Original Article
05/15/2013
Some address information for offenders not specific
CONCORD - Convicted sex offenders are required to keep police informed of their whereabouts, but when sex offenders are homeless, police often need to take extra steps to keep track of them.
- Our question would be, why are they homeless in the first place? Is it because of the online registry and residency laws perhaps? We suspect that is the reason. So if you want to eliminate the problem, repeal the online registry and residency laws.
[name withheld] is a convicted sex offender who's required by law to verify his address at least twice a year. On the registry, his address is listed simply as a blue and white tent.
"If they're homeless, if they're living in a certain area, we ask them to put where they're living," said Detective Lt. Timothy O'Malley. "If they live in a vicinity near a railroad track on the south end in a tent, then we would put that on the form."
But [name withheld]'s information didn't contain any specific area. Scanning the list, News 9 found several similar situations. In Concord, sex offenders were listed as living in a blue and black tent, in a van and in a car.
In Manchester, the east side and downtown parks were listed as addresses, but they didn't contain any more specific descriptions. That's a concern for victims.
"When it comes to sex offenders, one of the things from a victim's perspective is knowing where they are, and it makes it much more likely that the victims are able to go on with their lives, knowing that somebody is monitoring that," said Jill Rockey of the Crisis Center of Central New Hampshire.
The city of Concord has a designated detective who keeps track of offenders.
"The detective generates a list of offenders, a random list, every week, and patrol officers will go out and verify the addresses of the offenders, and that way, it's a proactive measure to make sure the offenders are living where they say they are living," O'Malley said.
Police said that through that process, they know where the homeless offenders are staying. If they fail to register, a warrant is issued that also shows up on the registry.
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Showing posts with label Homeless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homeless. Show all posts
Friday, May 17, 2013
Thursday, May 9, 2013
CA - Restrictive Residency Rules and the Illusion of Public Safety
Labels: California , Clustering , DayCare , Homeless , Housing , Park , Playground , Residency , UnderBridge
Original Article
05/05/2013
By Patti Giggans
There are risks of increasing restrictive residency rules for sex offenders while reducing their access to resources, and monitoring.
The latest strategy to restrict where convicted sex offenders live is to create parks where none exist to force registered sex offenders to move out of a neighborhood. The City of Los Angeles plans to build three pocket parks in the communities of Harbor Gateway and Wilmington. California state law prohibits sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a park, playground school or a daycare center. Some states restrict living within 1,000 feet or near certain bus stops. There are similar residence restrictive laws in every state along with sex offender databases and community notification of where offenders live, known as Megan’s Laws. The unintended result of super-restrictive sex offender zoning makes it impossible for sex offenders to find stable housing and forces them to cluster and crowd together in motels and apartment buildings, or sometimes under bridges creating homelessness, often away from family or other potentially positive supports. There is concern that these over-restrictive policies can backfire and actually increase recidivism.
Located in southern Los Angeles, Harbor Gateway, a community of about 40,000 people, has one of the city’s highest concentrations of registered sex offenders: 86 registered offenders live in a 13-block area. The park will be created in a space the equivalent of a backyard on a grassy corner large enough to fit a jungle gym and a couple of benches. The park is being explicitly created to restrict offenders from congregating in the area not necessarily to create green space for kids to play. No one can fault the community for its concern for safety especially of its children or blame its civic leadership for wanting to do something about it. Restrictive living and working rules keep multiplying with the goal of public safety. But do these living restrictions improve public safety or exacerbate the potential for re-offending? As there are fewer and fewer places for offenders to live and work they will continue to resort to clustering or worse: go underground. Creating housing instability can limit employment opportunities and access to social services and social support. Visibility, surveillance, accountability, treatment and support are some of the protective factors that can help an offender stay on the path of non-offending and reduce recidivism.
Convicted sex offenders and registrants are all painted with the same brush of pariah and monster, so it is very challenging for communities to think beyond the criminal justice lens to include public health approaches. But might we be risking being blinded by the illusion of safety when we don’t explore the complexity and the diversity of these offenders and call for research on what really works best. There is little room for political leadership to ask these important questions. Forcing offenders to go missing or go underground by promoting overly restrictive residence and employment restrictions may very well be one of those illusions of public safety that can backfire and create more risk and increase recidivism.
Patti Giggans is the Executive Director of Peace Over Violence. Peace Over Violence is dedicated to building healthy relationships, families and communities free from sexual, domestic and interpersonal violence. She is also the Vice-President of the Board of Directors for 1in6.
05/05/2013
By Patti Giggans
There are risks of increasing restrictive residency rules for sex offenders while reducing their access to resources, and monitoring.
The latest strategy to restrict where convicted sex offenders live is to create parks where none exist to force registered sex offenders to move out of a neighborhood. The City of Los Angeles plans to build three pocket parks in the communities of Harbor Gateway and Wilmington. California state law prohibits sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a park, playground school or a daycare center. Some states restrict living within 1,000 feet or near certain bus stops. There are similar residence restrictive laws in every state along with sex offender databases and community notification of where offenders live, known as Megan’s Laws. The unintended result of super-restrictive sex offender zoning makes it impossible for sex offenders to find stable housing and forces them to cluster and crowd together in motels and apartment buildings, or sometimes under bridges creating homelessness, often away from family or other potentially positive supports. There is concern that these over-restrictive policies can backfire and actually increase recidivism.
Located in southern Los Angeles, Harbor Gateway, a community of about 40,000 people, has one of the city’s highest concentrations of registered sex offenders: 86 registered offenders live in a 13-block area. The park will be created in a space the equivalent of a backyard on a grassy corner large enough to fit a jungle gym and a couple of benches. The park is being explicitly created to restrict offenders from congregating in the area not necessarily to create green space for kids to play. No one can fault the community for its concern for safety especially of its children or blame its civic leadership for wanting to do something about it. Restrictive living and working rules keep multiplying with the goal of public safety. But do these living restrictions improve public safety or exacerbate the potential for re-offending? As there are fewer and fewer places for offenders to live and work they will continue to resort to clustering or worse: go underground. Creating housing instability can limit employment opportunities and access to social services and social support. Visibility, surveillance, accountability, treatment and support are some of the protective factors that can help an offender stay on the path of non-offending and reduce recidivism.
Convicted sex offenders and registrants are all painted with the same brush of pariah and monster, so it is very challenging for communities to think beyond the criminal justice lens to include public health approaches. But might we be risking being blinded by the illusion of safety when we don’t explore the complexity and the diversity of these offenders and call for research on what really works best. There is little room for political leadership to ask these important questions. Forcing offenders to go missing or go underground by promoting overly restrictive residence and employment restrictions may very well be one of those illusions of public safety that can backfire and create more risk and increase recidivism.
Patti Giggans is the Executive Director of Peace Over Violence. Peace Over Violence is dedicated to building healthy relationships, families and communities free from sexual, domestic and interpersonal violence. She is also the Vice-President of the Board of Directors for 1in6.
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
NY - Guest view: A solution to the homeless sex offender issue
Original Article
Spoken like a true man of God!
05/08/2013
By J. BARRETT LEE
To my fellow Christians in Oneida County: There has been much ado in the headlines about the county’s temporary housing of sex offenders in Utica motels. Private citizens and elected officials alike are raising the voice of protest against this practice. I’ve repeatedly heard complaints about the county using Utica as a “dumping ground” for sex offenders.
The implication behind these statements is that such people amount to human garbage. I find this implication to be spiritually and morally troubling because of what it says about us as a community.
As a survivor of sexual assault, I can testify to the dehumanizing effect that such a violent act has on a person’s sense of self. The perpetrators of such acts necessarily objectify their victims and treat them like garbage, tossing them aside when there is no longer any use for them. I know firsthand what that feels like.
When we as a society compare our sex offenders to garbage, we do the same thing to them that they did to us. In doing so, we stoop to their level and perpetuate the cycle of violence.
American society at large endorses such violence because no one is said to be more despicable than a sex offender. We seem to have made it OK to dehumanize and hate these people because of what they have done to others. We use them as scapegoats and a “dumping ground” for our own rage, frustration, and self-hatred. Again, we do to them what they did to us. We become what we judge.
With this housing crisis, I believe God is presenting us with an opportunity to rise above revenge and break the cycle of dehumanizing violence. We have a chance to stand in solidarity with Jesus, who ate with tax collectors and sinners, the scapegoats and “sex offenders” of his day and age.
Christ’s commitment to a deep theology of grace empowered him to accept the “bad guys” and separate sinner from sin.
There are communities around the continent who have committed themselves to Christ’s path of radical hospitality. I’m thinking primarily of churches like Welcome Inn, a Mennonite church in Hamilton, Ontario. Their church has chosen to welcome sex offenders and surround them with circles of acceptance and accountability. They become a second family for program participants. They meet regularly with released offenders and nurture them into reintegration and active participation in community life. This way, sex offenders are simultaneously cared for and checked up on by people who care enough to love like Jesus.
Is there any reason why churches in the Mohawk Valley could not start similar programs? I can’t think of one.
All I can think of is what Jesus told his followers in Matthew 25:40: “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.”
Be blessed and be a blessing,
J. Barrett Lee is the pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Boonville and a participant in St. James Mission, a progressive, ecumenical, spiritual community in Utica. He also teaches philosophy at Utica College.
Spoken like a true man of God!
05/08/2013
By J. BARRETT LEE
To my fellow Christians in Oneida County: There has been much ado in the headlines about the county’s temporary housing of sex offenders in Utica motels. Private citizens and elected officials alike are raising the voice of protest against this practice. I’ve repeatedly heard complaints about the county using Utica as a “dumping ground” for sex offenders.
The implication behind these statements is that such people amount to human garbage. I find this implication to be spiritually and morally troubling because of what it says about us as a community.
As a survivor of sexual assault, I can testify to the dehumanizing effect that such a violent act has on a person’s sense of self. The perpetrators of such acts necessarily objectify their victims and treat them like garbage, tossing them aside when there is no longer any use for them. I know firsthand what that feels like.
When we as a society compare our sex offenders to garbage, we do the same thing to them that they did to us. In doing so, we stoop to their level and perpetuate the cycle of violence.
American society at large endorses such violence because no one is said to be more despicable than a sex offender. We seem to have made it OK to dehumanize and hate these people because of what they have done to others. We use them as scapegoats and a “dumping ground” for our own rage, frustration, and self-hatred. Again, we do to them what they did to us. We become what we judge.
With this housing crisis, I believe God is presenting us with an opportunity to rise above revenge and break the cycle of dehumanizing violence. We have a chance to stand in solidarity with Jesus, who ate with tax collectors and sinners, the scapegoats and “sex offenders” of his day and age.Christ’s commitment to a deep theology of grace empowered him to accept the “bad guys” and separate sinner from sin.
There are communities around the continent who have committed themselves to Christ’s path of radical hospitality. I’m thinking primarily of churches like Welcome Inn, a Mennonite church in Hamilton, Ontario. Their church has chosen to welcome sex offenders and surround them with circles of acceptance and accountability. They become a second family for program participants. They meet regularly with released offenders and nurture them into reintegration and active participation in community life. This way, sex offenders are simultaneously cared for and checked up on by people who care enough to love like Jesus.
Is there any reason why churches in the Mohawk Valley could not start similar programs? I can’t think of one.
All I can think of is what Jesus told his followers in Matthew 25:40: “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.”
Be blessed and be a blessing,
J. Barrett Lee is the pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Boonville and a participant in St. James Mission, a progressive, ecumenical, spiritual community in Utica. He also teaches philosophy at Utica College.
NY - Counties struggle with homeless sex offenders
Labels: DayCare , Homeless , Housing , MassHysteria , NewYork , Park , Playground , Residency , School
Original Article
05/05/2013
By ELIZABETH COOPER
UTICA - Since state and local laws about where they can live were tightened around a decade ago, sex offenders have become more likely to end up homeless.
That’s caused problems for counties across the state, because they are required by law to find housing for anyone who needs shelter within their borders.
Different counties have cobbled together different strategies to deal with the thorny issue, but officials and homeless advocates from several counties said there is no easy answer.
- There are easy answers! It's just something they don't want to hear. Eliminate the residency restrictions and stop letting mass hysteria define laws.
