October 31, 2009

FL- Somer Thompson case: was killer local?

10-31-2009 Florida:

Clay County Sheriff Rick Beseler held a press conference and released a possible profile regarding Somer Thompson’s killer. Due to the information given, criminal profiler Pat Brown suggests that the killer was someone local. Though attention has been focused on Georgia, where Somer’s body was found buried in a landfill, it is believed that the killer abducted and disposed of Somer locally. It was local, neighborhood garbage that was collected then taken to Georgia. While appearing on the Nancy Grace show, Pat Brown theorized that the killer may not have had access to transportation.

She discussed that the killer did not abduct Somer than drive to a random location and take her far away. The killer had access to a local dumpster or other trash facility, implying that he did not take Somer far from the area. Focus has been placed on a vacant house located at 1080 Gano Avenue, it has been suggested that the last place Somer was seen alive was just outside of this house. Crime scene investigators sealed the house off with crime tape and conducted an investigation that lasted several days. They collected evidence which has been sent off for processing.



If the killer is local, and possibly still in the area, the public should look for someone who might be trying to change their appearance, or may have missed work or other important functions on October 19, 2009, the day Somer Thompson was kidnapped. The killer might try to get rid of a vehicle quickly as well. If the killer used a vehicle, he or she would want to get rid of it due to possible evidence. One factor that has been suggested in the criminal profile includes the killer’s fascination with the case. He or she might be watching the coverage on a regular basis and seem preoccupied or obsessed with the details of the case. These are red flags that should alert those around the suspect to notify authorities.

It’s important that citizens remain alert and not ignore anything that might be a red flag, no matter how small or unimportant the tip might seem. Clay County police ask anyone who has any information to leave a tip at the 24/7 tip line: 1-877-6911. ..Source.. by Charisse Van Horn

Read More of Article...

FL- Florida ranks third in missing persons, mostly children

10-31-2009 Florida:

At times Florida can seem to be the national epicenter of reported missing children and child abductions.

The cases here gain national prominence and rarely have happy endings. After the media fanfare is over, the children's names stick out as sad reminders: Carlie Brucia. Jessica Lunsford. Trenton Duckett. Caylee Anthony. Haleigh Cummings. And now Somer Thompson.

The state does hold a number of unfortunate distinctions when it comes to measuring the number of children reported missing and, what some consider a related statistic, the number of registered sex offenders in the state.

According to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, Florida generally ranks third in the nation — behind only California and Texas — for reported missing persons, most of whom are children, registered sex offenders and the number of "stereotypical kidnappings," the most serious kind of stranger abductions.

The numbers can seem frightening for parents. Florida had nearly 62,000 missing-person reports during 2007. And as of July, the state had 51,560 registered sex offenders.

The vast majority of missing-person cases end up getting resolved. Many times reported missing children are kids who get lost or are runaways, said Ernie Allen with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

Many other cases involve custodial disputes. So of the roughly 800,000 kids reported missing nationwide each year, only about 58,000 represent "nonfamily abductions," Allen said. And only about 115 of those are defined as "stereotypical kidnappings."

Those involve someone the child does not know or has only a slight acquaintance with and who "holds the child overnight, transports the child 50 miles or more, kills the child, demands ransom or intends to keep the child permanently," according to Allen and U.S. Department of Justice statistics.

The large missing-persons numbers in California, Texas and Florida may be explained by a number of common factors.

"You've got large, populous states. You've got magnet states," Allen said. "You've got year-round climate, and kids tend to be relatively more accessible."

The large numbers of sex offenders in those states "probably" have some correlation, Allen said, but he also noted that not all sex offenders' crimes involve children.

"The 51,000 in Florida does not mean they all represent a serious threat to children in the state," said Allen, who has called for a tiered system for delineating sex offenders.

Florida ranks behind 13 other states in the number of sex offenders per 100,000 people. Florida has 281 such offenders per 100,000. Nationwide the ratio is 223 per 100,000. ..Source.. by Anthony Colarossi Sentinel Staff Writer

Read More of Article...

KY- Ignoring the court (KY Supreme Court)

See related article:

10-31-2009 Kentucky:

Just because you can do something doesn't mean you should. Attorney General Jack Conway needs to remember the wisdom of that old admonition as he and his counsel advise the Corrections Department not to follow a recent state Supreme Court ruling as Mr. Conway appeals it.

On Oct. 1, the state's high court, in a 5-2 decision, said the law banning sex offenders from living close to schools, day care centers and playgrounds could not apply to those convicted before 2006, the year the law was enacted. (Earlier this year, the Indiana Supreme Court issued the same ruling for its state law.) Mr. Conway was not happy with the decision, which he said raised "serious concerns about the impact on public safety." He indicated that he might appeal the ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court.

On Oct. 21, Mr. Conway's office filed a motion asking the state Supreme Court to suspend its ruling. The convicted sex offender who successfully challenged the state law has until Nov. 3 to oppose the Attorney General's motion to suspend the higher court's ruling, and Mr. Conway has until Dec. 30 to ask the U.S. Supreme Court to hear his case. In the meantime, the state Supreme Court hasn't issued an opinion as to the stay, and Mr. Conway has asked Kentucky probation and parole officers to continue to enforce the contested law - in essence, disregarding the high court's finding.

"Our position is that the Supreme Court decision is not final," Lisa Lamb, spokeswoman for the state Department of Corrections, told the Lexington Herald-Leader . "We believe the former law is still in effect."

That may be what they believe - and they provide copies of rules of procedure to back up their position, per the department's legal counsel. But the attorney general and his operatives ought not to be in the business of ignoring Supreme Court rulings they don't agree with, no matter how public-minded their intentions. ..Editorial.. by Louisville Courier Journal

Read More of Article...

NV- Child Pornography: Does the Punishment Fit the Crime?

10-31-2009 Nevada:

In Nevada, looking at child pornography is a Class B Felony, punishable by one to six years in prison and a five thousand dollar fine. Many experts say a child pornographer will never see a day behind bars, just a mere probation sentence. After that, they’re off “free and clear,” usually with no lifetime supervision.

Child pornography is a three billion dollar industry, that's according to the Internet Filter Review. Some experts are saying that the sentencing for people who look at child pornography is much too lax.

Child pornography is much more pervasive than people might think. And it’s often seen as a victimless crime. But one detective says that couldn't be further from the truth...it can involve children as young as three years old being raped. And often, he says, those who look at child pornography move on to actually touching children.

We met with a man who has seen how child pornography and molesting a child overlap.
Ted says his world was shattered three years ago when Richard Raymer took his son's innocence.

“I wanted to kill him I had so much anger."

Washoe County Sheriffs Detective Dennis Carry handled Raymer's case.

Carry says, "Richard Raymer was a two time sex offender he had convictions in Oklahoma and Florida. He moved to this area in 2005.”

That’s when detectives found out that Raymer's addiction went beyond child pornography.

He’s now serving a life sentence. But Detective Carry says if Raymer had received a stronger punishment initially, he may have not had the chance to molest a 10-year-old boy.

"A large percentage of people that get arrested on child pornography cases are receiving probation when its a first offense child pornography charge," according to Carry.

Probation--instead of jail time. Hard for Ted to understand. "I’m really worried because I don't ever want this to happen again."

Former D.A. Dave Clifton says it’s difficult for child sex offenders to change. "These type of criminal offenders are not likely to be rehabilitated, they’re not likely to be safe back in society."

Many child pornographers say their affinity toward child porn is an addiction, an uncontrollable urge.

Raymer was in a sex offender treatment program in prison...yet while he was there he still fantasized about young boys. In his prison diary, he wrote about a young boy that was “ten luscious years old” and how once he gets out, he wants to hook up with a boy named “Ricky.”

"Some have said they want to get rid of it they want to stop and just couldn't they would delete it and then go back for more," says Carry.

