Showing posts with label Circles of Support. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Circles of Support. Show all posts

March 17, 2015

Rutland Volunteers Help Sex Offender Re-Enter Community

3-17-15 Vermont:

A restorative justice program is showing remarkable success in helping high-risk offenders re-enter the community after prison. The idea is to create a circle of support and accountability, or CoSA, to help former inmates avoid re-offending.

The concept originated in Canada in the 1990s and Vermont is one of a handful of states now using the program. Three Canadian studies have shown it to reduce recidivism among sex offenders by as much as 70 percent.

A team of CoSA volunteers in Rutland and the offender they’ve been helping spoke with VPR about the program and why they think it works.

Tall and 40-something, the man asked that we distort his voice and not include his name in the story. “I sexually offended minors. It started many, many years ago,” he said. “I was inside for eight years.”

The man doesn’t make excuses for what he did and he understands his crime makes people angry and fearful. Ironically, he said prison is where he finally got treatment, first with the state’s program for sexual abusers and later with CoSA. He was released from prison more than two years ago.

“I got out in October, 2012,” and it was overwhelming,” he said. “I have to admit I was actually quite scared at that time. I remember thinking what am I doing? I had learned to be comfortable where I was and I definitely felt safe where I was.”

When asked if he was worried he’d re-offend, he nods. “Yes, I was worried that I’d re-offend. I always knew that I was capable of re-offending if I didn’t manage my situations correctly. But,” he said, “I knew that if I used the tools that I had learned I could manage it and luckily the people that were around me, CoSA for sure, helped me to make sure I did utilize that and did not reoffend.”

The man’s CoSA team is made up of a probation officer from the Department of Corrections, a program facilitator and four volunteers. The group began meeting once a week in 2012, while the man was still in prison. Now after nearly two-and-a-half years, they meet every other Thursday for about an hour.

“It is labor intensive,” admits Leslie Briere. She’s a corrections program supervisor and CoSA team member who works with parolees in Rutland and Middlebury. “I don’t think anyone benefits from someone being incarcerated long-term,” said Briere. “But the fact is at some point most offenders are going to come back to the community. So anything we can do to build their skills and to give them some opportunities and resources to make them successful everyone is better for that,” adds Briere.

On this Thursday, volunteers take a few minutes to catch up with one another before program facilitator Shawn McMore brings the meeting to order. “So let’s check in with everyone since the last CoSA,” he says, “find out what’s been going on. Joan, how have things been going for you?”

The meetings provide offenders and team members with a chance to visit and talk over any problems or issues they’re having.

When offenders first get out of prison, many of their problems have to do with finding work and a place to live. But over time, the issues become more nuanced.

For instance, at this meeting, the released offender talks about how frustrated and angry he got the week before when a department of corrections official told him he couldn’t put a security camera on his home.

The group knows that he’s received threats from his neighbors, which is why he wanted the camera. Volunteer Sherri Durgin-Campbell acknowledges his fear but gently pushes for more. “So I have a question - did you reach out to anyone in CoSA?"

Like an alcoholic who seeks help from a mentor, offenders taking part in CoSA are encouraged to call members of their team when they get upset to ensure problems get talked through and dangerous or unhealthy habits get broken.

Sitting in a gray hoodie, the man admits he didn’t pick up the phone right away, but instead tried to work through his emotions on his own. “I tried to think it through, you know, what set me off, what made me angry?" he says. "And I was able to fall back on some of the things I learned in the program inside."

Shawn McMore, the program coordinator, likes what he hears. “I was impressed because of the fact that you’ve learned so much since you’ve come out. You didn’t blow up,” says McMore. “You knew what was happening you identified it and said look I can’t go any further, and you just cut it off there.”

Volunteer Sherri Durgin-Campbell reminds the man that while his reaction is normal, his situation is not. “You have conditions,” she points out. "That is a reality I think that we need to look at that because the longer you’re out the more normal you’re feeling. But you have something in your past that’s an aspect of you and you’re going to have to deal with it just like anybody with any other addiction has to deal with,” she says while the man nods.