“I don’t know what the solution is,” said Greta Guarton of the advocacy group Long Island Coalition for the Homeless. “We, of course, think everyone needs a place to live, but certainly understand the community’s concerns.”
The issue came to a head in Oneida County in February, after an Observer-Dispatch report found that at least eight Level 2 and Level 3 sex offenders had been housed at three North Utica motels in a two-week period. Amid public outcry, two of the motels announced they would stop taking homeless individuals referred by the county, and County Executive Anthony Picente has said he is looking for other options.
“We have to find a solution given the lay of the land here, in terms of the shelters, the neighborhoods and the community,” he said. “It’s an ongoing process and discussion.”
Sex offenders have been required to register with officials where they live since the mid-1990s. The federal government and states across the nation adopted so-called Megan’s Laws after the 1994 murder of Megan Kanka, a New Jersey child who was killed by a released sex offender living near her home.
- Why do we continue to punish everyone with similar crimes due to one bad apple? Are we going to start doing the same for all other crimes? One person commits a crime with a gun and all gun owners are punished? Oh wait, they are already working on that one!
In subsequent years, states and many communities adopted laws regulating where sex offenders are allowed to live. In Oneida County, a 2007 law prohibits sex offenders from living within 1,500 feet of a school, child care facility, playground or park.
Counties in New York must find housing for any individual, regardless of their criminal history, if they come to the Department of Social Services and say they are homeless.
05/05/2013
By ELIZABETH COOPER
UTICA - Since state and local laws about where they can live were tightened around a decade ago, sex offenders have become more likely to end up homeless.
That’s caused problems for counties across the state, because they are required by law to find housing for anyone who needs shelter within their borders.
Different counties have cobbled together different strategies to deal with the thorny issue, but officials and homeless advocates from several counties said there is no easy answer.
- There are easy answers! It's just something they don't want to hear. Eliminate the residency restrictions and stop letting mass hysteria define laws.
“I don’t know what the solution is,” said Greta Guarton of the advocacy group Long Island Coalition for the Homeless. “We, of course, think everyone needs a place to live, but certainly understand the community’s concerns.”
The issue came to a head in Oneida County in February, after an Observer-Dispatch report found that at least eight Level 2 and Level 3 sex offenders had been housed at three North Utica motels in a two-week period. Amid public outcry, two of the motels announced they would stop taking homeless individuals referred by the county, and County Executive Anthony Picente has said he is looking for other options.
“We have to find a solution given the lay of the land here, in terms of the shelters, the neighborhoods and the community,” he said. “It’s an ongoing process and discussion.”
Sex offenders have been required to register with officials where they live since the mid-1990s. The federal government and states across the nation adopted so-called Megan’s Laws after the 1994 murder of Megan Kanka, a New Jersey child who was killed by a released sex offender living near her home.
- Why do we continue to punish everyone with similar crimes due to one bad apple? Are we going to start doing the same for all other crimes? One person commits a crime with a gun and all gun owners are punished? Oh wait, they are already working on that one!
In subsequent years, states and many communities adopted laws regulating where sex offenders are allowed to live. In Oneida County, a 2007 law prohibits sex offenders from living within 1,500 feet of a school, child care facility, playground or park.
Counties in New York must find housing for any individual, regardless of their criminal history, if they come to the Department of Social Services and say they are homeless.
Friday, April 26, 2013
CA - Many sex offenders end up on the streets
Original Article
04/25/2013
By Keli Moore
Close to two weeks after [name withheld], a sexually violent predator, was released from prison as a transient into Santa Barbara County, numerous questions have surfaced surrounding safety issues at homeless services.
There are screening processes to stay at overnight shelters in San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara Counties, but anyone can go to Prado Day Center in San Luis Obispo to get a hot meal.
"If you apply for a place to live you have to tell them that you're a registered sex offender. It makes it really difficult," said a local man who wants to remain anonymous. He has been out of prison for almost two years and since then, the streets of San Luis Obispo have been his home.
"We can get help through the county health as far as just getting some medical help and stuff like that, but as far as food, shelter, clothing, you have to pretty much find it on your own," he said.
What he doesn't realize is there are some options.
"During the lunch time at Prado for the People's Kitchen, they are allowed to just get in the lunch line, eat their plate of food, and leave the facility with no questions asked," said Dee Torres, who is the homeless services coordinator for CAPSLO.
According to the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office, there are 470 registered sex offenders in the county and 52 of them are transients. This raises concern for families with kids who use local homeless services.
"There's a six to eight page intake form that we complete with each individual and some other basic questions that we ask right when they come through the door," said Torres.
But the screening process is not fool proof.
"There have been a few cases where we have found out after the fact that somebody wasn't registered on the database and they didn't disclose," said Torres.
Although there are screening processes in place, a kid could still be exposed to a sex offender.
Transients who are registered sex offenders are required by law to check in with the closest law enforcement agency every 30 days, and if they are still on parole, they are required to wear a GPS device.
04/25/2013
By Keli Moore
Close to two weeks after [name withheld], a sexually violent predator, was released from prison as a transient into Santa Barbara County, numerous questions have surfaced surrounding safety issues at homeless services.
There are screening processes to stay at overnight shelters in San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara Counties, but anyone can go to Prado Day Center in San Luis Obispo to get a hot meal.
"If you apply for a place to live you have to tell them that you're a registered sex offender. It makes it really difficult," said a local man who wants to remain anonymous. He has been out of prison for almost two years and since then, the streets of San Luis Obispo have been his home.
"We can get help through the county health as far as just getting some medical help and stuff like that, but as far as food, shelter, clothing, you have to pretty much find it on your own," he said.
What he doesn't realize is there are some options.
"During the lunch time at Prado for the People's Kitchen, they are allowed to just get in the lunch line, eat their plate of food, and leave the facility with no questions asked," said Dee Torres, who is the homeless services coordinator for CAPSLO.
According to the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office, there are 470 registered sex offenders in the county and 52 of them are transients. This raises concern for families with kids who use local homeless services.
"There's a six to eight page intake form that we complete with each individual and some other basic questions that we ask right when they come through the door," said Torres.
But the screening process is not fool proof.
"There have been a few cases where we have found out after the fact that somebody wasn't registered on the database and they didn't disclose," said Torres.
Although there are screening processes in place, a kid could still be exposed to a sex offender.
Transients who are registered sex offenders are required by law to check in with the closest law enforcement agency every 30 days, and if they are still on parole, they are required to wear a GPS device.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
FL - Video Essay - A Sex Offender Haven in Rural Florida (2009)
Labels: Florida , Homeless , Housing , UnderBridge , Video
Or the Julia Tuttle Causeway bridge, where probation and parole were telling offenders to go live, and at one time, had over 100 ex-offenders forced to live under a bridge.
Video Description:
09/25/2009 - Sex offenders often live at the fringes of society. Scores of laws restrict them from living near where children gather. The result in many cases is a cluster, like at Miracle Park in Florida, where some 35 sex offenders live.
Video Description:
09/25/2009 - Sex offenders often live at the fringes of society. Scores of laws restrict them from living near where children gather. The result in many cases is a cluster, like at Miracle Park in Florida, where some 35 sex offenders live.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
NY - County searches for options for homeless sex offenders
Original Article
You want options? Really? If so, then examine the facts! The facts that the online registry prevents many from getting jobs, and employment, therefore they become homeless. Take the registry offline and eliminate the residency restrictions, which have been proven to not work, and most of the problem will have been solved.
04/24/2013
UTICA - Oneida County is searching for possible alternatives to housing homeless convicted sex offenders and violent felons in local motels.
“We are dealing with what’s in front of us,” said County Executive Anthony Picente. “That is a homeless population that has mixed within it ex-offenders that run the gamut of what the offense was, as well as people who have just run into a streak of bad luck.”
The issue arose after the O-D reported that within a two-week period in February, eight Level 2 or Level 3 sex offenders had been placed by the county Social Services Department in motels on Genesee Street in North Utica.
By law, counties are required to find housing for anyone who requests the assistance. If a homeless person is an active addict, a convicted sex offender or has a violent felony conviction, however, the local shelters won’t take them.
One possible alternative, Picente said, is having an outside agency operate a shelter.
- Even if you do this, there will always be people complaining about ex-sex offenders in their back yards.
“We are looking at all options to try and alleviate the situation,” he said. “But there may not be a perfect option out there that can satisfy everyone.”
- You will never please everyone!
Picente said homeless sex offenders are a particularly difficult group to find housing for because of local laws that prevent them from living near schools and certain other locations.
- Exactly, so take the registry offline and eliminate the residency laws, then most of the problem goes a way.
County Attorney Greg Amoroso said hotels and motels are on the list of locations where the state allows counties to place homeless individuals. The temporary housing also must be close to the services they need to get back on their feet, under the law, Amoroso said.
In March, an average of 23 homeless people per day was housed in area motels or hotels and 67 in shelters. Whether any of those individuals had criminal or addiction issues could not determined.
Sometimes, people who do not have those issues also are placed in the motels because of lack of available space in the shelters, county Social Services Commissioner Lucille Soldato said.
County Legislator Emil Paparella represents North Utica and was shocked to find that sex offenders were being housed in motels in his district.
- Why does it shock them? Or are they just pretending to be ignorant of this?
He said his son and grandchildren have stayed in those motels because of their low prices, but they won’t be doing it again unless things change.
He’s afraid others will do the same.
“Right now, we are trying to build Utica up,” Paparella said. “If we start getting a reputation that we are accepting homeless sex offenders, it’s not going to look good for the city.”
In Oneida County, the only shelters that take men are the Rescue Missions in Utica and Rome. Officials there did not return calls for comment.
County Social Services staff is barred by law from asking specific questions about a homeless person’s criminal record because it is not legally relevant to eligibility for county services, including housing. The staff can list the criteria set out by the shelters and ask the individual if they meet them, but the individual may opt not to specify which of the criteria the fail to meet.
- So basically, if you are an ex-felon, they cannot ask about your background, but if you are on the sex offender registry, sorry, we cannot help?
The shelters also ask such questions and might do blood tests to determine if a person is using drugs, she said.
Patricia Witt, executive director of Emmaus House, a shelter for homeless women and children, said her screening process is designed to protect the people her organization serves.
“Our funders and supporters created these shelters for specific purposes,” Witt said, "listing domestic violence, addiction recovery or specific groups such as women.”
You want options? Really? If so, then examine the facts! The facts that the online registry prevents many from getting jobs, and employment, therefore they become homeless. Take the registry offline and eliminate the residency restrictions, which have been proven to not work, and most of the problem will have been solved.
04/24/2013
UTICA - Oneida County is searching for possible alternatives to housing homeless convicted sex offenders and violent felons in local motels.
“We are dealing with what’s in front of us,” said County Executive Anthony Picente. “That is a homeless population that has mixed within it ex-offenders that run the gamut of what the offense was, as well as people who have just run into a streak of bad luck.”
The issue arose after the O-D reported that within a two-week period in February, eight Level 2 or Level 3 sex offenders had been placed by the county Social Services Department in motels on Genesee Street in North Utica.
By law, counties are required to find housing for anyone who requests the assistance. If a homeless person is an active addict, a convicted sex offender or has a violent felony conviction, however, the local shelters won’t take them.
One possible alternative, Picente said, is having an outside agency operate a shelter.
- Even if you do this, there will always be people complaining about ex-sex offenders in their back yards.
“We are looking at all options to try and alleviate the situation,” he said. “But there may not be a perfect option out there that can satisfy everyone.”
- You will never please everyone!
Picente said homeless sex offenders are a particularly difficult group to find housing for because of local laws that prevent them from living near schools and certain other locations.
- Exactly, so take the registry offline and eliminate the residency laws, then most of the problem goes a way.
County Attorney Greg Amoroso said hotels and motels are on the list of locations where the state allows counties to place homeless individuals. The temporary housing also must be close to the services they need to get back on their feet, under the law, Amoroso said.
The problem
Like the shelters, motels can refuse certain occupants, but places such as Scottish Inn, Happy Journey and Super 8 motels along North Genesee Street have accepted sex offenders in need of housing, county officials said. Under the law, the motels are not told the specific backgrounds, of the individuals they are housing.In March, an average of 23 homeless people per day was housed in area motels or hotels and 67 in shelters. Whether any of those individuals had criminal or addiction issues could not determined.
