The Controversy of SORNA
All states have to decide by July 27, 2009 whether they will adopt and implement the Federal Sex Offender Registration
and Notification Act (SORNA). The implementation of SORNA is an extensive and costly one. If the states do not implement SORNA,
they will be faced with the loss of 10% of Byrne Grants ( used to pay for such things as drug task forces, anti-gang units,
police overtime, and other law enforcement activities). On the other hand, if SORNA were to be implemented, it would prove
to be much more costly for the state of Maryland and to each individual counties.
Under current Maryland Registration, the following are required from all Registered Sex Offenders:
A registration statement shall include:
(1) the registrant’s full name, including any suffix, and address;
(2) (i) for a registrant under § 11–704(a)(7)(i) of this subtitle or
who is on work release, the registrant’s place of employment; or
(ii) for a registrant under § 11–704(a)(7)(ii) of this subtitle, the
registrant’s place of educational institution or school enrollment;
(3) (i) for a registrant enrolled, or expecting to enroll, in an
institution of higher education in the State as a full–time or part–time student, the
name and address of the institution of higher education; or
(ii) for a registrant who carries on employment, or expects to
carry on employment, at an institution of higher education in the State, the name and
address of the institution of higher education;
(4) a description of the crime for which the registrant was convicted;
(5) the date that the registrant was convicted;
(6) the jurisdiction in which the registrant was convicted;
(7) a list of any CURRENT OR FORMER aliases, FORMER NAMES,
NICKNAMES, CHAT ROOM IDENTITIES, ELECTRONIC MAIL ADDRESSES,
COMPUTER LOG–IN OR SCREEN NAMES OR IDENTITIES, INTERNET IDENTITIES,
AND INSTANT–MESSAGING IDENTITIES, AND ELECTRONIC CHAT ROOM
IDENTITIES that the registrant has used;
(8) the registrant’s Social Security number;
(9) any other name by which the registrant has been legally known;
and
(10) A COPY OF THE REGISTRANT’S VALID DRIVER’S LICENSE OR
IDENTIFICATION CARD;
(11) THE LICENSE PLATE NUMBER AND DESCRIPTION OF ANY
VEHICLE OWNED OR REGULARLY OPERATED BY THE REGISTRANT; AND
(10) (12) the registrant’s signature and date signed.
(b) If the registrant is a sexually violent predator, the registration statement
shall also include:
(1) identifying factors, including a physical description;
(2) anticipated future residence, if known at the time of registration;
(3) offense history; and
(4) documentation of treatment received for a mental abnormality or
personality disorder.
Under SORNA, sex offenders will be required to provide the following information to the sex offender registry:
• names, including all aliases used by the sex offender;
• date of birth, including both actual date of birth and any false date(s) of birth used
by the sex offender;
• all Internet identifiers and addresses, e.g., e-mail and instant messaging addresses;
• all telephone numbers including both land lines and cell phone numbers;
• Social Security numbers (SSN), including both valid governmentally assigned
SSNs and any other SSNs used by the sex offender;
• residence address;
• other residence information (i.e., where the sex offender has a home or habitually
lives) in relation to sex offenders who lack a residence address for any reason
(e.g., homelessness, or living in a house in a rural or tribal area that has no street
address);
• temporary lodging information about any place in which the sex offender is
staying for seven or more days, including identifying the place and the period of
time the sex offender is staying there;
• passport and immigration document information;
• employer’s name and address;
• other employment information concerning the places where the sex offender
works, if the sex offender has no fixed place of employment, such as information
about normal travel routes or the general area(s) in which the sex offender works;
• professional licenses;
• school name and address;
• vehicle information including description and license plate or registration number;
• physical description of the sex offender;
• text of the registration offense or offenses;
• criminal history and other criminal justice information;
• current photograph;
• fingerprints and palm prints;
• DNA information; and
• driver’s license or identification card.
The SORNA provisions were made retroactive. The Act applies to all sexual offenders,
including those offenders convicted prior to the enactment of SORNA (July 27, 2006) or
prior to a particular jurisdictions’ implementation of the SORNA requirements
So what does this all mean to the taxpayers?