Durgin-Campbell, says she’s proud of how far the man has come in the nearly three years she’s known him. But she says she didn’t join the program for him. “I didn’t join CoSA to be nice. My main reason for getting involved was I wanted to protect the community,” she says matter-of-factly.

Durgin-Campbell says one of her own children was incarcerated and she says that experience was an eye opener. “When someone comes out of a period of incarceration there are enormous challenges that I don’t think the public understands,” she says. “Because people don’t want to rent to you, they don’t want to give you a job and there are conditions placed on you that make it very difficult to make friends. So it’s a little bit for some of these folks like being released from the bars, but having invisible bars placed on them that puts them in solitary. And that,” she says, “is very dangerous to the community because that’s going to allow them to go back to the kinds of behaviors that they engaged in before.”

While the CoSA team provides direction, support and advice, team member Joan Eckley says they also help with more mundane issues like figuring out a budget and grocery shopping. “We drove him to and from his worksite, because initially when he first got the job he was stuck in a place that had no public transportation and he needed to get to the next town. So between his family and the CoSA volunteers we drove everywhere he needed to go,” says Eckley. “So it was very basic needs and fortunately he knew how to cook. A lot of people don’t know how to cook.”

The group also gets together socially says Leslie Briere, going out to dinner or to a movie. “It helps because a lot of offenders become isolated - particularly people who have sex offense.”

Sheri Durgin-Campbell nods. “Sometimes what somebody needs more than anything else is a friend.”

But while CoSA teams provide plenty of support they also stress accountability.

Offenders can be manipulative so volunteer Elizabeth Bellany says teams work together to avoid being conned or lied to. “In a CoSA there are no secrets,” she says. “So if the core member reaches out to one of the volunteers outside the CoSA meeting we must discuss this with everyone in the team. This is one way we can stop an offender from manipulating us or prevent them from becoming closer to one of the group and splitting the group.”

Not every offender leaving prison qualifies for CoSA. Rutland’s Program Coordinator Shawn McMore says men and women who want to take part have to want to change and not every offender does. This year, of the eight offenders referred for the Rutland program, McMore says only three were accepted.

And he says finding people in the community willing to take part is a challenge. “It’s not just anybody that comes through our door that’s going to be a volunteer.”

CoSA volunteers go through about six hours of specialized training, he says, in addition to getting ongoing support.

Yearly administration costs run about $12,500 per team. Shawn McMore says that’s a bargain compared to the roughly $50,000 the state spends to incarcerate someone for a year.

McMore says CoSA programs are being run in 12 locations across Vermont with 25 to 30 going on at any one time.

According to a 2013 study that assessed 21 completed CoSAs in Vermont, only one of the 21 participating offenders was charged with a new crime. Among Vermont offenders not taking part in the program, Shawn McMore says nearly half will violate conditions of their release or break the law again. “Other states are taking the CoSA model from what Vermont has done because they see it is worthwhile. But like I said, you have to vet the core member, that they want it. Then you have to have the right volunteers and make sure it’s a team,” he adds.

McMore believes the program not only protects communities, but helps keep offenders who want to change from ending up back in prison. The man at the center of this CoSA agrees.

“I can’t imagine what it would have been like had I got out originally and not had it,” the man says. “I definitely know that it’s surely helped me from re-offending and I think it would anybody else.”

The man has recently bought a house and admits his neighbors who know about his past, are not happy about it. “I understand the fear that comes with a person who’s committed a sex offense,” he says quietly. “I just want to be able to live my life.”

That will never be easy, he admits. The stigma of his crime will always follow him. But he says thanks to a group of strangers who he now calls friends, there are people he trusts who have his back. That’s a new experience to him, he says, and one he doesn’t want to lose. ..Source.. by VPR News

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April 12, 2013

Circles of Support reach out to Durham sex offenders

4-12-2013 North Carolina:

Even a convicted sex offender needs a friend.

That was the message at a recent community roundtable hosted by the Religious Coalition for a Nonviolent Durham.

Held every fourth Thursday at Shepherd’s House United Methodist Church at 107 N. Driver St, the lunches bring residents and community agencies together to discuss important social issues.