Sometimes, people who do not have those issues also are placed in the motels because of lack of available space in the shelters, county Social Services Commissioner Lucille Soldato said.
County Legislator Emil Paparella represents North Utica and was shocked to find that sex offenders were being housed in motels in his district.
- Why does it shock them? Or are they just pretending to be ignorant of this?
He said his son and grandchildren have stayed in those motels because of their low prices, but they won’t be doing it again unless things change.
He’s afraid others will do the same.
“Right now, we are trying to build Utica up,” Paparella said. “If we start getting a reputation that we are accepting homeless sex offenders, it’s not going to look good for the city.”
Shelters crowded
Shelters cost the county between $30 and $35 per day for adults, while the motels cost about $50 a day. About $255,000 was spent by the county on such placements in 2012.In Oneida County, the only shelters that take men are the Rescue Missions in Utica and Rome. Officials there did not return calls for comment.
County Social Services staff is barred by law from asking specific questions about a homeless person’s criminal record because it is not legally relevant to eligibility for county services, including housing. The staff can list the criteria set out by the shelters and ask the individual if they meet them, but the individual may opt not to specify which of the criteria the fail to meet.
- So basically, if you are an ex-felon, they cannot ask about your background, but if you are on the sex offender registry, sorry, we cannot help?
The shelters also ask such questions and might do blood tests to determine if a person is using drugs, she said.
Patricia Witt, executive director of Emmaus House, a shelter for homeless women and children, said her screening process is designed to protect the people her organization serves.
“Our funders and supporters created these shelters for specific purposes,” Witt said, "listing domestic violence, addiction recovery or specific groups such as women.”
Friday, April 12, 2013
CA - Seeking smarter rules for sex offenders
Labels: California , CrimeVigilante , Halloween , Homeless , Housing , JaniceBellucci , OffTheRegistry , Park , Residency , RomeoAndJuliet , School , TierLevels
![]() |
| Janice Bellucci |
04/11/2013
By Gale Holland
Janice Bellucci of Reform Sex Offender Laws believes offenders should go to prison. But after they get out, she wants them to have a chance to lead stable lives.
Janice Bellucci is a mother of two, the wife of a pastor and a former Girl Scout leader active in volunteer work.
She lives in a gated community an hour's drive north of Santa Barbara, with needlepoint pillows on the sofa and a vegetable garden in the backyard. She is also the public face of an organization advocating for the closest thing to an untouchable caste in our society: California's 88,000 registered sex offenders.
A former aerospace lawyer, Bellucci is the president of the California chapter of Reform Sex Offender Laws, a national group of offenders, family members, psychologists and attorneys registered as a nonprofit.
The California branch holds meetings every other month, closed to the media, to discuss offenders' rights and legal actions she is taking. Bellucci believes sex offenders should go to prison for their crimes. Her target is the crazy quilt of state and local laws regulating their conduct after they get out.
These laws bar offenders from moving near parks and schools, leaving them with comparatively few places to live. Almost all of San Francisco, and most of San Diego, is off-limits, she says. Some ordinances forbid offenders to even visit county parks and beaches.
Bellucci also wants to give some sex offenders a way off the registry. California is one of four states where sex offenders register for life, regardless of the seriousness of their crimes.
Bellucci has brought a professional sheen to the sex offenders' fight, writing talking-point memos, testifying before agencies and taking cities to court. And she's had some success: After she sued, a court stopped Simi Valley from requiring sex offenders to post signs on their front doors warning trick-or-treaters away on Halloween.
She casts her cause as a civil rights movement. During a conversation at her home, Bellucci referred to those on the list as "registrants" rather than sex offenders, and she quoted Gandhi and the Constitution.
"People don't like to hear me say it, but it's like how the Jews were treated in Nazi Germany," she said. "First they were told they were different, then they ended up in concentration camps."
No doubt this preposterous characterization is objectionable. Sex offenders are shunned for their conduct, not their status. And their conduct is often unspeakable.
But even a state advisory board acknowledges that post-release restrictions on sex offenders have gone too far. In an August 2011 report, the California Sex Offender Management Board said that one-third of the state's registered sex offenders are homeless, partly because of the housing limits.
There is no evidence that residence limits make children safer, the report said. "To the contrary, the evidence strongly suggests that residence restrictions are likely to have the unintended effect of increasing the likelihood of sexual re-offense," the report went on.
A particularly boneheaded example of overkill is the pocket park in Harbor Gateway. The park is being built not to serve families but to drive registered sex offenders out of a nearby apartment building, my colleague Angel Jennings reported.
I have no doubt Harbor Gateway needs a park. But what kind of a society builds parks not for children, but to chase sex offenders away?
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Peter Espinoza put the issue on hold in March by ordering officials to stop enforcing restrictions on how close sex offenders can live to parks or schools. Bellucci argues the limits are unconstitutional, and Espinoza, in an earlier ruling, agreed.
Bellucci, 61, doesn't have a sex offender in the family, although she currently represents some in civil challenges. She came to the cause by chance. The man who installed her water purifier wrote a book about his years on the registry. She read it and was aghast.
The man, [name withheld], had molested a child more than 30 years earlier, when he was a raging alcoholic, Bellucci said. [name withheld] went on to build a business and become a civic activist. He was physically attacked by a vigilante who found his name and address on the registry, she said.
His case helped convince her that lifetime registration was wrong. Bellucci has stories about Everymen who wind up on the registry: the "Romeo and Juliet" cases of two teens, one underage, in a sexual relationship; the guy who urinates behind a bar or moons a crowd. Nobody seems to know how many fit this category.
Assemblyman Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) has proposed a three-tiered registry that would enable lower-level offenders with otherwise clean records to get off in 10 to 20 years. Bellucci is lobbying for its passage.
"Sex offenders come from all walks of life," she said. "Some grew up in the ghetto, some grew up in Beverly Hills. They're like everybody else."
Really? I don't think so. Some undoubtedly made mistakes, but others are hardened offenders whom law enforcement would do well to track and monitor.
Just this week, [name withheld], 58, a registered sex offender, was arrested on suspicion of the home-invasion killing of an elderly San Bernardino woman. [name withheld]' previous conviction was for sodomizing a child under age 14.
I don't see the purpose of the public registry. For this story, I went on the Megan's Law website for the first time and found several sex offenders in my neighborhood. It made my skin crawl, but is it useful to know exactly where they are or what they did? I am well aware sex offenders are in our midst, and I don't need the details to protect myself and my children.
Bellucci is convinced sex offenders can be rehabilitated. She cited a study of 2008 data by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation showing than of those who returned to prison, about 2% had committed another sex offense. Banishing them from normal society makes them more likely to repeat their crimes, she believes.
"We all do so much better when we have stability," Bellucci said. "It's ridiculous all the challenges that get thrown in front of sex offenders."
But we've all heard of the priests, Boy Scout leaders and teachers who molested multiple children before finally getting caught. The state corrections department acknowledges it can say with only 75% accuracy who is likely to commit a sex offense again, although it hopes to increase the odds with better assessments.
Bellucci is undeterred.
"The people I'm focused on already paid their debt to society," she said. "All I want for them is peace."
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Overcoming housing barriers for sex offenders
Original Article
04/02/2013
By Robert Carter
Sex offenders remain some of the most difficult to place in the labor market
Release into the community from a correctional setting is a daily struggle, even when you have only been incarcerated for a short period. Many of the responsibilities and basic needs that were met while in the community are often much harder to gain back with a criminal background.
Policies regarding employment and housing of ex-convicts vary from state to state. There are varying perceptions in the philosophy of continued punishment, or allowing for those barriers to be overcome.
In addressing the constant and growing problem of the parolee population in terms of employment and housing, sex offenders remain some of the most difficult to place in the labor market. Finding appropriate and suitable housing in terms of their parole stipulations and landlord’s willingness to rent to current and prior felons remain some of the key issues.
Typically, private landlords and transitional housing programs can alleviate the pressure on sex offenders in finding more stable housing. Also, working with parole agents who supervise these sex offenders can help establish an acceptable or felony-friendly housing list, which should be maintained by the parole agent, the landlords, or the non-profit organizations who provide the housing services.
Addressing parole stipulations is also important in understanding what barriers exist in sex offenders search for suitable housing. Typically, sex offenders are required to register at their local police and/or sheriff’s department quarterly and to register any new addresses, cars, places of employment, email addresses, and phone numbers.
This population also can only reside within a certain amount of feet from a school or playground. What I have seen is a sex offender must not reside with 1,000 – 2,000 feet of any school or playground.
Parole agents are the ones responsible for the housing placement of sex offenders and if proper housing is not located, they must remain in jail as is it against the law for them not to have an address. Homeless shelters now have been the main focus in the media due to varying concerns that sex offenders are staying their temporarily.
- This is not the case for many states and keeping them in jail beyond their sentence is wrong! Just because politicians pass insane laws that make it almost impossible for an ex-sex offender to find a place to live or work, doesn't mean you can just keep them locked up, or it should mean that.
Some of these homeless shelters are within the 1,000 – 2,000 foot range of schools and parks set forth by most parole conditions amongst the sex offender population, however some judges have managed to set forth precedence allowing them to stay at the shelters.
A final issue with the residing within a school zone or park rule is that some schools or parks may even be closed, thus creating a need for exceptions to the rule to be made. If schools and parks are closed and there is no activity in the area from minors or families, why should this prevent them from residing within that area?
Non-profit organizations, parole agents, private landlords, and church organizations are examples of community members that can help alleviate the pressures of those entering the community seeking stable and affordable housing.
Prisoner Re-entry programs in general need to address this concern regarding sex offenders as this will become a growing problem, especially since most of them will be released in the near future after serving a long sentence.
04/02/2013
By Robert Carter
Sex offenders remain some of the most difficult to place in the labor market
Release into the community from a correctional setting is a daily struggle, even when you have only been incarcerated for a short period. Many of the responsibilities and basic needs that were met while in the community are often much harder to gain back with a criminal background.
Policies regarding employment and housing of ex-convicts vary from state to state. There are varying perceptions in the philosophy of continued punishment, or allowing for those barriers to be overcome.
In addressing the constant and growing problem of the parolee population in terms of employment and housing, sex offenders remain some of the most difficult to place in the labor market. Finding appropriate and suitable housing in terms of their parole stipulations and landlord’s willingness to rent to current and prior felons remain some of the key issues.
Meeting parole requirements and other issues
Sex offenders often have additional parole stipulations, which make it even more difficult for them to find stable housing. Even if stable housing is found, it’s most likely found in a dangerous or crime-infested neighborhood, decreasing their chances for success in the community. Housing for sex offenders should be utilized through Prisoner Re-entry programs; the community as a whole needs to work with these organizations.Typically, private landlords and transitional housing programs can alleviate the pressure on sex offenders in finding more stable housing. Also, working with parole agents who supervise these sex offenders can help establish an acceptable or felony-friendly housing list, which should be maintained by the parole agent, the landlords, or the non-profit organizations who provide the housing services.
Addressing parole stipulations is also important in understanding what barriers exist in sex offenders search for suitable housing. Typically, sex offenders are required to register at their local police and/or sheriff’s department quarterly and to register any new addresses, cars, places of employment, email addresses, and phone numbers.
This population also can only reside within a certain amount of feet from a school or playground. What I have seen is a sex offender must not reside with 1,000 – 2,000 feet of any school or playground.
Parole agents are the ones responsible for the housing placement of sex offenders and if proper housing is not located, they must remain in jail as is it against the law for them not to have an address. Homeless shelters now have been the main focus in the media due to varying concerns that sex offenders are staying their temporarily.
- This is not the case for many states and keeping them in jail beyond their sentence is wrong! Just because politicians pass insane laws that make it almost impossible for an ex-sex offender to find a place to live or work, doesn't mean you can just keep them locked up, or it should mean that.
Some of these homeless shelters are within the 1,000 – 2,000 foot range of schools and parks set forth by most parole conditions amongst the sex offender population, however some judges have managed to set forth precedence allowing them to stay at the shelters.