Initially, there would be a one time general fund reprogramming cost of $33800 for the Department of Public Safety and
Correctional Services. That cost is for only one department. Every county would be responsible to cover their reprogramming
cost out of their current budget. Under current law, it cost $1595 to supervise one offender for one year. Currently, Maryland
has approximately 500 registrants. Or $797500 spent a year to supervise those registrants. Once SORNA is implemented, every
registered sex offender must be re-registered and those who were not initially covered by the retroactive provision will now
be required to register. The homeless will now be sought out and registered since Maryland current registration has no way
to maintain the homeless. This will be proposed as weekly registrations of the homeless. In addition, there will be approximately
400 additional juvenile registrants to register. The sex offender registry has a total growth rate of 400-600 new registrants
per year. Thus, with the increasing number of caseloads, there will be a great need to hire additional agents to handle such
an increase. The cost to hire a new agent is about $50,00 per year including salary, benefits and equipment. Where will the
extra money come from? Most counties in today’s economy are having to cut corners to trim their budgets. What will this
added expense do to an already over-stretched budget? There are some solutions: 1) increase taxes for tax payers 2) take the
needed money from other programs 3) Increase sales tax. None of those solutions would be acceptable to the tax payer. (Remember,
this is for the state of Maryland, larger states will have increased expense.)
Current Maryland Sex Offender Registration and Classification is flawed. Maryland registries group all sex offenders in
one registry “Child Sex Offender Register” and the requirements are the same for all registrants whether or not
the offense involved a child. SORNA does not change the classifications, but rather enhances the misconception that all sex
offenders are child sex offenders. This serves only one purpose: To deceive the public that SORNA is the only way to keep
their children safe. Public is deceived and laws are passed.
SORNA is a costly implementation that only targets a small number of criminals. Interestingly still, is the fact that the
very group that are being targeted, has the lowest re-offense rate of all criminals. Without separating the classifications,
the re-offense rate for all sex offenders is 12%. This number is decreased with treatment and with time. Some one who was
convicted more than 10 years ago, has a re-offense rate of less than 8%. Once the sex offender reaches the age of 45 or older,
it drops to 3.3%. At age 60, the re-offense rate is near 0%. The highest incidence of re-offense occurs during the 1st
3 years after release and with the homeless. (Homelessness will increase with the new residency restriction laws that are
proposed. Thus, residency laws due more harm the good.)
As a tax payer, we need to look at what is not being told to the public. Rather than spending that amount of money on a
small group of criminals, wouldn’t it be better used for improving our children’s schools? Once you have decided
that this new regulation, SORNA, would be more costly than effective, contact your state representatives. Time is running
out for the tax payers to make their voices heard.
The Right To Disclosure and Privacy
HIPAA ( Federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
Protected health information (PHI) is individually identifiable health information that is maintained or transmitted .
Medical records are confidential. Health practitioners must ensure that all your information is kept confidential .
In a doctor’s offices they hand you a demographic sheet to look over. Your full social security number should not be
identified, just the last 4 digits. If their sheet contains you full address, telephone numbers, and date of birth, request
in writing that it be deleted. HIPAA stipulates that a patient has a right to their medical records: all medical records,
counseling sessions, therapy notes, test answers, polygraph evaluations may be obtained despite who is paying the bill. They
have 30 days to comply after submitting a written request. In psychological evaluations, they do not provide you with the
test, just your raw answers. Look over your records closely. Ascertain the evaluations they allegedly gave to you, you actually
took. In psychological evaluations, make sure the person they are physically describing is indeed you and make sure every
sheet you have signed is your signature. If a therapist has signed an evaluation, who you do not recognize, search the internet
for their licensure. If you find any discrepancies, file a formal complaint with your state’s Dept. of Health and Mental
Hygiene. Keep your records and ask for them periodically. Each session, request, in writing, a copy of your progress note.
Education: Key to Understanding and Peace of Mind
Americans crave education. Once educated, Americans are no longer victims to the scare tactics used by officials of power.
It is time for Americans to be educated on the subject no one wants to talk about: Sex Offenders.