Last month’s speaker was Drew Doll, coordinator of Circles of Support and Accountability (CoSA), an organization that provides intense support and accountability to sex offenders after their release from prison.

The program is a partnership between the Religious Coalition and the Durham County Criminal Justice Resource Center.

It purpose is simple – “no more victims.”

Ignoring the problem, says CoSA, puts the community at greater risk.

Founded in Canada in 1994, the concept spread to the United Kingdom in 2002 and found its way to Durham County last year.

Depending on the study being viewed, as many as one in three girls and one in five boys experience some form of unwanted sexual conduct in life.

The N.C. Department of Justice’s website shows 262 registered sex offenders in Durham County. Regardless of sentences, over 90 percent of sex offenders eventually come home and, Doll said, the police “can’t do it all.”

‘Lepers at the gate’

Speaking to about 50 people, Doll said treating offenders like “lepers at the gates” feeds into the isolation and secrecy that eventually leads them to repeat offenses.

“GPS, probation and parole doesn’t tell all the answers,” he said. “Monitoring doesn’t tell you what they’re thinking or the people they’re associating with, but a relationship with this person will help you understand.”

In CoSA, offenders and supporters write an agreement. It may be as simple as the offender agreeing not to hurt anyone or refraining from crime or drugs. In turn, supporters agree to help offenders achieve the goal of no more victims.

Offenders receive daily contact from CoSA members, whether face-to-face or over the phone. The idea is that having an inner circle of volunteers and friends along with an outer circle of professional help, such as substance abuse counselors or help finding housing, will help offenders succeed in their goal.

CoSA follows other circular community models for re-entry such as the local Genesis Home for those returning from homelessness. Doll cited research showing that those high-risk offenders in these support circles are 70 percent less likely to re-offend.

The organization generally asks volunteers, who get 25 hours of training, to give a year to build trust and transparency with offenders but stresses that volunteers must be willing to be in relationships with people that did “bad things.” Most offenders in the circles are men but some women also take part.

“We don’t pretend to be able to fix everything,” Doll said. “But CoSA works because we form relationships.”

“The power of relationships to change lives is incalculable, especially when they have people that expect them to succeed,” he said.

Doing our part

The luncheon was attended by representatives of several churches and agencies including the Durham Crisis Response Center, which serves victims of domestic and/or sexual violence, and Durham Congregations in Action.

“It takes commitment and training to work with pedophiles in the community,” said the Rev. Spencer Bradford, executive director of DCIA and a member of the CoSA Steering Committee. “We want to do our part to prevent further victimization with these circles of safety.”

Community member Jharmick Meeks has attended several community roundtables and said they always deal with issues important to the community such as gun laws and the problems of charging young people who commit crimes as adults.

“You have to reach out to improve this community,” he said. “I’m here to see change. We can sit here and talk all day, but the problem is out there.”

With April being Sexual Assault Awareness Month, it is a sentiment echoed by Doll.

He recently spoke with a group about CoSA and a man came up to him and said he initially did not want to attend because he had had a family member who was raped and murdered by an offender.

Doll said, “He told me after the talk he wondered how it would have been if that offender had had a circle.” ..Source.. by Carlton Koonce, Correspondent

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September 15, 2012

Study: Program For Sex Offenders Is Reducing Crime

9-15-2012 Minnesota:

Sex offenders who are enrolled in a new mentoring program through the Department of Corrections are 84 percent less likely to return to prison, according to a new study.

Minnesota Circles of Support and Accountability started in 2008, working with level 2 sex offenders who have a moderate risk of re-offending.

Each offender about to be released from prison is matched with a group of four to seven volunteer mentors, in an effort to prevent new crimes. Volunteers in the program receive training and support from the Department of Corrections.

They work with offenders to help them find jobs, housing, treatment and other resources as they return to their communities.

The program relies on volunteers, which saves money for taxpayers, according to a press release.

Officials say every dollar that’s spent on the program is estimated to have a return savings of $1.82.

