Showing posts with label (.Halloween 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label (.Halloween 2015. Show all posts

October 30, 2015

How dangerous are sex offenders on Halloween?

Here we see the police demonizing a section of society, placing them at severe risk of harm which frequently happens on Halloween, and claiming they are doing this for public safety. Whose safety, only those the police chose to keep safe; thats not public safety! The registry is not supposed to be used to highlight (Harm) folks so listed as the police here are doing; this police practice is actually a registry violation!
10-30-15 Virginia:

State and federal probation agents plan to keep a close eye this Halloween on registered sex offenders - at least those still under their supervision.

Some sex offenders living in Chesapeake, Hampton and Newport News will have to attend special meetings during prime trick-or-treating hours. Under threat of jail, others must stay indoors with their front porch lights dark while local and state police conduct random visits.

Virginia Department of Corrections officials cast the initiative - now in its 15th year - as a way to protect children from possible sexual abuse. A spokeswoman for the U.S. probation office said it's meant to "reduce risk to the children of the community on Halloween night."

Advocates for reforming the nation's laws governing sex offenders, however, decry the special meetings and home visits as a waste of resources. They cite a 2009 academic study to claim there is no evidence children are more at risk of being molested by a stranger on Halloween than on any other night.

"This is fear-mongering, plain and simple," said Mary Davye Devoy, an advocate for reforming Virginia's Sex Offender Registry. "They are addressing a risk that doesn't exist."

The director of the Moore Center for the Prevention of Child Sexual Abuse at Johns Hopkins University agrees.

"They ignore the real dangers children face," said Elizabeth Letourneau, an associate professor with the university's Bloomberg School of Public Health.

The study often referenced by Devoy and other advocates was published in the September 2009 edition of "Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment."

Using FBI statistics, researchers examined 67,045 nonfamily sex crimes reported between 1997 and 2005 involving children under 13. Using a day-by-day comparison, they found no significant increase in the number of children sexually assaulted by a nonfamily member on or just prior to Halloween.

"Halloween was pretty typical when compared to other days," said Jill Levenson, an associate professor of social work at Barry University in Florida who helped write the study with Letourneau.

She said about 2 out of every 1,000 Halloween crimes involved a report of a nonfamily member sexually abusing a child.

Lisa Kinney, a spokeswoman for the Virginia Department of Corrections, did not respond to calls and emails regarding the study and Devoy's complaints. Karen Redmond, the spokeswoman for the U.S. probation office, declined to comment.

Sex offenders under state supervision who live in Chesapeake, Hampton and Newport News must attend the meetings, as must sex offenders under federal supervision who live anywhere in the region. Norfolk police plan to send two officers to assist with the federal meeting.

State-supervised sex offenders who live outside those three cities will have to stay home with their porch lights off.

The state and federal government place no special Halloween restrictions on sex offenders who are not under supervision.

Levenson, Letourneau and Devoy argued local and state resources could be better spent on Halloween by having police worry less about sex offenders and more about directing traffic or cruising for speeders.

Children 5 to 14 are four times more likely to be fatally hit by a car while walking on Halloween than on any other day of the year, according to a 1997 study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"The real risk children face is getting hit by a car," Letourneau said.

Devoy compared the "myth" of the sex offender lurking on Halloween to the "myth" of degenerates putting razor blades in candy.

"People want a bogey man," Devoy said. "They want someone to fear and hate and protect their children from, and what better person than a sex offender." ..Source.. by Scott Daugherty

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October 29, 2015

Sheriff posts warning signs

This is nothing more than further punishment by local police who are not mandated to do this! Folks who would like to start a legal action to stop this pratice please contact legal@floridaactioncommitee.org
10-29-15 Florida:

According to Nassau County Sheriff Bill Leeper, this is the first year NCSO will put up signs to warn trick-or-treaters to avoid the homes of registered sexual predators in Nassau County.

Leeper sent out a news release Monday showing him personally posting one of the signs. Leeper wrote in an email to the News-Leader that it was “suggested by a few residents within our county that law enforcement provide additional public notice of where these sexual predators live, especially with Halloween approaching.”

“By law, sexual predators are not to participate in any Halloween activities and are not allowed to have outside lights on or give out candy to children,” Leeper wrote in his release.

The warning signs were provided by the Nassau County Road & Bridge Department, Leeper said, at no cost to the Sheriff’s Office, and will be taken down after Halloween. Leeper said detectives at the Nassau County Sheriff’s Office conduct routine checks on the 12 sexual predators who currently reside in Nassau County, to make sure they are staying where they are registered to live, and that they follow all the laws that govern them.

“The Sheriff’s Office has an obligation by state law and county ordinance to notify the public when a sexual predator moves into Nassau County and the location where they live,” Leeper wrote in an email. “Residents are notified in the neighborhood and the sexual predator’s name, photo and address is also placed on the Sheriff’s Office website. ..Source.. by Angela Daughtry

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March 27, 2015

Pasco considers tighter sex offender restrictions

3-27-15 Florida:

WESLEY CHAPEL — An ordinance proposed by Pasco County Commissioner Mike Moore that would force sex offenders in the county to live 2,500 feet away from places where children typically congregate was briefly discussed during this week’s Board of County Commissioners meeting.

Under Florida law, those convicted of certain sex crimes against a child younger than 16 are not allowed to live within 1,000 feet of schools, day care centers, playgrounds or other places where children congregate.

Moore’s proposed ordinance would substantially expand the “buffer zone.”

Commissioners are expected to vote on the proposal during a public hearing at 1:30 p.m. April 21 at the West Pasco Government Center in New Port Richey.

Information on the proposed ordinance was provided to commissioners by Senior Assistant County Attorney Kristi Sims and Pasco sheriff’s Sgt. Zak Arey. The county attorney’s office and sheriff’s office have each recommended the ordinance be approved.

Similar measures were implemented in Miami-Dade County in 2010 and Lake County in 2012.

As of this week, 902 sex offenders are living in Pasco, including 101 sexual predators and six juvenile sexual offenders, according to the sheriff’s office.

At the sheriff’s office’s request, the proposed ordinance also regulates the conduct of sexual predators and sexual offenders on Halloween.

Under the proposal, registered sexual offenders would be prohibited from giving — or seeking to give — treats to children; the offenders must avoid all Halloween-related contact with children and leave all “outside residential lighting off after 5 p.m.” on Halloween.

Further, the proposal would prohibit registered sexual offenders from displaying Halloween-style decorations at their residences.


The proposed ordinance also would create a 300-foot “safety zone” when children are at schools and school bus stops, playgrounds, YMCA facilities, Boys & Girls Clubs, youth campgrounds, sports facilities and other areas.

Proposed expansions of the 1,000-foot law have been considered by several municipalities around the Tampa Bay area. Zephyrhills considered a 2,500-foot buffer in 2006 but decided against it, as did Tampa in 2008.

In 2010, the San Antonio City Commission adopted a 1,500-foot ordinance, practically making the entire small city off-limits to sex offenders. ..Source.. by GEOFF FOX

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