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Selasa, 05 November 2013

NETHERLANDS - Virtual child (en)traps online "pedophiles"

Virtual child "Sweetie"
Original Article

11/04/2013

Terre des Hommes - An international charity which concentrates on children’s rights based in the Netherlands has created a virtual 10-year-old girl “from the Philippines” named “Sweetie.”

Sweetie was designed to track down, and hopefully convict, online pedophiles who use “webcam child sex tourism.”

I’m not sure where Terre des Hommes got these numbers, but they state at any given moment there are least 750,000 pedophiles online. That’s a staggering number of nonces with webcams, IMO.
- Hmm, 750,000 pedophiles?  Yeah right!  That number is very close to the number of sex offenders in the USA, but a majority of them are not pedophiles!

Warning: This video may be upsetting to some viewers

The Lies About Sex Offenders

Liar! Liar!
Original Article

11/04/2013

The more the evidence (PDF) shows otherwise, the more places pop up wanting sex offender residency restrictions and "child-safe zones."

Almost every day brings another town or another county proposing some sort of restriction limiting where those on the registry can legally live, go, or work, or placing some special conditions on their being there.

The concept of a "child-safe" area, just like all areas of restrictions to those on the registry, is flawed at the core. It makes assumptions that are untrue. One is that those who abuse children are strangers seeking out places where children congregate. This is true of the tiniest fraction, less than 1% most data shows. Virtually all child sexual abuse is committed by those close to the children in their lives, specifically their family members, their peers, and their authority figures.

IL - USA FAIR Has Big Impact at ATSA Conference

Shana Rowan with ATSA's Jim Brandt
Shana Rowan with ATSA's Jim Brandt
Original Article

11/04/2013

By Shana Rowan

For the first time, USA FAIR was an exhibitor at the ATSA Annual Conference held this year in Chicago from October 30th through November 2nd. This is the largest annual gathering of people involved in sex offender treatment and management.

I am pleased to report that the reception we received was fantastic. So many people visited our table that I had to order reprints of our hand-out materials! The conference participants were genuinely excited to see that family members of registrants were showing up to become a part of the fight for reasoned based laws.

Many attendees asked how they could get involved to work with us and indicated that they would refer their clients to us. Several state chapter representatives of ATSA expressed a desire to strategize with us on how to achieve reform and asked about USA FAIR giving presentations before their chapters.

I was joined by a strong team of reformers, including Gail Colletta and Barbra McClamma of Florida Action Committee.

None of this would have happened, of course, without the generous donations of USA FAIR members.

TX - Shooting On Rebecca Road In Odessa

Shooting in Odessa Texas
Original Article

It has been brought to our attention that the victim here is a RSO (registered sex offender), but we have no idea if that is indeed true and that he was shot due to being on the registry, but it makes you wonder. If this is true, then why are the police holding that information back? They and the media usually jump at the occasion to splash their name all over the place, so why is this different, except that is may be vigilantism?

11/04/2013

ODESSA - A 19 year old is recovering after being shot in front of his home.

Odessa police say they responded about 8:15 Sunday morning on the 900 block of Rebecca Road.

Officers say _____ was seriously injured and rushed to a local hospital.

Police don't have a detailed description of the shooter, they're only saying he's a Hispanic male in his thirties.

If you have any information about this shooting you're asked to call Odessa Crime Stoppers.

See Also:

Senin, 04 November 2013

IL - Man is no longer on the registry, but police tell him to move because he's breaking the law?

WTF
Original Article

If he is no longer on the registry and doesn't have to register, then he is NOT a registered sex offender! You cannot force someone who is off paperwork and the registry to move because he is "breaking" a law he doesn't have to live by!

10/29/2013

By Charlotte Eriksen

La Grange police last week notified a registered sex offender (American citizen) that he would have to move away from his home in the 200 block of North Waiola Avenue because it is within 500 feet of a school.

_____, 50, pleaded guilty in 1989 to having sex with a 13-year-old girl in DuPage County and was required to register as a sex offender for 10 years, according to Doings La Grange.

While he is no longer a registered offender, _____ is in violation of state law as a resident in a home located across the street from Ogden Avenue School and St. Francis Xavier School because of amendments to the statute, according to the Doings.
- If he doesn't have to register anymore, then how is he in violation of a law?

_____ told police he would make reasonable attempts to find a new residence, police said.
- Why?  I would tell them to stick it where the sun doesn't shine!

NEW ZEALAND - 'Roast Busters' sons of high-profile entertainer, cop

Roast Busters
Roast Busters
Original Article (Video Available)

11/04/2013

By Karen Rutherford

More details about a group of young Auckland boys called the 'Roast Busters', who've been luring girls into underage group sex and boasting about it online, can now be revealed.

One boy being questioned by police is the son of a celebrity with an international profile, while the other is the son of an Auckland police officer.

One girl, who is choosing to remain anonymous, says the Roast Busters stole her soul.

"They don't understand how I feel inside; they don't understand how this has hurt me," she says.

Police say the girl is one of a number of drunk, underage victims they've interviewed about being exploited by the Roast Busters.

The family of former Roast Buster Joseph Levall Parker has told us he left the six-member group mid-year, while several others have also bowed out.

Social media today carried apologies from at least one.