The study will be published in Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment. ..Source.. by CBS.com

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October 8, 2009

Sex-offender program in limbo

10-8-2009 Canada:

Minister’s office denies decision on funding made

OTTAWA-A national program that supports sex offenders after their release from prison is “in limbo” following conflicting reports about the status of a funding request made to the federal government, a co-ordinator says.

Circles of Support and Accountability (CoSA) is set up in 16 sites across the country and currently works with nine sex offenders in Ottawa.

Its co-ordinators had hoped federal funding of $7.5 million over five years would allow them to increase the number of offenders they work with and to conduct an evaluation of the program’s effectiveness.

On Sept. 22, co-ordinators and volunteers were stunned when an official with Public Safety Canada’s National Crime Prevention Centre told them the funding application was “dead,” said Andrew McWhinnie, CoSA’s national co-ordinator.

McWhinnie said National Crime Prevention Centre staff told them three times that the project “was done,” and a staff member also asked for the facility’s postal code in order to send a rejection letter.

McWhinnie believes the decision to deny funding came from Public Safety Minister Peter Van Loan’s office, but suggested that media coverage may have caused a review of the decision.

A spokesman for Van Loan said Wednesday that no decision was ever made and that the application remained under review.

“The minister finds it odd and was surprised to hear that the organization has been contacted,” Chris McCluskey said. “The minister hasn’t made any decisions regarding the organization’s request for funding.”

McCluskey could not say when the result would be issued. McWhinnie said he hoped to have a definitive answer by the end of the week.

“Right now, we’re in limbo. We’ve got thousands of hours into this proposal, encouraged at every step of the way to continue, and we’re all sort of sucker punched at this point,” he said.

McWhinnie said CoSA programs worked with about 150 offenders across the country each year and had hoped to increase that to as many as 300.

Each offender, called a “core member,” is paired with four or five volunteers who help with emotional support and day-to-day necessities such as housing and employment.

CoSA co-ordinators speculate that the request may have been initially denied for political reasons.

“We work with high-risk sex offenders,” McWhinnie said. “The government is engaged in a process now of toughening their legislation around sex offenders and around offenders generally. I don’t know whether it’s because this is a program that is on the one hand seen to support offenders … whether that worries them.

“On the other hand, we’re a program that holds offenders accountable and responsible for their actions, which is, we thought, exactly what the government wants to do,” he said, adding that the program starts after the criminal justice system was “essentially finished with these guys.”

McWhinnie said the program drastically reduced recidivism and had been replicated in Britain and the United States.

Susan Love, who co-ordinates the Ottawa CoSA, said about 30 offenders had participated in the program during the past eight years and none had committed further sexual offences.

“When you consider the reduction of victims and the community’s feeling of safety because they know that this safety measure, this program, is in place, you can’t really measure that,” she said.

Love said the Ottawa program operated on a shoestring budget, like others across the country, and received about $15,000 each year from Correctional Service of Canada to cover the co-ordinator’s salary, expenses and travel.

Should the program receive the requested funding, Love hopes to double the number of core members in five years and to hire a research assistant and bookkeeper.

“We’re just hoping that the minister will reconsider and see that this is not only cost-effective, but (also) an effective program that reduces victimization and also engages the community,” she said. ..Source.. by Neco Cockburn, The Ottawa citizen

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October 13, 2008

Just hating pedophiles won't keep children safe

10-13-2008 Canada:

Torches and pitchforks will not drive the monsters from our realm.

Neither prosecution nor protest will protect our children from pedophiles. Our common sense and humanity might. But on this issue, both are in short supply.

Pedophiles live among us, as we were so starkly reminded last weekend when two young girls were abducted and assaulted. And they will continue to live among us. Not just known offenders, who complete jail sentences and return to the community, like Danial Todd Gratton, the accused in last weekend's abductions.

New pedophiles are being created as we speak. Today's victim of sexual abuse can become tomorrow's abuser.

The gene pool, it seems, is also spawning new pedophiles. Research now indicates pedophilia, in some cases, behaves like its own sexual orientation, as vulgar as that might seem to the natural order of things.