Detective Carry says nearly all of those he has arrested first looked at pictures and video.
“We're talking children 5 years old, 6 years old, 7 years old being raped."

And then, like a drug, they need that next fix.

"They want something harder and harder. Research shows the next fix at some point down the road is touching a child.”

He says studies show that more than 85 percent of those who look at child porn move on to molest a child.

In Nevada, looking at child pornography is a Class B Felony, punishable by one to six years in prison and a five thousand dollar fine. Many experts say a child pornographer will never see a day behind bars, just a mere probation sentence. After that, they’re off “free and clear,” usually with no lifetime supervision.

Clifton says the likelihood of a child pornographer re-offending or moving on to molest a child hasn't been enough to change the law. "So do we want them running around in our streets? No. But because constitution doesn't allow us to put them in prison for the rest of their life for a crime they may commit…”

Detective Dennis Carry handled the investigation of William McCaffrey, who had one million pornographic images of children on his computer. When detectives asked him if he would ever touch a child he responded--"I really can't predict the future."

We may not be able to predict a person's future behavior, but maybe the future is closer than we think. According to the Butner study, two psychologists studied 155 child pornographers. When these offenders faced the court, they admitted to molesting a total of 75 victims. But after sentencing, these men were treated for their addiction and took polygraph tests, and the number of victims went from 75 to an astounding 1,777 victims (The Butner Study Redux).

And that disparity is why experts like Detective Carry say stronger sentencing is imperative. The current court system has offenders take a psycho-analysis test to determine whether they're a high risk to society. An exam both Clifton and Carry say is not reliable

“The psychosexual exam, I have to admit, most people pass because they’re only considered a moderate risk, and the expert would say this person's eligible for probation,” asserts Clifton.

Although, they must register as sex offenders.

“That allows government to monitor people and where they're living for the rest of their life.”

However, since most child pornographers are considered low risk by the courts, Tier 0 or 1, they won’t be listed on sex offender location web sites. Only Tier 2 and Tier 3 sex offenders are listed.

And even Clifton says programs like lifetime supervision and sex offender registration aren't fool proof. Phillip Garrido was a registered sex offender and on lifetime supervision when he allegedly abducted Jaycee Dugard.

So if all signs point to the fact that child pornographers are likely to re-offend, should state law change to give these offenders stronger sentences?

Clifton: “It may be the legislature increases sentences for these crimes some day, we'll see...I don’t know if the public outcry is going to be enough to make that happen.”

If that day comes, it will come too late for Ted and his family.

Ted remembers the fear in his son’s eyes when he was molested. "He come out crying to me and said ‘dad, I’m scared.’ I said what are you scared about?

He said, ‘I’m scared he might get me.’"

What, if anything, would you think should be done when it comes to child pornographers? You can post your comments below. ..Source.. by Christina Pascucci

Read More of Article...

Paedophile warning posters go up after ban fails

10-31-2009 Netherlands:

The release of a convicted sex offender can stir up a community, but recent attempts to keep one from returning to the Dutch city of Eindhoven have caused equal commotion.

His face was plastered on the front page of the biggest newspaper in the country on Thursday. De Telegraaf daily had removed the customary black bar before the eyes and, contrary to Dutch journalistic practice, used his full name while referring to "the paedophile who sees only one victim: himself". The paper had printed the same picture that has appeared on posters behind windows across Eindhoven.

Sytze van der V. (61) had hoped to return to this southern city after serving a 27 month sentence for abusing four young boys; his third conviction for such sex crimes against minors. Before he was released last month, however, mayor Rob van Gijzel notified him that he would be barred from entering his former place of residence.
Under a pilot project introduced in August, Van Gijzel had been warned about the imminent release of Van der V. The repeat offender had served the detention part of his sentence, but his appeal against the following 5 year supervision was still pending.

The local authorities offered him a rented apartment if he dropped his appeal and accepted constant supervision and an electronic ankle bracelet. The deal would also require him to stay away from schools, play grounds, pools and day care centres.

When Van der V. responded he would only accept limited supervision and would not wear the bracelet or give up swimming, Van Gijzel used his authority to bar the man from the city. The mayor was promptly overruled by a court which determined he could not use a law to protect public order against the man, despite his high chance of of recidivism.

This case illustrates a dilemma that appears to crop up every time a paedophile is released from prison: does the fact that he has served his sentence make him a free man or should his deed follow him for the rest of his life the way it does his victims?

The Netherlands does not keep a public register of convicted sex offenders. There are some private initiatives to do so, despite Dutch privacy laws that prohibit the publication of personal details of people who have been convicted. But the poster campaign now running in Eindhoven resembles the naming and shaming crusades seen mostly in the US and the UK. With the ban revoked, people in Eindhoven have taken matters into their own hands and put up posters of the man's face with the text "convicted paedo get out of here" around the city.

In a telephone interview on the late night show Pauw&Witteman on Tuesday, Van der V. said he felt hunted and had been sleeping in his car. Research has shown that sex offenders who are excluded from society have a higher probability of relapsing. "The chances are the smallest when these people are offered a safe place in society," Jules Mulder, who runs a forensic psychiatric clinic where sex offenders are treated, told NRC Handelsblad. "The best thing is to inform the neighbourhood about the arrival of a paedophile and put the man and the community in touch with each other."

Although there is little sympathy for the man, experts have pointed out that it is impossible to exile him from an entire municipality as this would just shift the problem elsewhere. "I understand Van Gijzel is at his wits' end," Sjef van Gennip, head of the Dutch rehabilitation office, said after the ruling. "But if he does not solve the problem, some other mayor will have to deal with it. There are children in every city."

Van Gennip does agree with the mayor that there is a "loophole in the legislation". Mayors are currently informed when a sex offender is released and returns to their municipality, but there is little they can do with that information. The justice ministry said that it is reviewing whether mayors should get more authority to act when perpetrators of serious crimes are released into their communities.

Van Gennip said that he would also like the ministry to prevent the release of sex offenders before the arrangements for state supervision are in place, even if a paedophile's case is still under appeal. ..Source.. by news staff

Read More of Article...

DC- U.S. Supreme Court to Review Sex Offender Residency?

What is the issue the Kentucky AG wants it to be? This article speaks multiple issues and clarity will decide whether or not the high court even accepts the case. While the Kentucky Supreme court said, issue is one of ex post facto, the Kentucky AG seems to want it to be, Whether or not ALL registered sex offenders can live next to schools? Interesting is, there is not one once of proof that RSOs make a choice to live next to schools, they live where there is available housing and where it is best for their family (like anyone else in society). So, ex post facto or emotional?

10-31-2009 Washington DC:

Madisonville, KY – Attorney General Jack Conway announced that his office will file a certiorari motion with the U.S. Supreme Court to review the recent ruling by the Kentucky Supreme Court that lifts the residency restrictions for all registered sex offenders who committed their crimes before July 12, 2006. This means hundreds of sex offenders could live next to schools and day cares. Hopkins County Commonwealth's Attorney, David Massamore said this will only apply to those who have committed a crime prior to July, 2006. However, this also means hundreds of sex offenders could live next to schools and day cares. Massamore said, “ The Law will be lost, (Citizens) will not get the protection created by the law.”

What protection? This alleged protection is a governmental ruse to allow enacting of laws that are really banishment of folks that are disliked. There is no proof that these laws protect, but they sound good, is that really a basis for such laws?

Madisonville City Police Chief James Pendergraff says he supports Conway's request. "Our department certainly supports Attorney General Conway's efforts to protect children. We wish him the best with his request before the U.S. Supreme Court as we continue to uphold the laws that are on the books." He suggested that citizens stay informed about registered sex offenders by logging on to the Kentucky State Police Sex Offender Registry.

Conway said that, “I have serious concerns about how the Kentucky Supreme Court’s ruling will affect public safety, and in the interest of protecting Kentucky families, I will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to hear our case.”