"If I suffer any consequences from my past actions then I guess I deserve it," the Facebook post read. "But I just want people to know I am a good person at heart and I have matured and have taken this as a massive learning experience."

Police have confirmed that one of the boys is the son of a high-profile entertainer, and the other is the son of a police officer.

Police say that's not the reason they've failed to lay charges to date.

"The reason we have not prosecuted anybody is we don't have sufficient evidence at this stage," says Detective Inspector Bruce Scott.

Police have known about the group since 2011, but they say their hands are tied until victims - who in some cases have been suicidal - agree to make a formal statement.

That has angered vigilantes, who today took to Facebook to express their anger.

"We're sick of it, we don't want this happening in our community," one post on the page read. "I'm a father, I have teenage girls and they have to walk in society, I don't like this scum walking in my streets."

Two of the Roast Busters were not walking the streets today; they were being re-interviewed by police.

As a result of publicity around the case, one of the young men who previously declined to co-operate presented himself at a police station early this afternoon. Another young man is also being interviewed by police.

Detective Inspector Bruce Scott says the investigation is making progress, but it is too soon to say if this development will result in any prosecution.

"We're grateful that the publicity around this case has enabled us to make further progress, and we hope to build on the work done by the enquiry team to potentially take us to the stage where we have enough evidence to build a case."

Video from a previous story:

VT - Lenient living restrictions for sex offenders

Sex offender housing
Original Article

10/31/2013

By Bridget Shanahan

Advocates say living restrictions could keep communities safer

COLCHESTER - Sex offender laws do not do enough to protect our families, say advocates for both victims and sex offenders.

Vermont's laws governing convicted sex offenders are more lenient than neighboring states, including New Hampshire and New York.

Offenders can pretty much live wherever they want as long as they're not on probation or parole: that includes next to schools, playgrounds and day cares.
- And that is how it should be!  Residency laws do nothing to prevent crime or protect anybody and study after study has been done to show it does basically nothing except prevent registrants from getting homes, jobs, support, etc, which could put people in potentially more danger from those who are prone to committing new crimes.

They're required to register, but only for a set amount of time, and even then the public doesn't know exactly where they are.

The Chittenden Unit for Special Investigation is out in Essex, hunting down addresses and knocking on doors, for their yearly sex offender registry checks.

Their stops take them past schools, parks and other areas specially designed for children.
- But not all registrants have harmed a child, so the one-size-fits-all law is unconstitutional, in our opinion.

A sex offender should stay away from areas where there are children if he's attracted to children. They should stay away,” Pastor Pete Fiske said.
- Registrants who are attracted to children (pedophilia) are rare, not the norm!

Fiske runs the church at prison and a religious treatment and reintegration program for all types of convicted criminals, sex offenders included.

He's working with recently released sex offender _____ -- imprisoned for handcuffing and sexually assaulting a young boy he met on the banks of a river in Southern Vermont.

After public outcry in Vermont, _____ tried to live in California, but the move sparked outrage from the mayor of San Francisco.

In a letter to Gov. Peter Shumlin, Mayor Edwin Lee says he's writing about a matter of "deep concern" and accuses the Vermont Department of Corrections of not notifying authorities of _____'s move, something Shumlin disputes.

Now _____ is back in Vermont, living in Hyde Park, just a mile or two from local schools.

I think that if there are ways that we can help make the community aware, and if we can help protect the community, that we should take any steps possible,” Hope Works Executive Director Cathleen Wilson said.

Wilson works with sexual assault victims and agrees with Fiske, restricted living on a case-by-case basis, particularly when the crimes involve children.

I think that would make a lot of sense. I think that would be a good step, quite honestly,” Wilson said.

It's something the city of Rutland already has: sex offender dwelling restrictions but only for those with crimes against children.

Despite those recommendations, Vermont Corrections Commissioner Andy Pallito still says enforcing zoning limits isn't the right move for sex offenders, arguing they'd be pushed out into rural areas without any treatment programs or law enforcement.

When you start to enact sex offender zoning regulations, you start to drive people who have high risk out into areas where you really can't keep an eye on them,” Pallito said.

Rutland Mayor Chris Louras says that's not the case.

He says the guidelines help make his community safer and that sex offenders don't have a problem finding a home.

It's a similar system to the one Barre Mayor Thom Lauzon tried to put in place in his city, too, but the measure was stopped by a judge.

As we sit here talking today, there are extremely high-risk offenders who have simply served their time and maxed. So they're no longer required to have treatment and they're no longer supervised by the Department of Corrections, and in those cases, I do think it's important to place restrictions, if you're on the registry,” Lauzen said.

The state of Vermont has considered creating statewide restrictions, but in the end, Sen. Dick Sears (D-Bennington) and other lawmakers decided against housing guidelines in favor of creating tougher penalties and the possibility of lifetime probation for sex offenders.

We made a lot of steps to try to keep, particularly, kids safe, but Vermonters in general, safer from sex offenders, and I think as we worked on the bill it was general agreement based on what other states had experienced with residency requirements, that that would not help,” Sears said.

Right now there are only four sex offenders who will be monitored for life. They were initially sentenced to a maximum of life in prison and were released.

As for those sentenced to probation for life, the Department of Corrections doesn't track that information, but the director of field services said he believes there are likely "not many" on that list.