A colleague of mine recently had an encounter in a restaurant. The woman beside him started up a conversation concerning
another man in the restaurant whom she recognized from the Sex Offender Registry. She asked a couple of questions: “I
wonder what the re-offense rate of sex offenders is?” And “How many on the registry have been falsely convicted?”
Long story short, when she found out the answers, she stated “I feel so stupid!” Like this woman, the facts will
surprise you.
This article will attempt to answer to answers those questions and more for you. Listed below are 10 Myths and the Facts:
Ten Myths About Sex Offenders
Recidivism is defined as repeat criminal behavior among offenders.
Of all crimes, sex offenders are widely believed to have the highest level of recidivism. However, treatment professionals
and criminologists have known for some time that once sex offenders are caught, only a small minority of them will commit
another sex crime. Although some pedophiles, before they are caught, have many victims, most have a single victim in or about
their own family. . In recent years social scientists and criminologists have combed through an immense accumulation of data
from hundreds of studies, which have tracked tens of thousands of individual sex offenders for long periods of time, some
even for decades. By 1994, 670 studies of sex offenders had been done and by the end of 2005 well over 700. Many of these
studies have been systematized through a methodology called meta-analysis. The resulting data reveal that many common myths
about sex offenders are simply false. We outline here some of them.
MYTH #1: "SEX OFFENDERS WILL ALWAYS KEEP OFFENDING."
Recently the Bureau of Justice Statistics published a study which tracked 9,700 sex offenders for three years, 2001-2004.
Their findings concluded:
Only 5.3% of these people imprisoned for sex crimes were rearrested for a subsequent sex offense.
Where a child was involved, the re-arrest rate dropped to 3.3%.
Between two adults, the sexual re-offense rate was 2.2%.
A more multifaceted meta-analysis was done in 2004 by the office of Canada's Solicitor General, Karl Hanson. This analysis
involved 95 studies tracking 31,000 sex offenders. These studies had an average follow-up period of 5 years and found:
The recidivism rate for once-caught pedophiles was 12.7%.
The overall once caught recidivism rate (includes adult victims) was 13.7%.
Contrary to widespread public opinion, once-caught sex offenders have a very low recidivism rate. With or without treatment,
more than 87% of the once-caught do not commit another sex crime. With treatment, the likelihood of re-offending is even lower.
In contrast, according to the 2004 U.S. Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics study, 69% of all other types
of criminals go back to prison, and they do so within five years. Over a longer period of time, other FBI statistics show,
about 74% of all other types of offenders return to prison.
When that figure is compared to only 2% to 13%, the recidivism rate for sex offenders in reality is only a tiny fraction
of what it is for other types of crime. This is not what the public believes and certainly not what they have heard. As the
trackings of tens of thousands clearly attest, most people learn from their mistakes, and sex offenders are no exception.
Just getting caught changes the behavior of most individuals.
MYTH #2: "TREATMENT DOESN'T MAKE ANY DIFFERENCE."
The public has been told for years that treatment doesn't work, that "for sex offenders nothing works," but here too a
myriad of major studies indicates otherwise:
The Campbell Collaboration analysis of 22,000 individuals found that treatment reduced recidivism by 37%.
Canada's Karl Hanson's 2000 analysis found a reduction of 41%.
Oshkosh Correctional's meta-analysis from 79 separate studies of over 11,000 sex offenders found that people who participated
in treatment programs had a 59% re-arrest reduction.
According to Alexander's 1998 study, "Men arrested for having sex with children are usually overcome with shame and remorse
and they want to stop. Since 1943 those who were treated in jails, hospitals and outpatient clinics found their way back to
prison at a rate that was approximately one-third of those who had no treatment."
By 2005, most all preventative programs showed that re-arrest rates were being reduced by greater than half. With some
of the latest deep aversion and victim empathy regimens, reductions were reported as high as 91%.
There is now a credible concurrence that "treatment works" and that new programs are becoming increasingly more successful.,
.
MYTH #3: "THE GREATEST THREAT TO OUR CHILDREN COMES FROM STRANGERS."
According to the most recent major study by the Bureau of Justice Statistics (2004), where 9,700 sex offenders were tracked,
only 7% of such crimes against children were perpetrated by strangers.
The majority (93%) of molestations of children are not committed by strangers but by people who are known and trusted within
or about the family.