Conway's Office of Criminal Appeals filed a motion on Oct. 21st with the Kentucky Supreme Court requesting that the court suspend implementation of the ruling until the U.S. Supreme Court determines whether or not it will review the Kentucky case. The motion to stay the request has not yet been ruled on the the Kentucky Supreme Court.

Attorney General Conway has until December 30, 2009 to file the motion with the U.S. Supreme Court. ..Source.. by Tim Moore – News Director

Read More of Article...

October 30, 2009

NY- Jury: NY sex offender beat up wary neighbor

Secondary dissemination is a problem because rarely is it truthful. i.e., according to what the law allows. As such it gets into a new area of law libel and slander. Although we do not know what exactly what was posted (words) beyond a picture, all around people get upset and this is a likely result.

10-30-2009 New York:

WATERLOO, N.Y. — A registered sex offender has been convicted of beating up a neighbor in a small-town apartment complex in upstate New York for posting fliers warning about his criminal past.

There is a major difference between "Warning someone" and "Informing someone." This is why it is best to refer folks to what the state posts, if doing anything at all.

William Meacham, his sister Stephanie and family friend Marvin Snyder were found guilty Thursday of gang assault on 35-year-old Adrian Porter, who was left with brain trauma, a broken nose and facial fractures.

They could get up to 25 years in prison at sentencing Dec. 21.

Authorities say Porter was confronted in the complex’s parking lot in Seneca Falls in September 2008 after he posted the fliers showing state sex-offender registry photographs of Meacham. ..Source.. by Boston Hearld.com



NY sex offender imprisoned for beating neighbor

12-21-2009 New York:

WATERLOO, N.Y. (AP) - A registered sex offender has been sentenced to 14 years in prison for beating up a neighbor in central New York for posting fliers warning about his criminal past.

William Meacham, his sister Stephanie and family friend Marvin Snyder were found guilty of gang assault on 35-year-old Adrian Porter, who was left with brain trauma, a broken nose and facial fractures.

Authorities say Porter was confronted in an apartment complex parking lot in Seneca Falls in September 2008 after he posted the fliers showing state sex-offender registry photographs of Meacham.

Meacham, who's 32, served nearly four years for raping a 15-year-old girl in the Binghamton area. At sentencing Monday, his 25-year-old sister and Snyder both drew 13-year terms. ..Source.. by AP

Read More of Article...

FL- Somer Thompson: FBI hunts for clues in Georgia landfill

10-30-2009 Florida:

Everything from taking crime scene photographs to lifting fingerprints

When FBI agent Larry Meyer heard that police found Somer Thompson’s body in a Georgia landfill last week, he mobilized a group of co-workers whose gruesome, painstaking work may reveal her killer.

Some were gun-toting agents who regularly hunt criminals on the streets of North Florida. Others included FBI support staff whose full-time jobs entail photography and data analysis.

They are all part of the Jacksonville-based FBI Evidence Response Team, a highly trained group of forensics-fascinated folk who could run circles around any CSI television star, though it’ll take more than an hour.

The team put their game faces on when they got to the Folkston landfill, focusing on finding even the smallest clue that could solve the case. It was only days later that some felt the emotional drain of recovering the body of the 7-year-old Orange Park girl.

Alex Silverstein felt it on his first day off.

“I probably hugged and kissed my kids more in that one day than I have probably in a month,” said Silverstein, 39, a 13-year agent and father of two.

Angela Hill felt it when she set eyes on her infant son. While Silverstein is a veteran of body recoveries, having worked as part of a team at the Pentagon after 9/11, this was Hill’s first.

“It’s not an easy thing to do, knowing it’s an innocent child,” said Hill, 30, an agent for 3 1/2 years. “But it’s for a greater purpose: To find evidence; to get some answers.”

The 16-person team seeks those answers through everything from taking crime scene photographs to lifting fingerprints. Their arsenal includes special lighting that spots invisible bodily fluids; a kit that lifts dust prints from a surface using an electromagnetic charge; and a machine that can vacuum human scent that is then tracked by bloodhounds.

They have a stocked equipment van and a high-tech command center vehicle. They also have a pipeline into the FBI’s state-of-the-art laboratory in Quantico, Va., where some of the evidence collected in Somer’s case is being analyzed.

But it’s the people on the team and their drive to help solve cases that make the biggest difference, said Meyer, the senior team leader and a 23-year agent.

“There’s a motivation to do more than the regular job,” said Meyer, 50.

FBI agents, analysts and other support staff who volunteer for the team get two weeks of forensics training and take follow-up classes. They are responsible for scenes on federal property and in FBI cases, such as collection of evidence during search warrants. They can spend upwards of half their normal work week on a case such as Somer’s.

They also assist smaller police agencies with evidence collection and body recovery, including another Clay County case this year in which the buried remains of a murder victim were being search for in Keystone Heights nearly 30 years after the slaying.

“I have a great deal of confidence in them,” Clay Sheriff Rick Beseler said.

Meyer said the team spent about six hours recovering Somer’s body and evidence around her, then returned two days later to collect more. They were joined at the landfill by Clay detectives and agents with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

“At first it was a great disappointment because we all hoped to find her alive,” Meyer said.

“Then when we got up there, as emotional as it was for everyone, we had to get the job done.”

Team members also worked with Clay detectives and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement at a property on Gano Avenue where Somer disappeared.

Though the team couldn’t discuss details of the case, members said they are hopeful their work will make a difference.

“Bring people to justice. There is no more noble cause than doing that,” Silverstein said. ..Source.. by Jim Schoettler

Read More of Article...

MI- GH cop won't be on sex offender list

Unbelievable, but there still may be justice. Michigan has a catch-all statute (MCL 28.722) which should cause this man to be forced to register, that statute is not under the control of the prosecutor.

10-30-2009 Michigan:

Thomas Carey to be sentenced Nov. 2

GRAND HAVEN, Mich. (WOOD) - A former Grand Haven police officer lost his job and could lose his freedom for his on-duty sexual encounters, but one of his victims says she can't understand why his name won't appear on the state's sex offender registry.

She thinks Thomas Carey belongs there to warn other women.

"He's just a sick person that takes advantage of women that can't help themselves," the woman told 24 Hour News 8.

Carey, 47, a 20-year veteran and one-time Grand Haven Officer of the Year, could face up to five years in prison when sentenced on Nov. 2 in Ottawa County.

But it was a deal worked out between Carey's attorney, Charles Rominger, and Kent County Prosecutor William Forsyth that will keep him from the sex offender registry.

Rominger said his client, who is married, is not a predator and doesn't belong on the list.

"I think it does a disservice to characterize this as a renegade police officer who was using his badge and authority to obtain sexual favors from non-consenting adult women," Rominger said.

That's not how state police saw it -- at least originally.

They investigated the case as first-degree sexual assault involving two vulnerable women -- ages 43 and 67 -- and an officer abusing his authority for sex, according to state police reports obtained by 24 Hour News 8 through the Freedom of Information Act.

The reports provide new details on the investigation -- and raise new questions.

Carey pleaded no contest to misconduct in office and gross indecency, the same kind of charge two consenting adults would face for having sex in public.

First-degree sexual assault carries a maximum sentence of life in prison; the most he can get now is 5 years.

Rominger said the officer agreed to gross indecency because it's not among the charges that land people on the sex offender list.

The 43-year-old victim said Carey first targeted her in early 2008, when she called police to report a suspicious person. Officer Carey -- the city's K-9 handler -- responded.

"I'd seen this cop before," she told 24 Hour News 8. "I've had other incidents and he was, you know, I could tell he had a crush on me, you know, that he liked me."

She had been diagnosed with mental health problems -- major depression, a dependent personality -- and other health issues, including insulin dependent diabetes, state police records show.

The officer was especially nice, the woman told police. He hugged her, told her a shower would make her feel better.

An hour or so later, he returned, providing more comfort, she said.