Whatever the cause, experts say pedophiles don't choose their sexual desires any more than we do. Nor can we pick pedophiles out of a crowd. Yes, some are anti-social, slovenly and odd.

But I once knew a kindly St. Albert family man -- a former Citizen of the Year -- who was a success in his profession and pegged for a career in politics. Until he was charged with sexually abusing the family babysitters.

I was appalled at the time. Just as we all were by last weekend's abductions. Seducing or forcing children into sexual activity is a gross violation of the trust they place in adults, as their guardians.

But I've come to believe we fail that trust by blinkering ourselves with disgust and hatred. The time has come to dial down emotion and look to the community for pragmatic answers.

That's not to say the justice system has no role to play in a common-sense response. One answer is for the courts to use dangerous offender legislation more often against repeat, cold-hearted sex offenders. Yes, in some cases you throw away the key.

But what of the first-time offender? Or the teenager who recognizes his urges, is horrified by them, but has no place to turn? Or the man caught with child pornography, who may be just starting to explore his deviant sexuality?

The experts say there is no cure for pedophilia. But that is not to say it can't be treated.

The Phoenix Program at Alberta Hospital Edmonton has demonstrated success in reducing recidivism of sex offenders to below four per cent, compared to 25 per cent for those who receive no treatment.

But no system is perfect -- even old-school castration failed to prevent recidivism. Such is the baffling nature of the human sex drive.

The big problem with treatment is its availability, or lack thereof. Governments aren't exactly throwing money at research or treatment centres for sexual deviants. Sympathy for the devil wins you no votes.

Dr. Fred Berlin, one of the world's leading experts on pedophilia, believes demonizing pedophiles has made the world less safe. In a climate of hate, it's almost impossible to get pedophiles into early treatment, though the evidence is that many begin molesting at age 13.

Mental-health professionals in the U.S. and Canada are now legally required to report a client who has offended or is at risk to offend. Berlin says he once got regular calls from men who truly wanted be treated for their pedophilic urges. Once the law changed, and he was required to report possible predators, the phone stopped ringing.

Yes, our hate forces pedophiles underground, where they are hard to track. If driven from one community, they will slip quietly into another.

And a pedophile unable to connect even loosely with community -- get a job, a place to live -- is much more of a threat.

Pedophilia is likened to alcohol and called a craving disorder.

Like an alcoholic, an anxious, depressed or despondent pedophile is much more likely to act out on his cravings. Knowing that, the answer seems obvious. Why not create a support and accountability network like Alcoholics Anonymous for pedophiles?

Good idea. So good, in fact, that it's been around for years. A mostly unheralded and underfunded program known as COSA, or circles of support and accountability, began in Ontario in the mid-1990s.

Volunteers from the Mennonites and other faith communities were asked by a pioneering corrections official to serve on a committee, or circle, that offered not only a watchful eye over the pedophile, but a sense of connection to community.

Volunteers helped the offender find places to work and live. Daily contact and weekly meetings allowed for monitoring and for a place where the ex-convict could share his thoughts and feelings.

COSA not only spread across Canada, but to eight other countries that enthusiastically supported a program that reduced recidivism in hard-core offenders by at least 80 per cent. COSA now exists in every major city in Canada -- except Edmonton.

The Mustard Seed church in Edmonton's inner city used to operate circles for released pedophiles. But Kris Knutson, the church's corrections chaplain, says the church was simply unable to continue.

"It was just so resource-intensive, we had to make a call," he said. The call was to shut down the demanding circles and focus on other offender programs.

Knutson isn't happy with the situation. Edmonton, with its surrounding jails, becomes home for many released pedophiles.

"When these men are pushed underground and isolated from the community, they are at a much greater risk to re-offend," he says. "They hide and there's no one to keep them accountable."

Knutson said the biggest roadblock to maintaining COSA in Edmonton was finding volunteers. Stigma kept many from participating. And those who agreed to volunteer suffered from the stigma, too.

Many were denounced by friends and family as pedophile sympathizers. Some felt their jobs were at risk if they continued. Ultimately, COSA folded in Edmonton because of this community's climate of hatred.