A final issue with the residing within a school zone or park rule is that some schools or parks may even be closed, thus creating a need for exceptions to the rule to be made. If schools and parks are closed and there is no activity in the area from minors or families, why should this prevent them from residing within that area?
Working together to find solutions
It’s apparent after reading this article that the community as a whole needs to work together to provide housing resources to sex offenders re-entering the community.Non-profit organizations, parole agents, private landlords, and church organizations are examples of community members that can help alleviate the pressures of those entering the community seeking stable and affordable housing.
Prisoner Re-entry programs in general need to address this concern regarding sex offenders as this will become a growing problem, especially since most of them will be released in the near future after serving a long sentence.
Friday, March 29, 2013
OK - Clause and Effect: Norman Helps Sex Offenders by Not Making Them Move
Labels: DayCare , Homeless , JuliaTuttle , Oklahoma , Residency , School , UnderBridge , Video
Original Article
03/28/2013
By KATE CARLTON
For victims, life after a sexual assault is often filled with shame, fear and frustrating legal battles. For perpetrators, life after conviction is complicated, especially after they finish serving time in prison. According to Oklahoma’s Sex Offenders Registration Act (PDF), those convicted of a sexual felony cannot live within a 2,000-foot radius of a school. And, as straightforward as that sounds, it might be significantly easier said than done.
“Well, we've got schools everywhere, plus the University of Oklahoma and that counts too,” said Norman Police Department Captain John Easley. “What you see is the law says, ‘You cannot live there.’ but that’s a little hazy area in the enforcement and prosecution of these folks. And what it’s come down to is somebody has described it as the grandfather clause.”
This “grandfather clause” is a caveat added to the law (57 O.S. § 590 - PDF) and a general understanding between law enforcement officials that makes it possible for sex offenders to remain inside that prohibited radius if they’re convicted while living there.
“In other words, if you offend in Norman, if you’re convicted in Norman (of a sex offense that requires registration) and you have property here in town, you don’t have to sell and leave that property," explained Easley. "You can just register and stay with that property. Now if you sell the property, or dispose of it in some way, then you are stuck with the situation where now the rule kicks in on you because the grandfather clause no longer operates.”
The City of Norman lists 83 registered sex offenders within its limits. And there’s a common assumption that at least some of those were men who were simply caught urinating in public. But Captain Easley explains that this is not the case. He said that if someone really is just urinating in public, they’ll usually only be charged with a misdemeanor, which would not require registration as a sex offender.
“[If] it’s done with malicious intent or prurient interest in mind…that’s where the state law kicks in,” Easley said.
The state law he refers to is the Sex Offender Registration Act. And while that’s generally not controversial, the “grandfather clause” is.
- It's called an ex post facto law and is a part of the states Constitution, so punishing people after the fact is an unconstitutional law, not a caveat.
However, according to Captain Easley, there are two main reasons why Norman allows for this exemption. First, the state of Oklahoma is reluctant to take property from property owners. And second, there are 24 schools that are part of the Norman Public School District, not including the private schools and day care centers that also count in the law’s enforcement. So it can be difficult to find land where offenders can live while following the original law, unless that land is out by Lake Thunderbird.
University of Oklahoma Assistant Professor of Sociology Meredith Worthen teaches a course on sexual deviance. She says that while this may sound alarming, she sees the grandfather clause as a more practical way to deal with sex offenders.
“Whenever we think of a sex offender,” said Worthen. “We think of an offender that offends against children. Even though there’s lots of types of sex offenders, that’s the first image that comes to our mind. And what do we want to do? Protect the children. Of course.”
Not all sex offenders are pedophiles. Some are charged with statutory rape, incest, or sexual battery. Put simply, many sex offenders are not direct threats to children, and Worthen says this clause may be more beneficial to towns than it is harmful.
“In the state of Florida, there’s kind of this area under a bridge where all of these sex offenders live because there’s nowhere in the county where they’re allowed to live based on their restrictions. And that is highly problematic because it creates this group of mostly men living without any sort of access to anything that we would think of as a safe space.”
Worthen cites the example of Miami, where there is no exemption from residency restrictions for sex offenders. Due to overlapping city and state laws, these men have been relegated to living in a tent city beside the Julia Tuttle Causeway, with no sanitation and tight restrictions on when they can leave.
“They sit around and they talk about how mad they are and how this is a bad situation.” said Worthen. “So, those guys are not considering how they want to be good men, how they want to rejoin the population and, you know, do pro-social things because they’re living under a bridge because their city said “too bad.”
In this clip from ABC News, a man living under that bridge in Florida, [name withheld], reflects on his living situation.
"I done went to prison and did all this time. Why am I still here? Why am I still being punished? All I want is my life back. I deserve a second chance at life,” [name withheld] said.
Worthen says that by permitting the offenders to remain in their homes after serving time, it encourages assimilation rather than recidivism.
“Allowing for kind of thinking about things differently can move away from creating these kinds of hubs of spaces where criminals live in,” said Worthen.
03/28/2013
By KATE CARLTON
For victims, life after a sexual assault is often filled with shame, fear and frustrating legal battles. For perpetrators, life after conviction is complicated, especially after they finish serving time in prison. According to Oklahoma’s Sex Offenders Registration Act (PDF), those convicted of a sexual felony cannot live within a 2,000-foot radius of a school. And, as straightforward as that sounds, it might be significantly easier said than done.
“Well, we've got schools everywhere, plus the University of Oklahoma and that counts too,” said Norman Police Department Captain John Easley. “What you see is the law says, ‘You cannot live there.’ but that’s a little hazy area in the enforcement and prosecution of these folks. And what it’s come down to is somebody has described it as the grandfather clause.”
This “grandfather clause” is a caveat added to the law (57 O.S. § 590 - PDF) and a general understanding between law enforcement officials that makes it possible for sex offenders to remain inside that prohibited radius if they’re convicted while living there.
“In other words, if you offend in Norman, if you’re convicted in Norman (of a sex offense that requires registration) and you have property here in town, you don’t have to sell and leave that property," explained Easley. "You can just register and stay with that property. Now if you sell the property, or dispose of it in some way, then you are stuck with the situation where now the rule kicks in on you because the grandfather clause no longer operates.”
The City of Norman lists 83 registered sex offenders within its limits. And there’s a common assumption that at least some of those were men who were simply caught urinating in public. But Captain Easley explains that this is not the case. He said that if someone really is just urinating in public, they’ll usually only be charged with a misdemeanor, which would not require registration as a sex offender.
“[If] it’s done with malicious intent or prurient interest in mind…that’s where the state law kicks in,” Easley said.
The state law he refers to is the Sex Offender Registration Act. And while that’s generally not controversial, the “grandfather clause” is.
- It's called an ex post facto law and is a part of the states Constitution, so punishing people after the fact is an unconstitutional law, not a caveat.
However, according to Captain Easley, there are two main reasons why Norman allows for this exemption. First, the state of Oklahoma is reluctant to take property from property owners. And second, there are 24 schools that are part of the Norman Public School District, not including the private schools and day care centers that also count in the law’s enforcement. So it can be difficult to find land where offenders can live while following the original law, unless that land is out by Lake Thunderbird.
University of Oklahoma Assistant Professor of Sociology Meredith Worthen teaches a course on sexual deviance. She says that while this may sound alarming, she sees the grandfather clause as a more practical way to deal with sex offenders.
“Whenever we think of a sex offender,” said Worthen. “We think of an offender that offends against children. Even though there’s lots of types of sex offenders, that’s the first image that comes to our mind. And what do we want to do? Protect the children. Of course.”
Not all sex offenders are pedophiles. Some are charged with statutory rape, incest, or sexual battery. Put simply, many sex offenders are not direct threats to children, and Worthen says this clause may be more beneficial to towns than it is harmful.
“In the state of Florida, there’s kind of this area under a bridge where all of these sex offenders live because there’s nowhere in the county where they’re allowed to live based on their restrictions. And that is highly problematic because it creates this group of mostly men living without any sort of access to anything that we would think of as a safe space.”
Worthen cites the example of Miami, where there is no exemption from residency restrictions for sex offenders. Due to overlapping city and state laws, these men have been relegated to living in a tent city beside the Julia Tuttle Causeway, with no sanitation and tight restrictions on when they can leave.
“They sit around and they talk about how mad they are and how this is a bad situation.” said Worthen. “So, those guys are not considering how they want to be good men, how they want to rejoin the population and, you know, do pro-social things because they’re living under a bridge because their city said “too bad.”
In this clip from ABC News, a man living under that bridge in Florida, [name withheld], reflects on his living situation.
"I done went to prison and did all this time. Why am I still here? Why am I still being punished? All I want is my life back. I deserve a second chance at life,” [name withheld] said.
Worthen says that by permitting the offenders to remain in their homes after serving time, it encourages assimilation rather than recidivism.
“Allowing for kind of thinking about things differently can move away from creating these kinds of hubs of spaces where criminals live in,” said Worthen.
Saturday, March 23, 2013
FL - Task force: Sex offender restrictions pointless
Original Article
03/22/2013
By Ben Wolford
WEST PALM BEACH - Harsh local restrictions on where sex offenders can live should be lifted, the Palm Beach County public defender said.
And prosecutors and law enforcement agreed.
Their consensus is a turn in the way safety officials think about regulating the movements of the most restricted class of ex-convicts. Dozens of sex offenders are homeless in Palm Beach County, sleeping outside on benches or under foliage, because living nowhere is easier than living somewhere.
Meanwhile, more than 100 sex offenders populate a remote cluster of duplexes, surrounded by sugar cane, two miles outside Pahokee. Known as Miracle Village, it is perhaps the most welcoming community for sex offenders in South Florida.
- Let's not forget the Julia Tuttle Causeway (YouTube) where at one time, over 100 ex-offenders were FORCED and TOLD to live.
"Any laws about public safety should be grounded in evidence-based policies, not by hysteria and misinformation," said Gail Colletta, president of the Florida Action Committee, which lobbies for restrictions that are based on the risk posed by each offender.
Colletta is also a member of a task force expected to recommend new residency restrictions to the county government. The Sex Offender Re-Entry Task Force, which includes lawyers, deputies, parole officers and elected officials, met Friday and heard from residents of Miracle Village.
"We took one of the worst parts of Pahokee and turned it into one of the safest parts of Pahokee," said Pat Powers, director of Matthew 25 Ministries, the Christian group that oversees Miracle Village.
Of the 909 registered sex offenders in Palm Beach County, 62 of them are homeless.
They report to their probation officers daily, and deputies with the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office say they are easier to watch.
"They have to tell us where they're going to be at," said Rosalyn Baker, of the Department of Corrections. "The corner of this, the corner of that."
The state law on sex offender residency says they cannot live within 1,000 feet of a school, day care center, park or playground. Palm Beach County further restricts them, pushing the zone to 2,500 feet. Some cities and villages flesh out the remaining patchwork of ordinances.
But residency means dwelling; it's where the offender sleeps between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. Some of them, Baker said, could live near a school all day then leave at night.
Ultimately, the task force seems to agree, none of this is relevant. The residency restrictions offer merely a "semblance of protection," they argue.
"These residency restrictions have not been shown to be effective in reducing recidivism," Public Defender Carey Haughwout said.
The rate of recidivism among sex offenders nationally, studies show, is between 5 percent and 10 percent over a decade. One study in Minnesota determined that residency restrictions would not have prevented any of the 224 sex offenses researchers examined.
Although county law enforcement officials agree residency restrictions should be repealed, they insisted on the dangerousness of sex offenders. Five percent recidivism is still 5 percent, they said.
"We're talking about kids who have been raped and killed," Sheriff's Office Detective Kevin Umphrey said.
03/22/2013
By Ben Wolford
WEST PALM BEACH - Harsh local restrictions on where sex offenders can live should be lifted, the Palm Beach County public defender said.
And prosecutors and law enforcement agreed.
Their consensus is a turn in the way safety officials think about regulating the movements of the most restricted class of ex-convicts. Dozens of sex offenders are homeless in Palm Beach County, sleeping outside on benches or under foliage, because living nowhere is easier than living somewhere.