Throughout the last decade, other arrest studies have found similar results. Most sex offenses are committed by a family
member or guardian/family member (often some parental substitute).
It may be a trusted uncle, father, stepfather, mother, family friend, a teacher, coach or a priest; but in almost all cases
the culprit is not a stranger.
If we keep in mind that 93% of the culprits are family or known to the family, and that 87% of sex offenders who are caught
do not re-offend, then it would seem that most registries or residency restrictions or tracking of individuals will be very
close to a waste of time. Such procedures will not make our communities any safer. In fact, there's evidence such measures
will do the opposite.
MYTH #4: "BANNING SEX OFFENDERS FROM PLACES WHERE CHILDREN CONGREGATE WILL SIGNIFICANTLY PROTECT OUR CHILDREN."
To claim school yards, daycare centers and other places where children congregate need legislation or Global Positioning
Satellite (GPS) geo-fence to keep sex offenders away may sound sensible, but again the facts do not fit the reality.
The fact is that most sex offenses take place in or near one's home and that only 7% involve strangers. Furthermore, only
a tiny percentage of sex offenders have any history of kidnapping or molesting children unknown to them.
Perhaps among the safest places for children to be are those where they are together in numbers. School personnel are paying
more attention than ever before, and older kids are keeping more of a watchful eye. People --even kids-- look out for each
other in public places.
Finally, making it difficult for sex offenders to find places to reside means that they will have a much harder time re-integrating
themselves into society, which is what most of them want to do.
MYTH #5: "TOUGHER LEGISLATION IS THE ONLY SOLUTION."
In the U.S., our judges are learned and principled and render few decisions without due diligence. Very stiff punishments
for child murderers are certainly called for, but punishment is just only when it is proportioned to the severity of the crime.
Such judgments should remain in the courts, subject to very specific deliberations --they should not be rendered in the legislatures,
where careful deliberation is impossible.
If legislation is based on the false premise that recidivism is inevitable rather than rare, and if blurs the line between
sex offense and murder, then it will result in laws that promote public shaming and permanent exclusion. These laws presume
and promote lifelong guilt, ruling out all hope of change. Thus they not only clearly violate the Constitution, but they actually
encourage more of the very crimes we are trying to reduce.
If we truly want fewer victims, we should adopt a more holistic approach to reintegrating sex offenders back into society.
The focus should shift from more and harsher punishment to the funding of good treatment programs. Although such a shift may
have little current appeal among the public today, treatment is the only sure way that we will see fewer victims of these
types of crime.
Given all the degrees that sexual offenses can take, one type of sentence does not fit all. What do you do with a 17-year-old
who had sex with a 15-year-old? What do you do if he was 19? What if it was consensual? Does he get registered for a lifetime
as a sex offender? What about an 8-year-old who plays doctor? What if he's 14? That fact is that nowadays even juvenile sex
offenders are being branded for life.
MYTH #6: "THE ONLY WAY TO DEAL WITH THEM IS PUT THEM BEHIND BARS."
Today, with two and quarter million inmates, our country has more people in jails and prisons than it does in all our colleges
and universities combined. When three-quarters of all offenders are going back to prison, just funding more prison cells isn't
the answer.
If our goal were to mass produce criminals, we couldn't be doing a better job. Without treatment programs, our prisons
have become huge breweries, woefully turning out more of the same product, each generation more hardened and more dangerous
than the last. If ever we're to make our societies more just and our communities more secure, our goal must be to make some
serious changes and not just keep doing more of the same.
If we got more serious about funding preventative programs, then our courts could establish good treatment programs
that would start from the first day of a criminal's first conviction. The result would be many fewer victims of all sorts
of crimes, including sexual abuse of children.
Presently there is little or no rehabilitation taking place in our prisons; there is just more and more fruitless incarceration.
We need to wake up about what we are brewing and start legislating intelligently, so that offenders can really get rehabilitated
and contribute constructively to society.
MYTH #7: "MANDATORY MINIMUM SENTENCES ARE EFFECTIVE AND WILL HELP PROTECT SOCIETY."
Although the public may believe that extremely stiff, mandatory minimum sentences and lock'em up strategies send a message
that deters crime, history tells another story.