"He was holding me, rubbing my back," she said.

Then, the visits became regular -- Carey tapping on her window late at night, within view of the Grand Haven police headquarters.

Once, he appeared suddenly, in uniform, in her bedroom at 2 or 3 a.m, standing in the dark, she told police.

She couldn't undertand why his bosses didn't know.

"It's evident, I mean he come knocking on my bedroom window at 1 o'clock in the morning," she said. "I mean, how can you hide, you know, a police officer, you know, in his uniform, dressed, banging on someone's bedroom window?"

She felt obligated, she told police, to give him what he wanted: Oral sex -- up to a dozen times during the course of 14 months, almost always while he was in uniform and with a gun on his belt.

Each incident "was pretty much the same," lasting 15 to 20 minutes, and "when he was done, he would leave," the woman told police. He never used force or threatened her, she said.

He called her "his girl," and told her, "You want it, don't you?" she told police.

"When asked why she didn't resist or say no, (her) response was she felt she had to and that he was a figure of authority, a police officer," wrote the state police detective who interviewed the woman.

"He has a gun," the woman told 24 Hour News 8. "I asked him one time: What would happen if his gun was to go off? I said, then you've got some explaining to do."

The victim kept the secret until March 2009, when she told her psychiatrist and her Ottawa County Mental Health caseworker, reports show. The allegations reached Grand Haven Public Safety Chief Dennis Edwards, who asked state police to investigate.

"I blame myself," the woman said. "I mean, I could have said no, but what do you say? He's a cop."

Carey denied the allegations when he met with a state police sergeant on June 4 at the Grand Haven Municipal Marina. The frequent visits with the woman, he said, were good public relations.

State police interviewed neighbors, who thought the officer's frequent visits were to check on the woman.

They also searched Carey's police locker and his Grand Haven Township home. It appears they found no evidence of sexual assault. Among the evidence they sought: Green or blue men's bikini underwear described by the victim.

But it was another detail the victim described -- a blue, oval tattoo -- that convinced state police she wasn't making it up.

State police got a search warrant for Carey's body. And, there it was -- a tattoo on his upper arm in honor of fallen Grand Haven Officer Scott Flahive, shot in 1994 in the line of duty.

Then, the biggest breakthrough for police, in August: Rumors about a similar relationship with a 67-year-old woman.

This started in 2005 -- about the time Carey was named Grand Haven Police Officer of the Year. She had called police to report a fraud; Carey helped investigate.

First came the compliments -- he said she looked sexy -- then hugs and kisses, she told police. She described the first visits, some in the middle of the night, as uncomfortable. She described their last encounter as "repulsive."

The sex acts -- 50 to 60 in all -- weren't consensual at first, she said, but it developed into a relationship that lasted several years.

She told police, "He would keep his uniform on and that he would just unzip his pants."

State police described this victim also as vulnerable; she'd been seeing a psychiatrist for 20 years for a chemical imbalance and clinical depression, records show.

Without the second victim, prosecutors would not have filed charges at all, sources told 24 Hour News 8.

Carey's attorney said he negotiated a deal with Kent County Prosecutor William Forsyth before charges were filed.

"My assessment was there was just as good a chance of an acquittal as there was a conviction," Rominger said.

Forsyth, who'd been asked to handle the case as a special prosecutor, wanted a felony sex crime conviction, and for Carey to never work again as a police officer.

Carey wanted to stay off the sex offender registry.

They both got what they wanted.

Carey got quick service in court: Charged and arraigned in Grand Haven District Court, then pleading no contest in Ottawa County Circuit Court -- all on the same day.

Forsyth wouldn't comment on the case.

Carey's former boss, Grand Haven Public Safety Chief Dennis Edwards, said he was satisfied with the charges. State Police Lt. Curt Schram, whose office investigated the case, said he believed the charges were appropriate.

Prosecutors would have had a difficult time proving the women were too vulnerable to consent, they said.

"At what point is somebody so incapicitated that they can't choose for themselves?" Edwards said. "It's better to get some conviction than to have a trial and end up with no conviction."

Carey's attorney agreed.

"They made knowing choices, willful choices," he said of the women. "There was benefit in the relationship to them."

The victim tells 24 Hour News 8 she plans to attend the sentencing, and has written to the judge, but she won't make a statement in court.

She no longer trusts police, or the system, she said.

"If he gets any jail or prison time, I don't think he's going to get the maximum that he should, being a cop," she said. ..Source.. by Ken Kolker

Read More of Article...

PA- Pa. Supreme Court Throws Out Thousands of Juvenile Delinquency Cases

10-30-2009 Pennsylvania:

Court Says Cases Tainted by Alleged Kickback Scheme Involving Corrupt Judge

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled late Thursday that almost all juvenile delinquency cases heard by an indicted former judge must be thrown out. The ruling means cases heard by former Luzerne County Judge Mark Ciavarella from Jan. 1, 2003 to May 31, 2008 are in question for fairness and impartiality.

Ciavarella faces criminal charges that accuse him of taking millions of dollars in kickbacks from owners of private detention centers in exchange for placing juvenile defendants at their facilities, often for minor crimes.

In one reported case, a college-bound high school student served three weeks in juvenile detention for making fun of the school principal on a Web site.

The court said that it "cannot have any confidence that Ciavarella decided any Luzerne County juvenile case fairly and impartially while he labored under the specter of his self-interested dealings with the facilities," and called Ciavarella's actions a "travesty of juvenile justice."

The decision could impact up to 6,500 Pennsylvania youth, whose juvenile detention records will now be erased and their cases dismissed without the possibility of retrial.

Most of the affected youth have already served their time. In Pennsylvania, juvenile criminal records are not automatically expunged when children turn 18, so Thursday's ruling could give thousands of kids a clean slate, said Marsha Levick, deputy director of the Juvenile Law Center in Philadelphia and an attorney for the children. About 100 Pennsylvania children could now be released from juvenile detention or taken off of probation, according to Levick.

"The court's far-reaching order is an exceptional response to the most serious judicial scandal in the history of the United States," Levick told ABC News.

The ruling is the latest stunning development in a story of corruption that first shocked Luzerne County residents in January 2009. Federal prosecutors announced that respected county judges Ciavarella and Michael Conahan had pleaded guilty to tax evasion and honest services fraud. However, their plea deal and relatively light sentence were later rejected by a federal judge who ruled that Ciavarella and Conahan had failed to accept responsibility for their crimes. In fact, Ciavarella had previously told "20/20" that "we would never agree that [the kids' sentencing] was improper."

Now, the two former judges face much more serious federal racketeering, bribery, and extortion charges. All of this is the result of a lengthy investigation by the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI. Ciavarella and Conahan have pleaded not guilty.

"They sold their oath of offices to the highest bidders and engaged in ongoing schemes to defraud the public of honest services that were expected from them," Deron Roberts, chief of the FBI's Scranton office, said at a late January news conference announcing the case.

The judges' arrests shed light on a mystery in Luzerne County: Why were so many kids getting sent directly to juvenile detention after seeing Ciavarella in his Wilkes-Barre juvenile court? And why were those kids sent away in such a rush? ..Click for the remainder of this story.. by FRANK MASTROPOLO, LAUREN PEARLE and GLENN RUPPEL

Read More of Article...

October 29, 2009

KY- State to appeal ruling limiting sex-offender law

10-29-2009 Kentucky:

The Kentucky attorney general’s office has asked the state Supreme Court to delay enforcement of its Oct. 1 ruling throwing out part of the state’s sex-offender statute until the U.S. Supreme Court hears the case.

The attorney general’s office filed a motion Oct. 21 asking the state high court to stay its ruling that the law banning sex offenders from living near schools, day cares and playgrounds cannot be applied to those convicted before the statute was enacted in 2006.

