said.
Rich told investigators he loved his job, was proud of working at the Sheriff’s Office, and intended to work there for 25 years, the investigation revealed.
“I’m willing to work with whatever needs to be done to make it acceptable,” Rich said of the Web site.
While the investigation into the Web site was under way, a separate investigation was being conducted into Rich’s inability to pass a polygraph examination question regarding viewing underage pornographic material on the Internet.
In March 2005, Rich, who worked in the jail, took a polygraph examination as part of a request to move to road patrol. The examiner, Cpl. Scott Walters, asked Rich if he had ever viewed or been in possession of any types of child pornography since his hire date on August 19, 2003.
“Not intentionally,” Rich said.
Rich told investigators that he would go online looking for movies and clips he could watch with his wife.
“There’s a lot of things I’ll download, just doesn’t do anything for me, so I trash it, you know. Put it in the delete file and erase,” Rich said during an interview.
At one point Rich told investigators that he clicked on a video called “My Teenie Wife,” that may have indicated it contained images of a 15-year-old, according to the investigation.
“I was downloading ‘My Teen Wife.’ I think I trashed it. I think I trashed the whole thing,” Rich said during his first examination.
When the examiner asked if he actually opened the video, Rich said he didn’t remember.
“I tend to think no. I have no memory of the content,” Rich said. “I remember seeing one clip of a girl and a boy, I should say male and female. ... If the title said 15, it would have been a curiosity thing.”
Rich also told investigators he viewed an online movie called “My Girlfriend and I,” featuring two “high school”-age girls engaged in a pillow fight and kissing each other, and a video titled “Teen Prostitute Video,” where the girls appeared to be at least 18, the investigation revealed.
When asked again if he’d ever seen any pornography depicting people under 18, Rich said. “I’m sure I have. I’ll say yes.”
Determining if someone is over 18 is sometimes hard to do, Rich told investigators.
“I don’t know how old someone is because 18 years old and 17 years old is a fine line,” he said. “However, it is a legal line.”
Rich said he never intentionally sought out underage pornography, the report indicates.
“I wouldn’t want to leave an impression on someone else further down the line of people who are going to read this, to think that I’m out there searching out, physically searching, typing in the terms ‘15-year- old woman’ or ‘young wife,’ or any of those things,” Rich said.
“I’m searching with something else and that’s coming up. And like I’m trying to say apparently is that I finally said, ‘Fine, let’s see what it is,’” he said. “For me to physically take the mouse, or the touch pad on the computer, move the cursor up and click on it is obviously an intent for me to see exactly what it was after it had been brought there by other means that I was not trying to do.”
Rich failed a second polygraph with Walters and then went to Fort Lauderdale for a third polygraph with a company called Deception Control Inc. The examiner in Fort Lauderdale, Lou Criscella, said that Rich displayed “significant reactions indicative of deception,” the internal investigation said.
On December 26, Rich, who earned $49,169 a year at the jail, had his appointment withdrawn based on the totality of the two investigations, for “immoral, unlawful or improper conduct,” the Sheriff’s Office reported.
Rich was not arrested or charged with a crime.
“I will say that if the case is released to the media, and the sheriff does not have some sort of hard, concrete evidence, then there will be some suits filed against the department — his department,” Rich said in the report.
Rich appealed the decision on Jan. 9. In his appeal, Rich argued that Criscella was not an “independent examiner” because he and the first examiner, Walters, used to work together. His appeal was denied on March 23, the Sheriff’s Office reported.
In an e-mail to the Daily News on Wednesday, Rich said he did not want to be interviewed because he feared being misquoted or having his statements taken out of context. In the e-mail Rich stated the Sheriff’s Office wouldn’t accept his offer to have the agency inspect his computer, waited until after his termination to inspect his agency-issued laptop, and failed to interview any of his co-workers, friends or his wife.
“Also consider that I was, and still am, the webmaster for the Collier Deputies FOP,” Rich wrote in his e-mail. “It was well known that I was involved in attempting to unionize the CCSO, and had just been elected to the Executive Board of the Collier Deputies Lodge of the FOP.”
During the interview Rich told investigators that he had brain surgery as a child and had significant memory problems.
“I have medical evidence that I should not have been polygraphed,” Rich wrote in the e-mail. “I have a statement from a longtime polygrapher that my polygraph results could not be relied on, and also from Cpl. Scott Walter, CCSO polygrapher, that doubts the findings of my polygraphs. These are all in my file.”
Rich started working with Ortino Investigations around the time of his appeal, said Victor Ortino, who owns and manages the firm. Ortino recently announced his intention to run for Collier County sheriff in 2008.
Ortino said Rich is a “good guy” who denied viewing child pornography.
“I am confident that he is not a child molester and does not view child pornography,” Ortino said.
If the Sheriff’s Office was really concerned about Rich’s behavior, the investigation would have been resolved in a much shorter period of time, Ortino said.
“If you have a person who did something illegal, you’re going to jump on that right away,” Ortino said. “Within 30 days you’re going to have that resolved.”
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