Meanwhile, more than 100 sex offenders populate a remote cluster of duplexes, surrounded by sugar cane, two miles outside Pahokee. Known as Miracle Village, it is perhaps the most welcoming community for sex offenders in South Florida.
- Let's not forget the Julia Tuttle Causeway (YouTube) where at one time, over 100 ex-offenders were FORCED and TOLD to live.
"Any laws about public safety should be grounded in evidence-based policies, not by hysteria and misinformation," said Gail Colletta, president of the Florida Action Committee, which lobbies for restrictions that are based on the risk posed by each offender.
Colletta is also a member of a task force expected to recommend new residency restrictions to the county government. The Sex Offender Re-Entry Task Force, which includes lawyers, deputies, parole officers and elected officials, met Friday and heard from residents of Miracle Village.
"We took one of the worst parts of Pahokee and turned it into one of the safest parts of Pahokee," said Pat Powers, director of Matthew 25 Ministries, the Christian group that oversees Miracle Village.
Of the 909 registered sex offenders in Palm Beach County, 62 of them are homeless.
They report to their probation officers daily, and deputies with the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office say they are easier to watch.
"They have to tell us where they're going to be at," said Rosalyn Baker, of the Department of Corrections. "The corner of this, the corner of that."
The state law on sex offender residency says they cannot live within 1,000 feet of a school, day care center, park or playground. Palm Beach County further restricts them, pushing the zone to 2,500 feet. Some cities and villages flesh out the remaining patchwork of ordinances.
But residency means dwelling; it's where the offender sleeps between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. Some of them, Baker said, could live near a school all day then leave at night.
Ultimately, the task force seems to agree, none of this is relevant. The residency restrictions offer merely a "semblance of protection," they argue.
"These residency restrictions have not been shown to be effective in reducing recidivism," Public Defender Carey Haughwout said.
The rate of recidivism among sex offenders nationally, studies show, is between 5 percent and 10 percent over a decade. One study in Minnesota determined that residency restrictions would not have prevented any of the 224 sex offenses researchers examined.
Although county law enforcement officials agree residency restrictions should be repealed, they insisted on the dangerousness of sex offenders. Five percent recidivism is still 5 percent, they said.
"We're talking about kids who have been raped and killed," Sheriff's Office Detective Kevin Umphrey said.
Friday, March 22, 2013
FL - Sex offender village grows out of residency restrictions
Original Article
03/21/2013
By Ben Wolford
PAHOKEE - Miracle Village is so remote, the residents compare themselves to lepers.
Two miles of sugar cane separate 100 men from nearby Pahokee, itself a flyspeck on the shores of Lake Okeechobee. They fill the skeleton shacks of an abandoned sugar-company town.
This is among the only places to live comfortably as a sex offender in South Florida. For many of these men, pushed to the fringe by residency restrictions, Miracle Village was the last net before homelessness.
"In the beginning, no one wanted us around," said Pat Powers, director of Matthew 25 Ministries, the Christian ministry that oversees about a dozen of the 65 dwellings on 24 acres. "But it's totally changed, now we're a part of the community."
Some of them had sex with their underage girlfriends. Some viewed child pornography. One resident, a leader in the ministry, was a teacher at a Palm Beach County school who confessed to molesting students.
Palm Beach County has established a task force to suggest ways to house and regulate the county's roughly 1,000 sex offenders. It has asked Powers, a sex offender himself, to share ideas at its meeting Friday.
Groups from as far as Texas and Alaska have sought Powers for advice. He said network film crews, drawn by the lurid possibility of a sex-offender colony, have descended on this outpost. Some, he said, left disappointed.
"We can't run it," he said they told him. "There's nothing controversial."
That was not true in 2009, when an aging evangelical pastor established Miracle Village, evicting families who lived there with children, and inviting more than 30 just-released sex offenders in the opening months.
It was halfway between two hostile places: prison and the public. It seemed perfect. But even two miles out Muck City Road, it seemed, was not far enough.
The Pahokee mayor at the time, Wayne Whitaker, told the Associated Press, "There's just too many in one place. It's very, very risky." Parents in the town complained of unease.
In Palm Beach and Broward counties, sex offenders are not allowed to reside near schools or parks, and many are further restricted by the terms of their probation.
"Municipalities and counties are in a race," said Dave Aronberg, Palm Beach County State Attorney. The race is "to push sex offenders into the neighboring communities."
"It becomes a competition."
But something changed in Pahokee. In three years, feelings shifted.
The controversial pastor died last year, and Powers, who had served 12 years on a lewd and lascivious conviction, assumed leadership. The sex offenders patronized local shops. Local officials made visits. Some of the tenants have built relationships with the local Methodist church.
"One of them plays the piano in the choir, one of them bakes the cakes," said Rose Herron, an 86-year-old churchgoer with white hair and a cross on her necklace.
The Rev. Patti Aupperlee, pastor of First United Methodist Church, said she takes certain precautions, including leaving the drapes of her office open, and said she has a close relationship with law enforcement. She said there was a recent incident, but declined to describe it.
She believes in forgiveness and human imperfection and second chances.
"When you see a pack of dogs, automatically you think 'attack' without knowing any of the individuals," Aupperlee said.
Pahokee Mayor J.P. Sasser said he knows several of the men personally through the church. He said they "are actually making a positive contribution to the community."
Powers said the recidivism rate among his tenants is nonexistent. This could not be confirmed; the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office did not respond to a request for crime rates among Miracle Village residents. In general, recidivism among sex offenders is between 5 percent and 10 percent over time, according to a recent Justice Department study.
Residents often talk about Miracle Village as though it was a person who saved their lives.
At 19, [name withheld] had a 14-year-old girlfriend. He served six months in a Brevard County jail then came here. Now 22, [name withheld] who plays the drums and Guitar Hero in his duplex, says Miracle Village is a place where his label — sex offender — does not interfere with his relationships.
"It was a blessing," he said.
03/21/2013
By Ben Wolford
PAHOKEE - Miracle Village is so remote, the residents compare themselves to lepers.
Two miles of sugar cane separate 100 men from nearby Pahokee, itself a flyspeck on the shores of Lake Okeechobee. They fill the skeleton shacks of an abandoned sugar-company town.
This is among the only places to live comfortably as a sex offender in South Florida. For many of these men, pushed to the fringe by residency restrictions, Miracle Village was the last net before homelessness.
"In the beginning, no one wanted us around," said Pat Powers, director of Matthew 25 Ministries, the Christian ministry that oversees about a dozen of the 65 dwellings on 24 acres. "But it's totally changed, now we're a part of the community."
Some of them had sex with their underage girlfriends. Some viewed child pornography. One resident, a leader in the ministry, was a teacher at a Palm Beach County school who confessed to molesting students.
Palm Beach County has established a task force to suggest ways to house and regulate the county's roughly 1,000 sex offenders. It has asked Powers, a sex offender himself, to share ideas at its meeting Friday.
Groups from as far as Texas and Alaska have sought Powers for advice. He said network film crews, drawn by the lurid possibility of a sex-offender colony, have descended on this outpost. Some, he said, left disappointed.
"We can't run it," he said they told him. "There's nothing controversial."
That was not true in 2009, when an aging evangelical pastor established Miracle Village, evicting families who lived there with children, and inviting more than 30 just-released sex offenders in the opening months.
It was halfway between two hostile places: prison and the public. It seemed perfect. But even two miles out Muck City Road, it seemed, was not far enough.
The Pahokee mayor at the time, Wayne Whitaker, told the Associated Press, "There's just too many in one place. It's very, very risky." Parents in the town complained of unease.
In Palm Beach and Broward counties, sex offenders are not allowed to reside near schools or parks, and many are further restricted by the terms of their probation.
"Municipalities and counties are in a race," said Dave Aronberg, Palm Beach County State Attorney. The race is "to push sex offenders into the neighboring communities."
"It becomes a competition."
But something changed in Pahokee. In three years, feelings shifted.
The controversial pastor died last year, and Powers, who had served 12 years on a lewd and lascivious conviction, assumed leadership. The sex offenders patronized local shops. Local officials made visits. Some of the tenants have built relationships with the local Methodist church.
"One of them plays the piano in the choir, one of them bakes the cakes," said Rose Herron, an 86-year-old churchgoer with white hair and a cross on her necklace.
The Rev. Patti Aupperlee, pastor of First United Methodist Church, said she takes certain precautions, including leaving the drapes of her office open, and said she has a close relationship with law enforcement. She said there was a recent incident, but declined to describe it.
She believes in forgiveness and human imperfection and second chances.
"When you see a pack of dogs, automatically you think 'attack' without knowing any of the individuals," Aupperlee said.
Pahokee Mayor J.P. Sasser said he knows several of the men personally through the church. He said they "are actually making a positive contribution to the community."
Powers said the recidivism rate among his tenants is nonexistent. This could not be confirmed; the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office did not respond to a request for crime rates among Miracle Village residents. In general, recidivism among sex offenders is between 5 percent and 10 percent over time, according to a recent Justice Department study.
Residents often talk about Miracle Village as though it was a person who saved their lives.
At 19, [name withheld] had a 14-year-old girlfriend. He served six months in a Brevard County jail then came here. Now 22, [name withheld] who plays the drums and Guitar Hero in his duplex, says Miracle Village is a place where his label — sex offender — does not interfere with his relationships.
"It was a blessing," he said.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
WA - Homeless sex offenders on the rise (Due to residency restrictions!)
Labels: FearMongering , Homeless , Residency , Video , Washington
Original Article
Just more of the usual media fear mongering. If they'd eliminate the residency restrictions then much of this would go a way. Why do they now ask, why are they homeless?
03/11/2013
By Davis Wahlman
BENTON COUNTY - KEPR is always keeping an eye on the process to track sex offenders in our community.
We learned one-type of offender is on the rise here in the Tri-Cities.
We looked at how you can keep your family safe.
Megan Mahaffey brings her children to Columbia Park almost every week. She feels safe knowing the park is far from homes.
Megan wants to steer clear of the possibility of any sex offenders, saying, "I don't think they should be allowed to live within in like, 20 miles of a park and a school."
But the offenders she's talking about are the one's who actually follow the rules. They tell law enforcement where they're living.
The number of compliant sex offenders hasn't gone up substantially in several years.
But officials at the Benton County Sheriff's Office are growing concerned about the number of transient offenders.
They may check-in with deputies, but they don't have a permanent home.
They could be anywhere -- at any time.
There are currently 477 registered sex offenders living in Benton County. 16 are transient.
Law enforcement has no way to proactively checking on them. They have to wait for the offender to make their weekly visit with authorities instead.
16 may not seem like a lot, but it used to hover around three to five.
Having three-times the number of homeless sex offenders is more work -- and more of the unknown.
Checking online can give you some idea of where offenders live.
But the list isn't complete.
If you were to go online to the Benton County Sheriff's website and put in the address for this park, you'd find at least four sex offenders living within two miles, but officials tell me it could be much more.
Leaving it up to parents to be aware -- and stay vigilant -- as the number of homeless sex offenders is on the rise.
We checked for an updated number of transient sex offenders in Franklin County, but that number was unavailable today.
Agencies update as best they can with the time and resources available.
Just more of the usual media fear mongering. If they'd eliminate the residency restrictions then much of this would go a way. Why do they now ask, why are they homeless?
03/11/2013
By Davis Wahlman
BENTON COUNTY - KEPR is always keeping an eye on the process to track sex offenders in our community.
We learned one-type of offender is on the rise here in the Tri-Cities.
We looked at how you can keep your family safe.
Megan Mahaffey brings her children to Columbia Park almost every week. She feels safe knowing the park is far from homes.
Megan wants to steer clear of the possibility of any sex offenders, saying, "I don't think they should be allowed to live within in like, 20 miles of a park and a school."
But the offenders she's talking about are the one's who actually follow the rules. They tell law enforcement where they're living.
The number of compliant sex offenders hasn't gone up substantially in several years.
But officials at the Benton County Sheriff's Office are growing concerned about the number of transient offenders.
They may check-in with deputies, but they don't have a permanent home.
They could be anywhere -- at any time.
There are currently 477 registered sex offenders living in Benton County. 16 are transient.