The court ruled 5-2 that the statute was improperly imposed on people convicted before it went into effect. The U.S. and Kentucky constitutions prohibit laws that impose or increase punishment on criminal acts committed before the law's enactment.

Lisa Lamb, a spokeswoman for the state Corrections Department, said on the advice of its general counsel, the department has told its probation and parole officers not to follow the ruling until the state Supreme Court decides whether it will be stayed.

Michael Baker, of Elsmere, Ky., who was convicted in 1995 of third-degree rape and successfully challenged the law, has until Nov. 3 to respond to the attorney general’s motion. His lawyer, Bradley Fox, said he will oppose it.

“The state Supreme Court was pretty clear in its ruling, and we think it should stay in place until another court reverses it," Fox said.

The state Supreme Court could rule on the motion any time after Baker’s response is filed.

The attorney general’s office has until Dec. 30 to file a petition with the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case. No petition has been filed.

The U.S. Supreme Court rejects most cases, but the issue of whether sex-offender laws can be applied retroactively has surfaced in many states.

Under the Kentucky Supreme Court’s Oct. 1 ruling, sex offenders will still be required to register, but the residency restrictions enacted in 2006 cannot be applied to offenders convicted before that date.

The Kentucky State Police has said it is unable to say how many sex offenders committed their crimes before July 2006 and remain on the list. But The Courier-Journal reported at that time that there were about 5,800 statewide and about 760 in Jefferson County.

The 2006 statute subjected all convicted sex offenders to the residency requirements, while the old law applied to roughly 1,200 offenders who were on probation or parole. ..Source.. by Andrew Wolfson

Read More of Article...

NC- UPDATE: Law challenged after sex offender arrested for going to church

10-29-2009 North Carolina:

Pittsboro, N.C. — Lawyers for a registered sex offender appeared in court Thursday to challenge the constitutionality of a law under which he was charged for going to church.

James Nichols, 31, was arrested on March 28 after he attended services at Moncure Baptist Church. He was charged under a nearly year-old state law that bans sex offenders from coming within 300 feet of any place intended for the use, care or supervision of children.

Moncure Baptist has a nursery and regularly scheduled programs for children.

In a two-hour hearing in Superior Court in Pittsboro Thursday, Nichols' lawyers argued that the law is too broad, doesn't exempt churches and violates constitutional rights to religious freedom and to assembly.

."He engages in free speech, he walks down the aisle, he sings with people, and he reads the Bible," defense attorney Glenn Gerding said. "So this is not just a case about the free exercise of religion; it is also a case about assembling together with people who want to assemble together."

Nichols has been convicted twice of indecent liberties with a teen girl and most recently of attempted second-degree rape in 2003. He spent a total of 6 years and 2 months in prison on those charges.

Nichols said that he found God in prison, and when he was released last September, Moncure Baptist welcomed him with open arms.

Prosecutor Kayley Taber said Nichols and another sex offender, Frank DeMaio, were arrested after the Chatham County Sheriff's Office received a complaint.

"This was not an investigation targeted at local churches," Taber said.

DeMaio has joined Nichols in challenging the law.

Judge Allen Baddour did not make a decision on the issue Thursday but set another hearing for Nov. 12.

If Baddour declares the law unconstitutional, the case could go all the way up to the state Supreme Court.

Thirty-six states establish zones where sex offenders cannot live or visit. Some states provide exceptions for churches, but many do not. ..Source.. by Bryan Mims

Read More of Article...

KY- Officials told to ignore sex offender (court) ruling

There are way too many people in public office that thinks they are above the law!

10-29-2009 Kentucky:

Kentucky probation and parole officers have been told to violate a state Supreme Court opinion that found it was unconstitutional to retroactively apply a law that restricts where sex offenders can live.

The men and women who monitor sex offenders on probation and parole were told not to let the convicts live within 1,000 feet of a school, day-care center or playground even if their crime was committed before the statute was strengthened in 2006.

The Supreme Court opinion is being ignored because Attorney General Jack Conway is seeking to overturn it, said Lisa Lamb, spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections which oversees the Divisions of Probation and Parole.

Conway's spokeswoman, Allison Gardner Martin, said that while it was true her boss was reviewing his options for getting the opinion overturned, he hadn't taken any official steps.

“That is very interesting,” said Richard Tewksbury, a professor of criminal justice at the University of Louisville who studies sex offenders. “That is intriguing being that the case law now says one thing but yet probation and parole has purposely chosen to ignore the Supreme Court ruling and continue the enforcement.”

He said it was disheartening that a state agency is instructing its employees to purposely violate a court opinion.

“I'm greatly disappointed that the Department of Corrections is going to seek to imprison people on a crime that the Kentucky Supreme Court says they can not do that on,” Kenton County public defender Mike Hummel said.

While unaware of any registrant being charged with violating the retroactive clause of the law since the Supreme Court ruling, Hummel said he intended to fight any charge. He has previously represented sex offenders who have had to move because of the stricter restrictions.

Trevor Killey, 43, is one sex offender who has moved back to his home since the Supreme Court ruling. He hasn't received any objections from law enforcement officials, he said. The Erlanger home is within 1,000 feet of a park.

“I'm not surprised by it,” he said in reference to what probation and parole officers have been told to do. “People have this thing against the average sex offender, regardless of what their crime may or may not be.”

While not on probation or parole, Killey was placed on the sex offender registry for 25 years after getting convicted of being a Peeping Tom 14 years ago in Michigan. He moved to Northern Kentucky in February for a job.

The residency restriction don't take into consideration the facts that Killey has never been accused of a sexually inappropriate act with a child, has custody of a teenage son and would not have even been placed on the registry had he been convicted of the equivalent charge in Kentucky.

While the state's original residency restrictions applied only to those on probation or parole, legislators rewrote it to apply to all registrants regardless of probation or parole status. In addition, it added playgrounds to the list of prohibited areas, and measured the distance from the property line as opposed to the wall of the building.

The strengthened rules became law on July 12, 2006, and were applied retroactively.

It is thought that hundreds of registrants across the state had to move before the Supreme Court overturned the retroactivity clause Oct. 1.

The Supreme Court was asked to review the constitutionality of the law after Kenton Circuit Judge Martin Sheehan, then a district judge, found that applying the law retroactively amounted to an ex post facto punishment, a punitive law after the fact. ..Source.. by Jim Hannah • The Cincinnati Equirer

Read More of Article...

CT- Rell announces updated sex offender registry

Sex offenders living close to one's home are not the ones to be concerned about, if any at all. The Minnesota DOC study of WHERE sex offenders recidivate WHEN they do, and found that EVERY SINGLE sex offender that recidivated, did so miles away from their homes. Therefore, what the Gov. trys to sell as improvements are useless to folks: Mapping of RSOs within 2 miles and e-mails when a RSO moves into your neighborhood.

10-29-2009 Connecticut:

Gov. M. Jodi Rell and state police unveiled upgrades to the state’s Sex Offender Registry Wednesday that they say will help parents and officers keep better track of sex offenders.

The enhanced system was designed to bring the state up to new requirements outlined in the federal Adam Walsh Act and will allow people to actually track the listed addresses of the more than 5,000 people on the registry.

“The Connecticut sex offender registry was a national model when it was first rolled out — and now we are taking it to a new level,” Rell said during a press conference announcing the enhancements Wednesday. “Our families must have every tool available to keep their children safe.”

The improvements include a “mapping” feature that allows state residents to look up any convicted offenders living within a two-mile radius of their home. The site also features tips for parents on how to keep children safe and how to have appropriate discussions with their children about interaction with adults.

Individuals, groups or organizations can also sign up to receive e-mail “alerts” on convicted sex offenders who have moved into their area. The previous Web site allowed residents and police to look up offenders by name or city and provided only the offender’s name, address and charges.

The new system will also provide a detailed description of the offense and the age of the victim for those who have been convicted after 2006 and will eventually allow law enforcement agencies and probation officers to trade information, said state police Lt. Samuel Izzarelli who works with the registry.