It is a bitter irony. Pedophiles continue to live among us -- unseen and unsupervised, at greater risk of re-offending -- because we couldn't drive the monster out of ourselves. ..News Source.. by Scott McKeen

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June 19, 2008

UK- New model for dealing with sex offenders launches in UK

6-16-2008 United Kingdom:

A new charity is being launched in London tomorrow to pioneer an award-winning community response to sex offending, in the UK.

Circles UK aims to support the development and effectiveness of Circles of Support and Accountability, (Circles), which have halved rates of reoffending where they have been used abroad.

A 'Circle' consists of about 6 people from the local community, with the sex offender at the core.

This idea is not used as an alternative but in addition to whatever sentence is passed and the offender is still registered on the sex offenders register.

The Canadian model has proved to work with re-conviction rates halving, and those who re-offend committing less serious offences.

Amongst sex offenders there is often a high degree of emotional loneliness and isolation experienced just after they are released. These feelings are likely to make them re-offend. The Circle is designed to address this. It also gives the community a voice, providing accountability for the offender, and reassurance for the community.

The Home Office funded pilots in the UK, the two main ones being run by Quaker Peace and Social Witness and the Lucy Faithfull Foundation.

The launch conference for Circles UK, at Central Hall Westminster in London tomorrow, will bring together more than a hundred people with expertise in dealing with sex offenders, including some from prison, probation and police services; academics and agencies working to promote child safety or working with adults at risk of sexual offending.

Keynote speakers include Maria Eagle MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State, Ministry of Justice; Professor David Wilson, criminologist, writer and broadcaster; Tim Newell, former prison governor and worker for restorative justice; Dr Robin Wilson, forensic psychologist, Clinical Director, Florida Civil Commitment Centre; and Tim Richley, Criminal Justice Adviser, SACRO, Scotland.

Helen Drewery of Quaker Peace and Social Witness, said: “It was a little daunting for the Quakers in 1999 to pioneer this work in the UK. It was a big task for a small faith group. This work shows that the community can respond positively to the challenge of released sex offenders living in our communities.”

There are Quakers among the volunteers and Trustees, but Circles UK is now an independent charity. ..News Source..

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November 6, 2007

Providing a last chance for pedophiles

Circles Of Support; Monitoring, mentoring, cuts risk, group says
10-22-2007 Canada:

TORONTO - In the dank office of a downtown church, a page sealed in plastic and stuck on the wall reads: "Every human being is worth more than the worst thing they do."

It is a hopeful message that goes beyond mere platitude in this context. It is the driving philosophy and was the inspiration for Circles of Support, an organization that began in 1994 when notorious child molester Charlie Taylor was due to be released from prison into the Hamilton area.

The Circles of Support philosophy runs counter to everything society thinks about child molesters -- that they are repeat offenders, unable to be reformed, deviant -- to surround them with support rather than shun them. In fact, those who support the program see it as the most common-sense response to the problem.

Consider the Taylor case: With the community railing against having such a loathsome offender in its midst, and prison officials with no other option for someone who had served every day of his sentence, a Mennonite church accepted the infamous sex offender into their congregation, agreeing to meet with him regularly.

They called themselves Charlie's Angels, and until his death, acted much the way a family or friends would have -- had any of those remained when he was released.

When Taylor died in 2005, perhaps one of his only accomplishments was that, after prison, he lived for 11 years without committing a new sexual offence.

Dr. Robin Wilson, a clinical psychologist who has treated up to 7,000 sex offenders and is a long-time consultant with Circles of Support, applauds Taylor's reformation.

"That's pretty remarkable given that when he was released from prison the risk rating that he was given [by Canada's National Parole Board] was 100% chance of re-offending in seven years. He beat the odds by four years."

The group's research indicates that of the sexual offenders who have taken part in the program, there has been a 70% reduction in sexual offence recidivism.
In a survey of 24 offenders who sought and committed to the group's support, two-thirds said that alone they would have had difficulty with relationships and would have returned to crime.

Ninety per cent of the respondents said they would have had problems readjusting to the community.