Law enforcement has no way to proactively checking on them. They have to wait for the offender to make their weekly visit with authorities instead.
16 may not seem like a lot, but it used to hover around three to five.
Having three-times the number of homeless sex offenders is more work -- and more of the unknown.
Checking online can give you some idea of where offenders live.
But the list isn't complete.
If you were to go online to the Benton County Sheriff's website and put in the address for this park, you'd find at least four sex offenders living within two miles, but officials tell me it could be much more.
Leaving it up to parents to be aware -- and stay vigilant -- as the number of homeless sex offenders is on the rise.
We checked for an updated number of transient sex offenders in Franklin County, but that number was unavailable today.
Agencies update as best they can with the time and resources available.
Monday, March 4, 2013
FL - Sex offenders booted from house deemed not in compliance
Original Article
See the video at the link above.
03/04/2013
JACKSONVILLE - Four registered sex offenders were evicted from a Westside home Monday after code enforcement officers told them the house they were living in was not in compliance.
"Most people in Jacksonville don't see what sex offenders go through. Everything you see on TV is negative, but not all sex offenders are preying on children," said one sex offender evicted from the house who didn't want to be identified.
He said the city is making it harder for him and other offenders to get back on their feet. Since his release from prison in September, he's been living at the house, along with six other sex offenders who pay $600 a month each.
He said he called the code compliance office Monday morning to report a problem with the plumbing and the electricity. Instead, when officers walked in the door, their attention was drawn to something else.
"The first thing he said when he came in is he said there are too many people living in the house, the square footage isn't correct, and they'll have to get some of the people out of the house," the evictee said.
He said the places where sex offenders can live are limited in Jacksonville, and he thinks more programs should be in place to help. Code enforcement officers at the housing facility wouldn't comment Monday about the decision to evict, but instead issued us a statement.
They said the occupants were given a citation for illegal rooming inside the house and have 30 days to correct the problem. No more than five unrelated people can live in a single family house.
- What difference does it matter if the people are or aren't related? If it was a family then this wouldn't be an issue.
Code compliance officers said it's not their responsibility to relocate the occupants, only to make sure that the house is safe.
The evictee said the decision has only created more challenges for him in a society that's quick to judge and slow to forgive.
"I'm trying to get my life back together and so are offenders, but the city ordinances and housing predators are making it that much harder," he said.
See the video at the link above.
03/04/2013
JACKSONVILLE - Four registered sex offenders were evicted from a Westside home Monday after code enforcement officers told them the house they were living in was not in compliance.
"Most people in Jacksonville don't see what sex offenders go through. Everything you see on TV is negative, but not all sex offenders are preying on children," said one sex offender evicted from the house who didn't want to be identified.
He said the city is making it harder for him and other offenders to get back on their feet. Since his release from prison in September, he's been living at the house, along with six other sex offenders who pay $600 a month each.
He said he called the code compliance office Monday morning to report a problem with the plumbing and the electricity. Instead, when officers walked in the door, their attention was drawn to something else.
"The first thing he said when he came in is he said there are too many people living in the house, the square footage isn't correct, and they'll have to get some of the people out of the house," the evictee said.
He said the places where sex offenders can live are limited in Jacksonville, and he thinks more programs should be in place to help. Code enforcement officers at the housing facility wouldn't comment Monday about the decision to evict, but instead issued us a statement.
They said the occupants were given a citation for illegal rooming inside the house and have 30 days to correct the problem. No more than five unrelated people can live in a single family house.
- What difference does it matter if the people are or aren't related? If it was a family then this wouldn't be an issue.
Code compliance officers said it's not their responsibility to relocate the occupants, only to make sure that the house is safe.
The evictee said the decision has only created more challenges for him in a society that's quick to judge and slow to forgive.
"I'm trying to get my life back together and so are offenders, but the city ordinances and housing predators are making it that much harder," he said.
Saturday, March 2, 2013
NC - Men’s shelter turning away sex offenders
Labels: Homeless , Housing , NorthCarolina , USAFair
Original Article
At least the shelter is trying to help, but what would help more to end this homelessness is for the counties / state to repeal the residency laws which do nothing to prevent / deter crime but creates homelessness and joblessness.
03/02/2013
By Cameron Steele
The Men's Shelter of Charlotte is now turning away registered sex offenders as officials try to help the offenders who already live there – some of them for several years – find jobs and homes of their own.
Shelter officials made the decision Friday to not accept any new registered offenders. But Executive Director Carson Dean said they’ve been trying to find a solution for months to the persistent homelessness and joblessness of some 50 sex offenders at the shelter.
“It’s very difficult for us,” Dean said. “Because of the offense that’s on their records, it just becomes very difficult for them to get a job, get someone to rent you an apartment.”
Homeless facilities like the Men’s Shelter often become a last resort for sex offenders who are released from prison and must report their addresses to the local sheriff’s office, according to local and state officials.
Between laws that restrict where sex offenders can live -- nowhere near schools, child care centers or parks -- and landlords who don’t want to rent to them, many have trouble finding a place to live even temporarily.
And those “last resorts” often turn sex offenders away, too, according to a 2009 report from the state Department of Corrections. The study shows many community-based shelters across the state have criteria that prevent them from accepting sex offenders.
Some turn sex offenders away because they don’t want to house them alongside women and children.
Others, like the Men’s Shelter of Charlotte, can’t handle the burden of sex offenders who often turn into lifetime shelter residents.
None of the offenders living at the shelter will be kicked out. Dean hopes the decision to turn away new offenders will give shelter case managers more one-on-one time with the registered offenders currently there.
“We’re going to help them find some place that they can be in compliance with their offender status,” Dean said.
Just under 800 sex offenders are registered in Mecklenburg County, according to the N.C. Department of Justice.
Dean said he would like to the Department of Corrections and other state and federal agencies play a bigger role in reducing the risk of homelessness for sex offenders.
“It’s not the right thing for someone to be stuck in the shelter forever,” he said. “Whether they are coming out of a state or federal prison – those are the resources that should be helping them with housing.”
Department of Corrections officials Saturday were not immediately available for contact.
Shana Rowan, a spokeswoman for a national non-profit advocating fair sex offender registry laws, said county and state legislators should examine how statutory requirements contribute to offender homelessness.
“When it comes to sex offenders, we’ve just legislated these people to the point where there’s nowhere for them to live,” Rowan said.
Before the decision to no longer allow sex offenders, the shelter was taking in about two registered men a month.
At least the shelter is trying to help, but what would help more to end this homelessness is for the counties / state to repeal the residency laws which do nothing to prevent / deter crime but creates homelessness and joblessness.
03/02/2013
By Cameron Steele
The Men's Shelter of Charlotte is now turning away registered sex offenders as officials try to help the offenders who already live there – some of them for several years – find jobs and homes of their own.
Shelter officials made the decision Friday to not accept any new registered offenders. But Executive Director Carson Dean said they’ve been trying to find a solution for months to the persistent homelessness and joblessness of some 50 sex offenders at the shelter.
“It’s very difficult for us,” Dean said. “Because of the offense that’s on their records, it just becomes very difficult for them to get a job, get someone to rent you an apartment.”
Homeless facilities like the Men’s Shelter often become a last resort for sex offenders who are released from prison and must report their addresses to the local sheriff’s office, according to local and state officials.
Between laws that restrict where sex offenders can live -- nowhere near schools, child care centers or parks -- and landlords who don’t want to rent to them, many have trouble finding a place to live even temporarily.
And those “last resorts” often turn sex offenders away, too, according to a 2009 report from the state Department of Corrections. The study shows many community-based shelters across the state have criteria that prevent them from accepting sex offenders.
Some turn sex offenders away because they don’t want to house them alongside women and children.
Others, like the Men’s Shelter of Charlotte, can’t handle the burden of sex offenders who often turn into lifetime shelter residents.
None of the offenders living at the shelter will be kicked out. Dean hopes the decision to turn away new offenders will give shelter case managers more one-on-one time with the registered offenders currently there.
“We’re going to help them find some place that they can be in compliance with their offender status,” Dean said.
Just under 800 sex offenders are registered in Mecklenburg County, according to the N.C. Department of Justice.
Dean said he would like to the Department of Corrections and other state and federal agencies play a bigger role in reducing the risk of homelessness for sex offenders.
“It’s not the right thing for someone to be stuck in the shelter forever,” he said. “Whether they are coming out of a state or federal prison – those are the resources that should be helping them with housing.”
Department of Corrections officials Saturday were not immediately available for contact.
Shana Rowan, a spokeswoman for a national non-profit advocating fair sex offender registry laws, said county and state legislators should examine how statutory requirements contribute to offender homelessness.
“When it comes to sex offenders, we’ve just legislated these people to the point where there’s nowhere for them to live,” Rowan said.
Before the decision to no longer allow sex offenders, the shelter was taking in about two registered men a month.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
NY - Registered sex offenders being placed at North Utica motels
Labels: Employment , Homeless , Housing , NewYork , Residency
Original Article
02/23/2013
By ROCCO LaDUCA
UTICA - Anyone who spends a night at a motel accepts the fact that they know little about the guests who are staying in surrounding rooms.
So there’s always the possibility that a convicted criminal – such as a registered sex offender – might occasionally be sleeping next door.
But when sex offenders and child molesters are among the homeless people temporarily placed by the Oneida County Department of Social Services in a cluster of local motels just off the state Thruway exit, questions can arise whether any child’s safety is being systemically put at risk.
This practice comes as news to some authorities, including the Utica Police Department where offenders are required to register any changes in address within the city.
Within the past two weeks, at least eight Level 2 and Level 3 registered sex offenders have reported living at the Scottish Inns, Happy Journey and Super 8 motels along North Genesee Street, according to the state’s public sex offender registry.
“I think you would want to know that you’re safe and your family is safe, and I think any reasonable person would want to know if a sex offender is staying next to them for a week,” said Utica police Sgt. Steven Hauck. “We’re not looking to brand people with a scarlet letter, but the most important thing is to keep people safe.”
A homeless sex offender is able to apply for public assistance and temporary housing like anybody else, officials said. The issue, however, is that sex offenders are not required to disclose their criminal past when applying.
That means motel staff might never know they are hosting a sex offender, and neither would any guests with children who might be staying in the neighboring rooms.
Despite these worries, two typically opposing voices at least agree on one thing: It would not be fair to “paint with a broad brush” all sex offenders as a public risk in motel settings.
Shana Rowan, executive director of USA Families Advocating an Intelligent Registry, or FAIR, said sex offenders already struggle to find jobs and housing, so disclosing this information would likely only make it more difficult to move on with their lives.
“It’s understandable that people would feel empowered to know information like that, but there’s no research to suggest a sex offender would abduct a child they don’t know to molest them,” Rowan said. “I don’t see any positive outcome in making them even bigger targets.”
The Oneida County Child Advocacy Center investigates sex abuse against children, but its director, Chief Deputy Dean Obernesser, agrees that the label of being a sex offender does not necessarily mean the person is a threat to children.
“You have to look at each one individually,” Obernesser said. “I don’t think you can randomly say that if there are 10 sex offenders living at a particular place that you put the community at risk.”
02/23/2013
By ROCCO LaDUCA
UTICA - Anyone who spends a night at a motel accepts the fact that they know little about the guests who are staying in surrounding rooms.
So there’s always the possibility that a convicted criminal – such as a registered sex offender – might occasionally be sleeping next door.
But when sex offenders and child molesters are among the homeless people temporarily placed by the Oneida County Department of Social Services in a cluster of local motels just off the state Thruway exit, questions can arise whether any child’s safety is being systemically put at risk.
This practice comes as news to some authorities, including the Utica Police Department where offenders are required to register any changes in address within the city.
Within the past two weeks, at least eight Level 2 and Level 3 registered sex offenders have reported living at the Scottish Inns, Happy Journey and Super 8 motels along North Genesee Street, according to the state’s public sex offender registry.
“I think you would want to know that you’re safe and your family is safe, and I think any reasonable person would want to know if a sex offender is staying next to them for a week,” said Utica police Sgt. Steven Hauck. “We’re not looking to brand people with a scarlet letter, but the most important thing is to keep people safe.”