“It will allow law enforcement and probation to update the database to exchange or update information,” Izzarelli said. “Now we’ll be able to know the exact reason someone has gone into violation and why. The system will automatically print out reports that officers can verify. These upgrades should be done in the next 10 months.”

The registry is maintained by the state police. Every convicted offender is required to register and verify that their address listed on the Web site is correct. Those who do not maintain their listed address are considered in violation.

The new system will also allow the state Department of Corrections to file electronic registrations for those offenders who will be leaving prison and coming back into the community.

The public will not have access to law enforcement information but will have better access to finding out if someone has come into their area, he said. But Izzarelli was careful to point out during Wednesday’s press conference unveiling the changes that state police caution parents that the Web site is only one tool in keeping kids safe.

“The individuals on the Web site make up a small portion of the sex offenders in our communities,” Izzarelli said. “Sexual assault is an under-reported crime and the statistics show about 3 percent of offenders have been convicted. The Web site should be used as one tool, not a clearing house for who should interact with children. It’s a good place to start the education in a household on a topic that often isn’t discussed.”

Parents should regularly have sexual-safety discussions with their children and the talks should grow as their children grow, he said.

Residents can visit the updated registry at www.ct.gov/dps and click on the “sex offender registry” link on the left-hand tool bar.

How many are in your neighborhood?

A quick check of the registry reveals that there are 206 offenders in 164 locations in a two-mile radius of The New Britain Herald using the 1 Court Street, New Britain, address.

There are 59 offenders in 54 locations in a two-mile radius of the Bristol Press at 188 Main Street, Bristol, according to the registry.

Residents can visit the updated registry at www.ct.gov/dps and click on the “sex offender registry” link on the left-hand tool bar. ..Source.. by LISA BACKUS, staff writer

Read More of Article...

October 28, 2009

A NEW Blog by A Voice of Reason - Sex Offender: Holiday Restrictions

10-28-2009 National:

Effective this date we have opened a new blog to handle just News items and other reports dealing with "Restrictions of Sex Offenders" on Holidays.

Should anyone have any ideas on how to make this new blog better and more informative please contact eAdvocate by clicking on the RED BAR.

Now, please visit Sex Offender - Holiday Restrictions and enjoy, errr, or get upset by the restrictions placed on sex offenders and their families.

eAdvocate

Read More of Article...

Guardians of Their Smiles

10-28-2009 National:

FOR Jessica Gwozdz, a professional photographer and mother of two, Flickr was a blessing. It allowed her to share photos of her children, Grace and Henry, with distant, tech-averse relatives for whom a username and password would have been too great an obstacle. It even allowed potential clients to freely browse her gallery.

Then a friend sent her an e-mail message with the kind of subject line no parent cares to read: “Oh no — it’s Gracie.”

The message contained a link to Orkut, a social networking site popular in Brazil. Someone had created a fake profile, using headshots of Mrs. Gwozdz’s 4-year-old daughter.

“They gave her a fake name, Melodie Cuthbert, and a relationship status that said she was interested in making friends and dating men,” Mrs. Gwozdz recalled in a recent telephone interview. Other Orkut members had given the profile a “sexy” rating of two and a half hearts.

The discovery turned out to be little more than a gut-churning prank. According to a Flickr spokeswoman, young teenage girls in Brazil were copying children’s pictures from the photo-sharing site to create “paper doll” profiles, then giving each other “sexy” ratings depending on the quality of their work.

Mrs. Gwozdz contacted Flickr and Orkut, which deleted the profiles. And Mrs. Gwozdz has now taken advantage of Flickr’s privacy settings. But to this day she occasionally gets e-mail messages to her Flickr account from strangers saying things like “family very beautiful” and “I would ask you, let me use the photos of his daughter.”

Such is the stuff of parents’ nightmares in the social networking age, when Facebook is rapidly taking the place of the baby book. Young parents are flooding photo-sharing and social networking sites — Snapfish, Twitter, YouTube, even Match.com — with images of their children dancing, singing and bathing.

Not everyone is sure that all that sharing is such a good idea. Several groups on Facebook rail against people posting children’s photos. On Parenting.com, the editor, Susan Kane, says the debate “is constantly going on.” And on blogs, school listservs and at kitchen tables, the argument flares: should young children’s photos be shared online?

Just consider these recent postings on UrbanBaby.com and Momversation.com, two discussion sites for young mothers:

“You should not have any photos of your children on the Internet at all!”

“They’re 3 years old, it’s not that big a deal.”

“If you want to post pictures of my kids online, you’d better ask me first (so I can say no!)”

“Why were they naked?”

Like other parental debates — whether to spank or when to let children travel alone — the issue tends to divide parents into two familiar camps: the vigilant and the laissez-faire. Some parents want to protect their children from what is unlikely but still tragically possible. Others say children will do best when learning to live with the realities of the Web.

Squashed in the middle are parents who impose their own haphazard rules: Only post on password-protected sites. Leave out names. Yes to Flickr, no to YouTube. And for heaven’s sake, no bathtub photos.

Parents are grappling with what is safe, and what fears are irrational. As with most debates about child safety, the risks are not as severe as many imagine. But neither is posting photos online as safe as many assume.

Elizabeth Hunter, a blogger from Arlington, Mass., frequently posts pictures of her 2-year-old daughter on her site. To her, it’s a matter of living with the reality of the Web.

“Hundreds of kids die in swimming pools every year, but we don’t shut down all the pools,” she said. “We teach kids how to swim.”

“I don’t put up pictures of her completely naked or ones that show her genitalia, obviously, but I have shown pictures of her in the bathtub,” she added. “Sure, people can probably figure out where she is and stalk her, but child abductions from strangers are such strange occurrences, really.”

Rebecca Woolf, a Los Angeles-based writer, uses her children’s real names on her site, and shows their faces. But she said in an interview, “I wouldn’t even post a picture of my son from behind if he were naked.”

It’s not always easy to know what’s the right thing to do. “I feel conflicted about it,” she said. “People have said to me, ‘Oh, you’re exploiting your kids.’ But the medium is so new, none of us know what is going to happen.”

Other parents see a case of dangerously mixed messages: How can you teach a child not to share private information if you post a picture of him wearing his baseball uniform — with the town name — as your profile photo on Facebook?

“We tell our children all the time to be careful, don’t reveal your information, don’t give your name, don’t talk to strangers,” said Jodi Garrett, a registered nurse in San Diego, Calif., who does not post pictures of her two children. “To me, a picture posted on the Internet is a big piece of information. I cringe when I see what people post.”

And even strict parents can’t always keep out the rest of the world. Kathryn Murray, a mother from the Upper East Side who asked to use her middle name instead of her first to protect her family’s privacy, said she limits pictures of her son to Picasa, a site that allows for invitation-only access. But she recently had an awkward moment when a friend told her she had posted pictures of her son on Facebook. She was considering how to ask her politely to take it down, when her friend, sensing the tension, beat her to it.

“My facial expression was enough,” she recalled.

Fueling the anxiety of parents like Ms. Murray is a doomsday scenario: a predator finds pictures of a cute child on the Internet, figures out where the child lives or goes to school and snatches him.

“It’s probably not too difficult to go through those pictures and figure out we live on the Upper East Side,” Ms. Murray said. “And then it’s ‘Oh, I’ve been to that park,’ or ‘I know that street,’ What’s to stop a pedophile from putting two and two together?”

Her fears are misplaced, experts on online safety say.

“Research shows that there is virtually no risk of pedophiles coming to get kids because they found them online,” said Stephen Balkam, chief executive of the Family Online Safety Institute. While the debate makes this crime seem common, he said, all the talk is really just “techno-panic.”

Prof. David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire, says TV shows like the “Dateline NBC” program “To Catch a Predator” have falsely inflated the danger of the Internet.