When child molester Wray Budreo died last month, his funeral service was attended by about 35 people, all of them contacts made through Circles of Support. Convicted of 20 sex crimes between 1963 and 1988, he was one of the first offenders embraced by the program when he was released from prison in 1994, amid a public clamour that included noose-waving demonstrators and screaming headlines. He inspired the program to keep going because he never sexually reoffended.

"This is a very simple concept. All we have to do is think of ourselves. We do well in life because we have people who care about us," said Dr. Wilson, who now runs a Florida prison for violent sexual predators.

"If you're a long-term sex offender and everyone in the community hates your guts and nobody wants to look at you, never mind spend any time with you, who's there to point you in the right direction when you make bad decisions?"

The Circles of Support program, which has grown enough to become partly funded by the Correctional Service of Canada, relies on a relationship approach that surrounds an offender, or core member, with a circle of volunteers, and an outer circle of professionals.

It is the inner circle that drives the program, which is administered by a Mennonite group here in Toronto. They are ordinary citizens who, in the language of the organization, agree to walk with those cast out by society, meeting with offenders on a daily basis.

There are to be no secrets between the core member and the volunteers, and there are strict guidelines about confidentiality versus keeping secrets, and about empowering the offender versus creating a dependency.

"The one thing about offenders that has probably struck me the most is just how exactly similar they are to the rest of us; that there is no tattoo in the middle of their forehead; there is no glaring difference between them and us that we can readily see," said Dr. Wilson.

"That dirty old man with the long greasy hair and dirty fingers in the park with bags of candy and a trench coat -- he doesn't exist. Your average sex offender looks a lot like me; your average sex offender looks a lot like [the Prime Minister;] your average sex offender looks a lot like the next parent of a victim.

An understanding of child molesters goes a considerable distance to helping the problem be contained, he said.

"If we hide our heads in the sand and try and legislate them into non-existence, we're fooling ourselves ... They're part of our community, and the only way that we're going to get our heads around this is if we treat [the problem] as if it's a community issue."

BACK STORY:

Circles of Support and Accountability (COSA) are intended to assist sexual offenders released at the end of their sentence. Their risk of re-offending is considered so great that they cannot be safely supervised in the community. Many are high-profile cases with no social support. - Offenders must sign a "covenant" to live offence-free and notify COSA immediately if they have difficulty doing so. The non-legally binding document allows volunteers to receive confidential information from therapists and other professionals. - COSA members are primarily faith-based community volunteers who "walk daily in friendship" with offenders also help them with everything from basic banking, using public transit and doing laundry to getting counselling and applying for dental care and car insurance. - After an initial series of meetings in the community, volunteers are encouraged to have the offender over to their home, but only if the entire group decides that the visits do not pose a risk to the core member and to the community. - If notes are subpoenaed for a court appearance, volunteers are encouraged to "record only defensible facts and avoid opinion when writing notes." - COSA will break confidentiality with an offender -- a key reason for its success -- if a child is at risk or a law or a condition on a court order has been violated or is about to be violated. - COSA members are advised never to contact victims. Instead, offenders who wish to do so are to be "strongly encouraged" and re-directed to the accredited Victim Offender Reconciliation Program. ..more.. Source: Correctional Service Canada, Zosia Bielski, National Post. krook@nationalpost.com

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May 30, 2007

Managing Unacceptable Risk: Sex Offenders, Community Response, and Social Policy in the United States and Canada

Abstract:
This article compares the community protection–risk management model for the control of sex offenders with the clinical and justice models that preceded it and with a restorative justice alternative based on the principle of community reintegration. The author discusses how this community protection–risk management model reflects the new penology as well as the fusion of panopticism and synopticism. The author also discusses the model’s actual and potential social costs. He concludes with a brief look at circles of support and accountability. This Canadian approach involves setting up support circles of volunteers who enter into a covenant with persons designated as high-risk sex offenders to help them both to integrate into the community and to reduce the likelihood that they will reoffend. ..more.. by Michael G. Petrunik, Criminology Department, University of Ottawa, Canada

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