A homeless sex offender is able to apply for public assistance and temporary housing like anybody else, officials said. The issue, however, is that sex offenders are not required to disclose their criminal past when applying.
That means motel staff might never know they are hosting a sex offender, and neither would any guests with children who might be staying in the neighboring rooms.
. . . . .
2 sides weigh in
Despite these worries, two typically opposing voices at least agree on one thing: It would not be fair to “paint with a broad brush” all sex offenders as a public risk in motel settings.
Shana Rowan, executive director of USA Families Advocating an Intelligent Registry, or FAIR, said sex offenders already struggle to find jobs and housing, so disclosing this information would likely only make it more difficult to move on with their lives.
“It’s understandable that people would feel empowered to know information like that, but there’s no research to suggest a sex offender would abduct a child they don’t know to molest them,” Rowan said. “I don’t see any positive outcome in making them even bigger targets.”
The Oneida County Child Advocacy Center investigates sex abuse against children, but its director, Chief Deputy Dean Obernesser, agrees that the label of being a sex offender does not necessarily mean the person is a threat to children.
“You have to look at each one individually,” Obernesser said. “I don’t think you can randomly say that if there are 10 sex offenders living at a particular place that you put the community at risk.”
Friday, February 15, 2013
NY - New sex offender bill signed, but questions persist
Original Article
02/15/2013
By DENISE CIVILETTI
County Executive Steve Bellone has signed a bill passed last week that ends "clustered" housing of registered sex offenders, putting an end to the two trailers used to shelter the county's homeless sex offenders. The legislature's minority leader, Republican John Kennedy of Nesconset still questions why the new law had to be pushed through so quickly and wonders aloud whether the $900,000 annual contract granted to a private contractor should have been subject to a competitive proposal process.
Though hailed by Suffolk Police Chief James Burke as "the most comprehensive law in the nation" for dealing with registered sex offenders — as well as by East End legislators delighted that the seven-year saga of the county trailers in Riverside and Westhampton will finally come to an end — both the law and the process by which it was enacted have drawn sharp criticism.
Civil rights advocates question the constitutionality of vesting a private entity with quasi-law enforcement authority to undertake intensive home surveillance of registered offenders. Others, including the legislative minority leader, Republican Jack Kennedy of Nesconset, are troubled by the hasty adoption of the law and the $900,000-a-year contract it awards to a the Stony Brook-based Parents for Megan's Law group, without first soliciting competitive proposals.
- It's a conflict of interest! This is like having drug dealers help solve the "war on drugs."
The county executive pushed the bill through the legislature in a single day, submitting it to lawmakers on the morning of their Feb. 5 general meeting. It was called for a public hearing and submitted to a vote that very afternoon.
That flies in the face of democracy and sound public policy, according to the director of the Suffolk chapter of the N.Y. Civil Liberties Union.
"The bill was introduced, updated, subject to a public hearing and voted on within three or four hours," NYCLU Suffolk director Amol Sindha said in an interview this week.
Bellone's office issued a certificate of necessity, which allows the legislature to forgo its normal committee process in deliberating a bill. The CN, as it is known, is "a time-sensitive request" by the county executive on a resolution that requires "immediate consideration," according to the county's website.
But use of a CN is a sensitive subject around the horseshoe in the legislative auditorium — and one that doesn't sit well at all with Kennedy. At last week's meeting, Kennedy questioned the need to circumvent the committee process. He was joined in his reservations by members of the Republican caucus. In the end, they all voted to approve the measure.
- So with them all passing the bill, even though they bypassed the process, they are setting a precedent that we are sure, will be used more and more to bypass congress. This is a dangerous situation! If they had an issue with how the bill was put forward, they should've not passed it, and told the author to follow the standard process!
This week found the minority leader second-guessing himself in that decision.
"There is much ambiguity in the administrative code and the county charter," Kennedy said in a phone interview Wednesday. "We have, in essence, empowered the county executive to utilize this. But it clearly is supposed to be for a situation that's emergent," Kennedy said.
This was not such a situation, but instead was one of political expediency, he said.
Then why vote to approve? Lawmakers, including Kennedy, passed the measure unanimously — by a voice vote.
- Exactly!
Kennedy said both Bellone and Parents for Megan's Law executive director Laura Ahearn lobbied hard to get legislators on board with the bill and approval by CN. Kennedy said he knew most, if not all, other legislators would support Bellone's effort on this hot-button issue.
- Yeah, they just follow the leader, no questions asked!
"There was a sense of inevitability," Kennedy said.
And he did not want to stand alone in opposition to a bill that would be embraced by the public as a "get tough" law on sex offenders. Such opposition comes with a price tag, as he learned the hard way, he said. Kennedy cast the lone no vote on the county's residency restrictions law for registered sex offenders. It was a hugely unpopular vote and he lost the support of his party because of it. He found himself in a tough primary battle to win nomination for re-election.
- Yes, he didn't have the balls, and doesn't want to upset those who vote for him. This one paragraph sums it all up! Don't rock the boat!
"It was no fun," said Kennedy, who reiterated his belief that the residency law is unconstitutional. That issue is currently before a court and officials acknowledged last week the county is likely to lose the case — as has every other municipality that's enacted restrictions on where registered sex offenders can live.
"We put this feel-good pablum out there for the public, making them think they'll be safer," Kennedy said. "And now we've spent a tremendous amount of taxpayer money to defend bad legislation." The Republican leader said he's concerned the county is going down the same path with the new law, dubbed the "Community Protection Act."
Of particular concern, Kennedy said, is that the law empowers a private organization with responsibility for verifying the home addresses of the county's registered sex offenders.
Equally troubling, Kennedy said, is the approval of a $2.7 million, three-year contract with a private entity without details of the contractor's responsibilities being disclosed to lawmakers and without submitting the contract to any sort of competitive process, Kennedy said.
"Bellone will say they're a sole source provider and bring it before the waiver committee," Kennedy said. That will allow the administration to circumvent the county's procurement policy that otherwise requires the county to issue a request for proposals for all contracts in excess of $25,000 (PDF), he said. "That's the only way they could thread the needle."
"I wouldn't deem Parents for Megan's Law the only entity in Suffolk County to do what the contract requires," Kennedy said. "And we don't even know what that is. There's nothing defined yet," he said. "But there are other victim services agencies in this county."
- A private company should not be doing this. It's a law enforcement issue and that is why the police have jobs, to enforce the laws.
"By local law and after public debate, the county has satisfied the procurement guidelines under state and local law for this type of contract," Vanessa Baird-Streeter, a spokesperson for Bellone said in an email yesterday.
The public had an opportunity to comment on the measure at both a presentation given to the legislature's public safety committee on Thursday, Jan. 31 and at the general meeting the following Tuesday, Feb. 5.
But the bill itself was not available to the public until the afternoon of the Feb. 5 hearing. It was not posted on the legislature's website until after it was adopted.
- Exactly, so how can anyone comment on a bill they haven't even read yet?
"To call it a public hearing is essentially a farce," NYCLU's Sinha said.
Others, like Kennedy, are troubled by the bill's lack of specifics about the duties of Parents for Megan's Law under the $900,000 annual contract.
Forensic psychologist Bill O'Leary, who, under contract with the state, works with registered sex offenders, points out that 95 percent of sex crimes against children are committed by people who are not on any registry.
"If we really want to protect our children from sexual predators, we need to address that instead of focusing all our resources on the registered offenders who re-offend, which represents a statistically small portion of those crimes," O'Leary said in an interview.
O'Leary made the same argument to lawmakers at the hearing last week, pleading with the legislature dedicate resources to prevention through education, and by strengthening its child protective services unit, which has suffered budget cuts.
"If there's money to be spent, that's where the county should spend it," O'Leary said at the hearing.
He got no response from lawmakers at the meeting.
The new law, in the section authorizing the contract with Parents for Megan's Law, lists six types of services the organization will provide. Item six reads: "the provision of community and prevention education."
Kennedy, who complained at last week's meeting that the bill did not have the proposed contract attached to it, which he said was the norm, reiterated that complaint in an interview with RiverheadLOCAL this week.
"When you look at the research, it's frightening — the small number of sex crimes committed by registered offenders, as opposed to people not on any registry. Yet we're still so focused on the registry," Kennedy said.
"It's missing the forest for the trees."
Riverhead Assessor Mason Haas, who spoke on behalf of the town in support of the bill at the hearing, agreed more emphasis should be placed on prevention and education.
"There's no doubt it needs to be tweaked," Haas said. But as a longtime advocate for closing down the homeless-offender trailers, Haas said the new program represents the local community's best shot at making that happen.
During a break in the public portion of last week's meeting, Haas engaged in a discussion with O'Leary about education and prevention initiatives needed and Parents for Megan's Law might do in that regard under the new contract.
Haas suggested the two speak with Ahearn, who was also in the lobby of the Hauppauge auditorium. Ahearn refused to discuss it in the presence of O'Leary, Haas said.
O'Leary said he was not surprised. He said Ahearn has refused to talk with him, or respond to his calls or emails for some time.
Ahearn acknowledged her refusal in an interview this week.
"It's my understanding he has a practice in which he provides services to sex offenders," Ahearn said. In her opinion, she said, he has no place in a county program monitoring sex offenders, counseling victims or crafting education and prevention programs.
- And you have no place in monitoring them either! The contract should be null and void.
"I'm sure if he [O'Leary] wants to expand his efforts he has the wherewithal to go out and find grant funding to do it," Ahearn said.
"If you saw the presentation, if you took the additional time to listen, you know the program includes significant victims services and prevention initiatives," Ahearn said.
Parents for Megan's Law would be hiring "additional prevention staff" to undertake those services, she said.
In a presentation to the county legislature's public safety committee on Jan. 31, Ahearn outlined a "sex offender tracking and community support eight-point plan." Under the new program, the organization would establish a 24-hour hotline providing access to a trained specialist, she said. An education supervisor will "conduct extensive outreach to schools and community organizations and train per-diem prevention educators to conduct sexual abuse, abduction and rape prevention workshops and Internet safety programs. The group will also enhance its existing crime victim advocacy support programs," she said.
The slide presentation given by Ahearn and the Suffolk police chief can be viewed here.
O'Leary said he does not understand how an effective program to prevent sexual crimes could be undertaken without consulting any mental health experts on the criminals themselves. He said he has expressed that sentiment to the county executive and was hoping for a meeting with him.
The county's process in crafting and adopting the new law was "not informed decision-making," O'Leary said. "It's not defining the real problem and putting the solution ahead of defining the problem."
O'Leary said the general public is terrified of registered offenders. "As the father of two young children, I completely relate," he said. "But that fear is largely misplaced. The real threat comes from trusted relatives and family friends. People you know. They are the people who are far more likely to molest your child. It's a difficult thing to come to terms with. But if we really want to prevent abuse, we need to teach parents and children where the real threat lies and teach them how to recognize warning signs. We don't need to use scare tactics and we certainly shouldn't lead people to believe the main threat is from people on a registry."
Advocates for reforming registry laws argue that's exactly what the registry laws and groups like Parents for Megan's Law do.
An organization called USAFair, established in 2012 by family members of registered sex offenders to advocate for the reform of registry laws, faults lawmakers, the media and groups like Parents for Megan's Law for what they say is exaggerating the likelihood of a registered offender re-offending.
"A 2010 survey by the Center for Sex Offender Management of the U.S. Department of Justice found that 72 percent of Americans believe that the sex crime recidivism rates are 50 percent or higher, with a third believing it is more than 75 percent. Only 3 percent believe it is less than 25 percent - even though actual recidivism rates are considerably below 25 percent," USAFair said in a Feb. 4 press release. "New studies are constantly confirming low recidivism, with the latest being released last month (PDF) showing a recidivism rate in four states of 10 percent after 10 years, with rates dropping sharply with years of offense-free tenure in the community."
USAFair faults Ahearn's group in particular, arguing that the Parents for Megan's Law website misrepresents recidivism statistics.
"USA FAIR has been attempting to get Parents for Megan's Law to take down misleading statistics from their website that reinforces the 'big lie' of high sex offender recidivism," the organization said in a statement. "Numerous studies, including a landmark 2003 study by the U.S. Justice Department have found that sex offenders actually have one of the lowest recidivism rates in the criminal justice system, about 5.3 percent."