“There is this characterization of pedophiles using the Internet as an L. L. Bean catalog, but this is not the way it happens,” he said. Predators are much more likely to look in chat rooms or other sites, he said, where teenagers are suggesting that they may be open to a sexual relationship.

The real danger is that a photo is appropriated and mistreated.

Gretchen White, a blogger from Westminster, Colo., discovered a young woman on MySpace passing off pictures of her baby as her own. “It turns out she had faked a pregnancy online and needed a baby to show for it,” Mrs. White said.

Suspicious friends of the young woman traced the photo back to Mrs. White’s blog and alerted her. “My initial reaction was, I’m never blogging again,” Mrs. White said, but decided instead to brand all her pictures with a watermark of her blog’s URL, an increasingly common tactic for mommy bloggers.

Rachel Sarah, author of the book “Single Mom Seeking,” recently came across a Web site for a group in California that used a picture of her and her daughter as an advertisement. They took it down at her request, but she said the experience was “unsettling.”

The possibility always exists that pedophiles are lifting such pictures, Professor Finkelhor says, but it is not something he has encountered. And, he said, it’s unlikely for a discomfiting reason: actual child pornography is so readily available that pedophiles aren’t likely to waste time cruising social networks looking for less explicit material.

Regardless of what danger may come to your children by posting pictures, there is one hazard whose existence no one can question: other parents. And their wrath could be enough to make anyone think twice before posting photos of little Charlie’s fourth birthday party.

Aaron Baar, a freelance writer from Chicago, posted a video last year of his son’s school holiday concert on YouTube, so his parents could see it.

“I put it up there and I forgot about it,” he said. But he had tagged the video with the name of the school, and one by one students started finding it.

Several months later he received an e-mail message from the mother of the child standing next to his son asking him to take it down. That parent also shared her e-mail message with the class’s other parents, touching off a small avalanche of disapproving posts on a local message board regarding Mr. Baar’s parenting skills.

“To this day I don’t feel comfortable bringing a camera to a school play,” he said. ..Source.. by DOUGLAS QUENQUA

Read More of Article...

CO- Police crush sex offender's car; warn of more

I wonder what they will CRUSH when a police officer -from headquarters- does the same as this fellow did?

10-28-2009 Colorado:

DENVER - Officials in the police department wanted to figure out the most eye-catching way to make a statement about pursuing sex offenders. They came up with the idea of a press conference, with the main event being the smashing of a 1998 Mitsubishi Eclipse.

"It would be important for us to actually make a public point here," Captain Judith Will said while standing in front of the car that was painted red with one white stripe going down the center.

That car used to belong to 37-year-old Balazs Toth. In June, he pleaded guilty to criminal attempt to commit sexual assault on a child. Police arrested Toth in December of 2008 after he tried to meet up with a 14-year-old girl with whom he'd been chatting online.

He drove his car to the parking lot of a fast food restaurant, planning to have sex with the girl.

The meeting was actually an undercover sting by Denver Police.

"Because of the severity and type of crime, we felt it would be more important to crush the car and make sure the car is never used in a criminal offense again," Detective John Brown, who handled the case as part of Denver's Public Nuisance Abatement Unit, said.

The unit filed civil charges against the car. It regularly files charges against inanimate objects.

The unit was created by an ordinance in 1994 and targets things described as: "Any parcel of real property, personal property, or motor vehicle on or in which any of the following illegal activity occurs, or which is used to commit, conduct, promote, facilitate, or aid the commission of or flight from any of the following activities."

Those activities include 22 offenses, which range from drug or weapons possession, to repeat traffic offenders and sex offenders. Anyone charged with those crimes could have their cars crushed or property seized, as part of the law.

Sometimes the seized property is a building or a business.

Not all cars are crushed as part of the ordinance. Some cars are returned to lien holders or owners if a settlement is reached. Some of the vehicles are auctioned off.

"From a standpoint, financially, for the city and county of Denver, it makes sense to try to sell these vehicles at auction and get those financial benefits to help the general fund," Will said.

The captain added that Toth's car was not one that the city wanted to auction off. Instead, officials chose to crush it.

"We want to get the message out there. We're not going to tolerate this, and we're going to come after you," she said.

Sex offenders were added to the nuisance abatement unit's list five years ago. Investigators think this is the first time that police have crushed a car belonging to a sex offender.

There could be more to come.

"We are going to take these kinds of actions in the future for this kind of criminal activity," Brown said.

Police say their ultimate mission is to help children.

"Many of us are parents," Division Chief David Fisher said. "All of us are concerned. And everyone in our community is concerned about the most vulnerable people in our society, our children."

Toth, a former Catholic school teacher, was sentenced to 90 days in jail and five years of probation. ..Source.. by Dan Boniface TaRhonda Thomas

Read More of Article...

After Somer Renee Thompson, Letting Our Kids Walk To School

A dose of reality which everyone should read. Hats off to this Columnist: Dave Smith

10-28-2009 National:

The word insane comes to mind when thinking of the situation in Florida with little Somer Renee Thompson, the other similar cases around the nation and the thousands of very similar cases which will come.

Anyone who has lived in these United States for the last 40 years has seen CHANGE sweep over this nation in such a huge way that our country is not even recognizable from what it once was.

There is a saying which goes something like this, "With freedom comes much responsibility". Americans have fall end down on the JOB in the responsibility area of maintaining sanity in our country.

To reflect upon our current situation. Our government is full of corrupt people. Our Judicial system is full of corrupt people. Our city officials in countless cities across the nation are being caught in corruption. There is sexual scandal in the churches, in the political offices, the courts, the police offices, in social services offices and in day care centers.

Our media pushes every kind of sexual immorality into the minds of not only our adults but also our children. One could even see advertisements on television using a sexually provocative man or woman to sell broccoli.

Sex and violence sells and that is what the media supplies. Supply and demand has always been the way of business in these united states. Due to the steady supply of sexually explicit material being broadcast and distributed on a daily basis for decades, we now are reaping what we have sown.

That media containing sex and violence coupled with sex offender laws which even Congressmen have admitted, "Once you are on the registry, your life is basically over", creates a scenario where people will kill their victims just to ensure they do not have a witness which can get them sentenced to a lifetime of registration on the sex offender registry.


Upon hearing the news of the little girl in Florida, killed and thrown into a trash bin. I can only think of one thing. Why on earth would anyone let a 7-yea-old girl walk a mile to or from school?

As a parent of two teenagers and a 2 year old, I would never allow my children to walk a mile to or from school. Not in these times we live in.

Just 30 years ago, you could go out into any neighborhood and see children everywhere, riding bikes, skateboarding, playin and having fun. Typically, and without fear, children would leave the home in the morning, say bye to mother and tell her they were riding their bikes to town....

Not today. You can walk or drive around any neighborhood today and you will not see very many children running around riding bicycles, skating or playing. They are all inside, watching television, playing Xbox 360s, play stations or Wiis.

There have been studies conducted on the effects of watching sex and violence on television day after day and the results are shocking and alarming to say the least. But you do not have to look to studies to see the results.

The largest industry in America is now the combined legislature, courts, police, sheriff and prison systems and all that those businesses support. Tied to these are countless businesses. Psychiatrists, psychologists who the court orders felons to pay to go see. Grocers and suppliers, contractors, lawyers and the list is too great for this article.

It would seem that everything it takes to completely and utterly destroy this nation from the roots up,(family), is being done on purpose.

Heaven forbid I should mention Jesus Christ and the fact that it is almost a swear word now to say, "God" in any government office or public school... that one sentence will probably ban this article from even being published.

No, the problem facing little girls like Somer is not all those sex offenders living in her vicinity. The problem is that this nation has sat by and watched and even participated in the destruction of any semblance of morality, decency, and restraint involving sex and violence for decades.