Criminologists point out that such laws, even when publicized, are not all that effective. Often, in the heat of actual
violence, perpetrators do not even think about consequences. At such moments of blinding rage and confusion, there are generally
few thoughts of penalties or sentences, severe or otherwise.
Conversely, we do know that extremely harsh mandatory sentences have prompted some of the very types of crime they are
intended to stem. When a perpetrator is aware of particularly dire consequences if he's caught, that fear can lead him to
cause even greater harm for the victim. A person facing a stiff sentence like a mandatory 25 years to life, or even a death
sentence, may decide his chances are better if he eliminates the victim and any possible witness. What might have been a lesser
crime then often gets even worse.
It may seem a paradox, but the stiffer the consequences, the more Jessicas, Megans and Polly Klaases will likely be the
result. It is understandable that with such terrible murders come calls for tougher punishments. However, the problem with
legislation launched in anger is that it invariably ends up punishing not only those who deserve punishment, but also those
who do not.
MYTH #8: "SEX OFFENDER REGISTRIES ARE NECESSARY TO PROTECT SOCIETY."
Posting names, addresses and photographs on a Sex Offender Registry is not only a risk to those on the list; it can also
lead to unintended, inappropriate and destructive consequences for the whole community.
Registries tend to treat all sex offenders the same way, without reference to the severity of their offense, their responsiveness
to treatment, or current assessment of the risk they pose. It is seen by some as an opportunity to harass the offenders and
even worse.
While it is certainly in order to professionally monitor and discipline sex offenders for various prudent periods, we must
also try to be fair about how offenders are handled. Permanently branding them on registries or making targets of them with
conspicuous tracking devices will only aggravate the problems, not solve them. Unfortunately, when a partially informed public
is allowed and encouraged to become watchdogs, sex offenders face greater risk of confrontations by the public, due mainly
to anger and hostility. Some people even feel that they have a warrant to harass offenders and make life miserable for them.
Since the start of Community Notification, there has been a growing number of serious beatings, not only of sex offenders,
but sometimes of their family members or people with whom they live. Some confrontations have led to tragedies. Two sex offenders
were murdered in Maine. In this case, the victims were no longer likely threats; one was simply a young man who at 17 had
a 15-year-old girlfriend. Had their names, addresses and photographs not been on the state's registry, had the two been simply
monitored by probation and treatment professionals, they would not have been spotlighted by some zealot who apparently thought
he was doing the work of God.
A little wall sign at one of NCIA's clinics gets a lot of applause from those in treatment:
"Permanent brandings may be all right for cattle,
but they shouldn't be for people."
If we want to be humane, that sign is correct. If we want former offenders to regain their health and not be always on
the run, we should not set them up to be stalked. Vengeful prescriptions that call only for more and more punishment will
not produce a cure. Since so few of the once-caught remain a threat, there are smarter approaches than alarming communities
with registries and turning all levels of former offenders over to the general public for surveillance.
MYTH #9: "TRACKING DEVICES ARE A PRACTICAL AND JUST MEANS FOR KEEPING SEX OFFENDERS UNDER SURVEILLANCE."
If we want fewer victims of sexual offenses, the primary goal should be to reintegrate former offenders peacefully back
into society as law-abiding citizens. This cannot be done if we keep them in fear and on the run. Tracking devices that have
to be worn conspicuously only make targets of the people we are trying to reintegrate into society.
When offenders are made to wear GPS bracelets, with one worn on the ankle and another on the wrist, they are big, bulky
and hard to keep hidden. For anyone who has to wear them, they are a scarlet letter, a crippling stigma of shame.
If we want to keep sex-offenders on track, turning them into prey on registries or spotlighting them with bulky tracking
bracelets on both arm and leg is not the answer. Making a dartboard of any human being is clearly more an act of revenge than
an aid in stemming crime. The vigilante mentality is still strong in many places: one man on a sex offender registry found
the severed head of his pet dog on the front porch of his house.
Sadly, the new legislation being created is aimed more at increasing punishment and appeasing the public than it is at
actually making our communities safer. When the public is as misinformed and angry as they are, it is a perilous mistake to
give them the addresses and photographs of all sex offenders, particularly without the background of their crimes or updated
individual assessments of risk.