Saying we need to get TOUGH ON SEX OFFENDERS to cure the sickness which America suffers from is like telling a cancer patient to take this aspirin and a glass of water each day and all will be well.

To get to the heart of the matter, this nation needs to wake up and realize our minds have been infected with immorality.

Insane is it to think you can pump sex and violence into the minds of children and adults alike for decades. Twenty for hours a day, 7 days a week, day after day, year after year and then expect them to NOT act out on it.

You break down the family unit from a father, mother and children to one parent always working, the child home watching TV or being entertained by the pervert next door and what do you get.. just what we have now. Murder, rape and sex crimes on the rise.

But you know what. That will not happen. Everyone is so use to getting their daily fix of sex and violence from the media. Why do you think anyone is even reading about little Somer? It involves sex and violence. There you have it.

I feel great compassion for the family, friends and neighbors of this little girl.. but I tell you as sure as I am sitting here writing this... this country has not even come close to seeing what is to come. This practice will become more wide spread as our media takes us further into sexual depravity. ..Source.. by Dave Smith an independent columnist

Read More of Article...

TX- Mistakes on sex offender registry rare--but they happen

A reporter living in the dark ages, sees ONE when there are hundreds! Here are a few:

10-27-2009 Texas:

A man in Illinois recently talked about the problems created when he was mistakenly included on that state's sex offender registry for 40 days. Illinois authorities said they didn't know how often such mistakes happened.

Tela Mange, spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Public Safety reveals only one case of mistaken identity in the Lone Star state in the past 10 years. Last spring a 20 year-old woman in the Dallas-Fort Worth area was listed on the registry, despite never having committed a sex crime. According to television reports, the woman's birthdate, height and weight were included on the website, as well as a photo of her as a juvenile when she was arrested for trespassing.

"It was a coding error on our end," Mange said. "As soon as we were notified of the error we corrected it and implemented additional steps to insure that somethg like that would not happen again." ..Source.. by Diane Jennings/Reporter

Read More of Article...

October 27, 2009

FL- Report: 4 men arrested for armed robbery at Somer Thompson's home hours before body found

Links to further information in the original article. This is bizarre.

10-27-2009 Florida:

The Clay County Sheriff’s Office Daily Bulletin for Oct. 21, 2009, indicates that four men were arrested at the home of Somer Thompson for armed robbery on that date—just hours prior to the discovery of Somer's body.

Blink On Crime reports that one defendant—Montrail Howard—had a jaywalking infraction that turned into a citation on Oct. 20. The next day, he and three others were arrested at 1706 Horton Drive in Orange Park, Fla., where Somer’s family resides.

According to Blink On Crime, there is no information as to whether these arrests or the robbery has any relation to Somer’s kidnap and murder.

Somer, 7, went missing on Oct. 19 on her way home from school. Her body was found in the early morning hours of Oct. 22 in a Georgia landfill. ..Source.. by Cindy Adams

Read More of Article...

FL- Another Florida Tragedy

While I agree with most of what Dr. Dobbert says, one thing no one should be doing is, implying or pointing fingers at a sex offender as the cause of this horrible tragedy, AT THIS POINT, simply because there is no PUBLISHED evidence showing one is involved.

Implying that someone or a specific group is involved creates a dangerous public safety issue. AT this point law enforcement does not need another issue to deal with. Restraint with implications is needed right now, that protects public safety more than hysterical folks running around society and possibly causing problems.

NOTE: A commenter notes article's implication that death is caused by a "sexual predator." Please note that, the first mention of "sexual predator (see highlight)" merely says, they exist, not that one caused this death. The next time "predator" is used it says, "this predator (see highlight)" has been watching. There is no mention there that such predator is a sexual predator. At this point in time -in this case- Dr. Dobbert, who I believe is privy to evidence in this case, is being very careful with his words in order to "not reveal" any evidence that MAY EXIST. Everyone involved with this case seems to be very careful not to reveal any known evidence -YET- so they can build a case for court. Smart police work, my opinion.


10-27-2009 Florida:

It grieves me to tell you that we have lost another child in Florida. Seven-year-old Somer Thompson was last seen on the afternoon of Oct. 19, running ahead and away from the other children on their mile-long walk from school. Her body was found two days later north of the border in a Georgia landfill. The FDLE CART (Florida Department of Law Enforcement Child Abduction Response Team) for the region was involved, but as the terrible statistic haunts us, only 1 to 5 percent of stranger-abducted children live longer than 24 hours.

Despite the death of the child, I must compliment Clay County, Fla., Sheriff Rick Beseler for "asking for help." The FDLE CART and the FBI were involved and 155 registered sex offenders were interviewed immediately as is the solid CART protocol. Communities that have not implemented a CART, or whose law enforcement commanders are too arrogant to request assistance from other public safety professionals, endanger the children of their communities.

Training school bus drivers to assist by watching for suspicious persons loitering at schools and bus stops is a very successful proactive approach to protecting our children. However, the abduction and death of Somer dictates that communities cannot rely entirely on law enforcement and school districts to protect their children. Community activists, terrified of crime, form neighborhood watch programs. Unfortunately, too many communities are complacent, believing that a child abduction will never happen in their neighborhood.

It is time for society to pull their aggregate heads out of the sand and recognize the reality that child sexual predators do exist and they live in every neighborhood in the United States. Further, a child predator commonly preys upon children outside of their own neighborhoods. Let's not be surprised to find that this child murderer lives in another community, county, or perhaps even the bordering state of Georgia. In closing, I reiterate my pride in the law enforcement agencies that collaborated in this effort, rather than ignorantly not be willing to share the "collar," and invite a group of well-meaning, but untrained nonprofessional volunteers to assist in a criminal investigation.

Communities: Be Activists. Demand to know what is your law enforcement agency's protocol on child abduction and their willingness to ask for additional professional assistance. If a protocol doesn't exist, demand they develop one that meets community approval. If the command officer is unwilling to utilize additional professional assistance from other agencies and jurisdictions, REMOVE THEM FROM OFFICE!

The message is simple: don't watch your children, watch who is watching your children. Further, I am confident that this abduction was not opportunistic, this predator has been watching these children. ..Source.. by Dr. Duane L. Dobbert, Ph.D

Read More of Article...

OH- Glitch forces review of cases

10-27-2009 Ohio:

Victims are being notified that those who victimized them might be getting out.

Thousands of ex-offenders could be released from state supervision, and more than 200 current inmates might get out of Ohio prisons early because of a sentencing glitch.

Many of the affected current and former inmates committed felonies and some are sex offenders, an official said.

Ohio prisons director Terry Collins said that rulings in three related lawsuits handed down by the Ohio Supreme Court this year are forcing the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction to review more than 14,000 other cases.

The glitch affects only offenders sentenced after the state’s 1996 “truth-in-sentencing law” took effect.

“‘If the sentencing order didn’t say they had mandatory supervision and the number of years, the order was void,” Collins said.

The judges’ sentencing oversight was cited in three specific cases and expanded, by virtue of the Supreme Court rulings, to cover thousands of similar cases.

The ruling directly affects three groups: 14,816 former prisoners sentenced to “post-release control” (the post-1996 successor to parole); more than 208 inmates sent back to prison for violating post-release control rules; and an undetermined number of inmates currently in prison.

Collins said he didn’t know the number of cases affected, or how many have sentencing problems.

“My concern is that we may well have to take some people off supervision by the Ohio Adult Parole Authority,” he said. “We would no longer have the ability to supervise them from a legal perspective.”

Agency officials are in contact with common pleas judges statewide. A telephone hot line has been set up to help schedule re-sentencing hearings, by teleconference when possible.

In addition, the agency’s victim-services department is contacting crime victims and family members to inform them that offenders who they thought were under state supervision might not be supervised for much longer.

“I’m always concerned about the victims of crime,” Collins added. “Every time something happens with one of these cases, it opens up memories again.” ..Source.. by The Valley Homepage

Read More of Article...