The monitoring of sex offenders will always be better handled by knowledgeable treatment professionals carefully coordinating
their efforts with police and parole officers than by the varied mercies of an angry, upset and partially informed populace.
If GPS devices need to be used, there now exist cell phones with GPS chips, which not only give the person's precise location
but allow immediate voice contact with the person.
Unless we want to go back two centuries to the ghoulish practices of Salem, we should not get caught up in the intoxications
of revenge that only fuel harassment and witch hunts.
MYTH #10: "THE EXPERTS SAY THAT STRONG, REPRESSIVE MEASURES ARE NECESSARY TO KEEP SEX OFFENDERS FROM RE-OFFENDING."
Below are some revealing quotes from various experts and authors who have studied sex offender legislation and treatment.
Tom Masters, Program Director, Correctional Treatment Services at Oregon State Hospital:
Unfortunately a lot of crime legislation is a function of politics and does not lead to rehabilitation or community safety.
Margaret Love, former Justice Department Pardon Attorney, writes:
Mean spirited vengeful legislation is only an incitement to vigilante injustice masquerading as a responsible public safety
measure.
In the June 2006 issue of National Wildlife, Richard Law summarizes some studies on how we in America have become
so overcome by fear. Here are some excerpts:
Fear is felt nearly intensely in suburban Overland Park, Kansas, as it is in urban Philadelphia. One suburban father told
me, "I want to know where my kid is 24 hours a day, seven days a week. I want to know where that kid is. Which hours. Which
square foot. Which telephone number.
As a parent, I have felt that fear but consider the facts:
The number of abductions by strangers has been falling for years.
Most abductors are family members.
U.S. children are safer now than they have been since 1975.According to the 2005 Duke University Child Well Being Index,
violent victimization of children has dropped by more than 38 percent.
A 1991 study found that in 1990, the radius within which children were allowed to roam on their own from home had shrunk
to a ninth of what it had been in 1970.
What has increased is round-the-clock news coverage of a few tragedies, conditioning families to live in fear.
In the June 2, 2006, San Francisco Chronicle Mark Martin, Peter Firmrite and Greg Lucas wrote an article
that made the following points:
Residency prohibitions on sex offenders have become increasingly popular across the country, despite any statistical evidence
that they limit assaults on children. At least 18 states have some restrictions on where parolees live.
Niki Delson, a licensed clinical social worker who has worked for 30 years with sex offenders and their victims and
who is chairwoman of the California Coalition on Sexual Offending, says: "Where someone lives has no relation to the commission
of a crime". She calls residency requirements "a smoke screen that does little to help children".
Jill Levenson, a professor at Lynn University says: "Restricting where parolees live can actually do more harm than
good. Such requirements tend to push them out of metropolitan areas where they are further away from job opportunities, families,
treatment options and all the things we know that will reduce recidivism.
A review of residence restrictions Levenson published noted that both Minnesota and Colorado prison officials studied
patterns of sex offenders on parole and found no correlation between new offenses the parolees committed and where they lived.
Neither state adopted residency requirements.
Corwin Ritchie, Executive Director at the Iowa County Attorney's Association, stated:
In 2002, Iowa enacted a law that prohibits sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a school or daycare center. The
law has overburdened law enforcement, has concentrated sex offenders in areas where they are allowed to live, and has led
to an increase in the number of sex offenders who have stopped registering with local authorities and gone missing.
I
defy anyone to try and convince me, scientifically or logically, that those requirements have any affect at all. It makes
great sense politically, but has no affect whatsoever on public safety.
James Poniewozik, staff writer for Time Magazine, wrote on October 16, 2006:
Strangers make up 7% of child molesters; the vast majority are family members. But you wouldn't know it from watching TV.
When stranger predators are everywhere on TV, it suggests that they are everywhere in the real world: in your school yard,
roaming your street, and --especially-- climbing the DSL line into your kids' bedrooms like an ivied trellis.
Robert Freeman-Longo, former director of the Safer Society, stated:
You ban somebody from the community, he has no friends, he feels bad about himself, and you reinforce the very problems
that contribute to sex abuse behavior in the first place. You make him a worse sex offender.
CONCLUSION
Knowing of NCIA's work and having seen this report, author/researcher Henry Scammell volunteered the following:
The public has been misled into believing that sex offenders are around every corner and that even those who have been
caught will go on to offend forever. The first fear is irrational and the second is less true of sex offenses than of virtually
any other type of crime. The only public policies with any hope of success are those based on reliable research instead of
fears, and on scientific facts rather than easy political fixes fed by misconceptions.
Fear is a poor basis for public
policy. It raises a nearly unbreachable barrier to the truth. And a policy that is based on the realities --of low recidivism,
of responsiveness to treatment and of the relationship between the vast majority of offenders and their victims-- offers the
only hope for reducing or eliminating one of our society's saddest and most challenging problems.
If we keep in mind the reality that once a sex offender is caught, most of the problem ceases, that preventative programs
can cure almost all the rest of the once caught, then clearly treatment must be the goal. When you hear a politician calling
for tougher sentences and not backing it up with dollars for treatment programs, then he is looking for votes, not solutions.
The public's fear would not be so intense today if it were not being propelled by all the exaggerated and often totally false
recidivism claims. There have been too many "scarathons" that claim that the boogeyman has become much larger than he really
is. Even though the public imagines the molester-kidnapper is everywhere, that simply is not the case. Because of all the
clamor and panic, what criminologists and treatment scholars have learned to date has plainly not been heard by the public.
Sadly, what has been spawned politically so far, such as sex registries and residency restrictions, are measures that will
do nothing to make our communities safer, but in fact will do more harm. If we want fewer sex offenders and fewer victims
of these types of crime, we have got to be more levelheaded. We should see to it that the public and our legislators inform
themselves better about these myths and learn to distinguish the reality from the many distorted ideas that are abroad.
Copyright 2007-2008 ReformSexOffenderLaws.Org Group
As you can see, sex offenders are one of the least re-offenders. Surprising still, is the fact that it’s not strangers
that we need to worry about harming our children, but someone you know and trust. Good to know around Halloween. And did you
know, not even one sexual abuse has ever been committed during trick or treat.
So why are they in the news all the time? For one, all though some but not all offenses are against children. This makes
it a front page story and acts as a very powerful scare tactic. A better choice for parents and for women in general would
be to teach and practice safety. Why s it just during Halloween do we print, educate, and encourage safety? These are rules
that should be followed every day. Women, you need to take it one step further: 1) Always lock your doors to your car, your
home and even your windows. 2) Ask for an escort if you leave work or the mall at night. 3) Take self defense classes and
practice until it’s a reflex. Self defense classes teach more than how to physically protect yourself, they teach you
to act smart and think safe. I had myself and my daughter is self defense classes not once but twice. Once when she was 8
years old and again when she was 14. And we practiced. From the time she was a toddler, I preached safety and educated on
strangers. We had a password when she was in school and we have one now even though she is 24 years old. It is what you do
as a parent that makes your child safer, not what is posted on the internet, or on the doors during Halloween.
The other question to be discussed “How many sex offenders are falsely accused?”
More than you realize. According to the Innocence Project, there has been 223 post conviction DNA exonerations in the United
States alone. Common causes of the wrongful convictions were: poverty, racial issues, eye witness misidentification, corrupt
scientist, corrupt police, corrupt FBI agents, corrupt prosecutors or inept defense counsel. Unfortunately for many, the Innocence
Project only takes on cases where DNA can be tested. There are many innocent men and women, still being punished for a crime
they did not commit. Why? Because they have been told that all the evidence collected when they were convicted in the 1970’s
and 1980’s had been destroyed. So until we can find a way to help these people, we will never know the true number of
innocent people who are paying for crimes they did not commit.
I hope this article helps you make more educated and informed decisions in the future. I also hope it helps you to distinguish
what is just a scare tactic and what is fact.
If you need more answers, you may e-mail me at sdk5460@yahoo.com.
Or you can visit the National website www.reformsexoffenderlaws.org
Education is the key to understanding and peace of mind.
Sandy Kennedy
Chairperson
Maryland Citizens For Sex Offender Justice