Shana Rowan, a USAFair founder, said she wrote to Ahearn in December seeking changes to statistics on the PFML website that she says misrepresent the results of a study on repeat offenders. Ahearn never replied to the letter.
"As executive director of Parents for Megan's Law, Laura Ahearn has shown herself to be a zealot who has built a career demonizing the very people she is now to be charged with monitoring. She has perpetuated the myth of high sex offender recidivism, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, to enrich her organization," Rowan said.
Ahearn dismissed Rowan's criticism, pointing to Rowan's engagement to a registered offender who she said "raped a six year old child." Ahearn also said Rowan is "part of NAMBLA," the North American Man/Boy Love Association. Asked for documentation, Ahearn said, "Just search her name on the Internet."
- That is defamation! Just because something is on the Internet doesn't mean it's true, and she didn't want to show where she got that BS from, which we know where she got it from. It's all BS and we hope she takes you to court and wins!
Rowan categorically denies that she has ever in any way been associated with NAMBLA. A website called evil-unveiled has a page about her with her name in the URL, and it's the top hit in a Google search of her name. The page says she is a member of "the new NAMBLA" a name the website gives to "activists" seeking reform of registry laws, allegedly so that they can have sex with children.
"I think it's very telling that she [Ahearn] would resort to personal attacks instead of discussing the issues on the merits," Rowan said this week.
- We agree. It's the usual Ad Hominem attack.
Rowan said as the recipient of signifcant public funding — Parents for Megan's Law's 2011 federal tax return reports the group received more than $946,000 in government grants in 2011, the lion's share of its total revenue of just under $1.1 million — the group should be held accountable for providing accurate information to the public. "That was really all we were seeking," Rowan said. "The new deal with Suffolk County is a whole other subject," she said.
"Parents for Megan's Law has no experience in sex offender management - none," Rowan said, questioning how the county could "sole-source such an important and costly contract without even considering truly qualified parties - such as the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers, who are mental health professionals and sex-offender policy researchers." Rowan said the vote by the legislature was "a political attempt to purchase Laura Ahearn's support for the controversial proposal at great cost to the taxpayer."
Asked to respond to the criticism of USAFair, Baird-Streeter, the county executive's spokesperson said, "No comment."
02/15/2013
By DENISE CIVILETTI
County Executive Steve Bellone has signed a bill passed last week that ends "clustered" housing of registered sex offenders, putting an end to the two trailers used to shelter the county's homeless sex offenders. The legislature's minority leader, Republican John Kennedy of Nesconset still questions why the new law had to be pushed through so quickly and wonders aloud whether the $900,000 annual contract granted to a private contractor should have been subject to a competitive proposal process.
Though hailed by Suffolk Police Chief James Burke as "the most comprehensive law in the nation" for dealing with registered sex offenders — as well as by East End legislators delighted that the seven-year saga of the county trailers in Riverside and Westhampton will finally come to an end — both the law and the process by which it was enacted have drawn sharp criticism.
Civil rights advocates question the constitutionality of vesting a private entity with quasi-law enforcement authority to undertake intensive home surveillance of registered offenders. Others, including the legislative minority leader, Republican Jack Kennedy of Nesconset, are troubled by the hasty adoption of the law and the $900,000-a-year contract it awards to a the Stony Brook-based Parents for Megan's Law group, without first soliciting competitive proposals.
- It's a conflict of interest! This is like having drug dealers help solve the "war on drugs."
The county executive pushed the bill through the legislature in a single day, submitting it to lawmakers on the morning of their Feb. 5 general meeting. It was called for a public hearing and submitted to a vote that very afternoon.
That flies in the face of democracy and sound public policy, according to the director of the Suffolk chapter of the N.Y. Civil Liberties Union.
"The bill was introduced, updated, subject to a public hearing and voted on within three or four hours," NYCLU Suffolk director Amol Sindha said in an interview this week.
Bellone's office issued a certificate of necessity, which allows the legislature to forgo its normal committee process in deliberating a bill. The CN, as it is known, is "a time-sensitive request" by the county executive on a resolution that requires "immediate consideration," according to the county's website.
But use of a CN is a sensitive subject around the horseshoe in the legislative auditorium — and one that doesn't sit well at all with Kennedy. At last week's meeting, Kennedy questioned the need to circumvent the committee process. He was joined in his reservations by members of the Republican caucus. In the end, they all voted to approve the measure.
- So with them all passing the bill, even though they bypassed the process, they are setting a precedent that we are sure, will be used more and more to bypass congress. This is a dangerous situation! If they had an issue with how the bill was put forward, they should've not passed it, and told the author to follow the standard process!
This week found the minority leader second-guessing himself in that decision.
"There is much ambiguity in the administrative code and the county charter," Kennedy said in a phone interview Wednesday. "We have, in essence, empowered the county executive to utilize this. But it clearly is supposed to be for a situation that's emergent," Kennedy said.
This was not such a situation, but instead was one of political expediency, he said.
Then why vote to approve? Lawmakers, including Kennedy, passed the measure unanimously — by a voice vote.
- Exactly!
Kennedy said both Bellone and Parents for Megan's Law executive director Laura Ahearn lobbied hard to get legislators on board with the bill and approval by CN. Kennedy said he knew most, if not all, other legislators would support Bellone's effort on this hot-button issue.
- Yeah, they just follow the leader, no questions asked!
"There was a sense of inevitability," Kennedy said.
And he did not want to stand alone in opposition to a bill that would be embraced by the public as a "get tough" law on sex offenders. Such opposition comes with a price tag, as he learned the hard way, he said. Kennedy cast the lone no vote on the county's residency restrictions law for registered sex offenders. It was a hugely unpopular vote and he lost the support of his party because of it. He found himself in a tough primary battle to win nomination for re-election.
- Yes, he didn't have the balls, and doesn't want to upset those who vote for him. This one paragraph sums it all up! Don't rock the boat!
"It was no fun," said Kennedy, who reiterated his belief that the residency law is unconstitutional. That issue is currently before a court and officials acknowledged last week the county is likely to lose the case — as has every other municipality that's enacted restrictions on where registered sex offenders can live.
"We put this feel-good pablum out there for the public, making them think they'll be safer," Kennedy said. "And now we've spent a tremendous amount of taxpayer money to defend bad legislation." The Republican leader said he's concerned the county is going down the same path with the new law, dubbed the "Community Protection Act."
Of particular concern, Kennedy said, is that the law empowers a private organization with responsibility for verifying the home addresses of the county's registered sex offenders.
Equally troubling, Kennedy said, is the approval of a $2.7 million, three-year contract with a private entity without details of the contractor's responsibilities being disclosed to lawmakers and without submitting the contract to any sort of competitive process, Kennedy said.
"Bellone will say they're a sole source provider and bring it before the waiver committee," Kennedy said. That will allow the administration to circumvent the county's procurement policy that otherwise requires the county to issue a request for proposals for all contracts in excess of $25,000 (PDF), he said. "That's the only way they could thread the needle."
"I wouldn't deem Parents for Megan's Law the only entity in Suffolk County to do what the contract requires," Kennedy said. "And we don't even know what that is. There's nothing defined yet," he said. "But there are other victim services agencies in this county."
- A private company should not be doing this. It's a law enforcement issue and that is why the police have jobs, to enforce the laws.
"By local law and after public debate, the county has satisfied the procurement guidelines under state and local law for this type of contract," Vanessa Baird-Streeter, a spokesperson for Bellone said in an email yesterday.
The public had an opportunity to comment on the measure at both a presentation given to the legislature's public safety committee on Thursday, Jan. 31 and at the general meeting the following Tuesday, Feb. 5.
But the bill itself was not available to the public until the afternoon of the Feb. 5 hearing. It was not posted on the legislature's website until after it was adopted.
- Exactly, so how can anyone comment on a bill they haven't even read yet?
"To call it a public hearing is essentially a farce," NYCLU's Sinha said.
Others, like Kennedy, are troubled by the bill's lack of specifics about the duties of Parents for Megan's Law under the $900,000 annual contract.
Forensic psychologist Bill O'Leary, who, under contract with the state, works with registered sex offenders, points out that 95 percent of sex crimes against children are committed by people who are not on any registry.
"If we really want to protect our children from sexual predators, we need to address that instead of focusing all our resources on the registered offenders who re-offend, which represents a statistically small portion of those crimes," O'Leary said in an interview.
O'Leary made the same argument to lawmakers at the hearing last week, pleading with the legislature dedicate resources to prevention through education, and by strengthening its child protective services unit, which has suffered budget cuts.
"If there's money to be spent, that's where the county should spend it," O'Leary said at the hearing.
He got no response from lawmakers at the meeting.
The new law, in the section authorizing the contract with Parents for Megan's Law, lists six types of services the organization will provide. Item six reads: "the provision of community and prevention education."
Kennedy, who complained at last week's meeting that the bill did not have the proposed contract attached to it, which he said was the norm, reiterated that complaint in an interview with RiverheadLOCAL this week.
"When you look at the research, it's frightening — the small number of sex crimes committed by registered offenders, as opposed to people not on any registry. Yet we're still so focused on the registry," Kennedy said.
"It's missing the forest for the trees."
Riverhead Assessor Mason Haas, who spoke on behalf of the town in support of the bill at the hearing, agreed more emphasis should be placed on prevention and education.
"There's no doubt it needs to be tweaked," Haas said. But as a longtime advocate for closing down the homeless-offender trailers, Haas said the new program represents the local community's best shot at making that happen.
During a break in the public portion of last week's meeting, Haas engaged in a discussion with O'Leary about education and prevention initiatives needed and Parents for Megan's Law might do in that regard under the new contract.
Haas suggested the two speak with Ahearn, who was also in the lobby of the Hauppauge auditorium. Ahearn refused to discuss it in the presence of O'Leary, Haas said.
O'Leary said he was not surprised. He said Ahearn has refused to talk with him, or respond to his calls or emails for some time.
![]() |
| Laura Ahearn |
"It's my understanding he has a practice in which he provides services to sex offenders," Ahearn said. In her opinion, she said, he has no place in a county program monitoring sex offenders, counseling victims or crafting education and prevention programs.
- And you have no place in monitoring them either! The contract should be null and void.
"I'm sure if he [O'Leary] wants to expand his efforts he has the wherewithal to go out and find grant funding to do it," Ahearn said.
"If you saw the presentation, if you took the additional time to listen, you know the program includes significant victims services and prevention initiatives," Ahearn said.
Parents for Megan's Law would be hiring "additional prevention staff" to undertake those services, she said.
In a presentation to the county legislature's public safety committee on Jan. 31, Ahearn outlined a "sex offender tracking and community support eight-point plan." Under the new program, the organization would establish a 24-hour hotline providing access to a trained specialist, she said. An education supervisor will "conduct extensive outreach to schools and community organizations and train per-diem prevention educators to conduct sexual abuse, abduction and rape prevention workshops and Internet safety programs. The group will also enhance its existing crime victim advocacy support programs," she said.
The slide presentation given by Ahearn and the Suffolk police chief can be viewed here.
O'Leary said he does not understand how an effective program to prevent sexual crimes could be undertaken without consulting any mental health experts on the criminals themselves. He said he has expressed that sentiment to the county executive and was hoping for a meeting with him.
The county's process in crafting and adopting the new law was "not informed decision-making," O'Leary said. "It's not defining the real problem and putting the solution ahead of defining the problem."
O'Leary said the general public is terrified of registered offenders. "As the father of two young children, I completely relate," he said. "But that fear is largely misplaced. The real threat comes from trusted relatives and family friends. People you know. They are the people who are far more likely to molest your child. It's a difficult thing to come to terms with. But if we really want to prevent abuse, we need to teach parents and children where the real threat lies and teach them how to recognize warning signs. We don't need to use scare tactics and we certainly shouldn't lead people to believe the main threat is from people on a registry."
Advocates for reforming registry laws argue that's exactly what the registry laws and groups like Parents for Megan's Law do.
An organization called USAFair, established in 2012 by family members of registered sex offenders to advocate for the reform of registry laws, faults lawmakers, the media and groups like Parents for Megan's Law for what they say is exaggerating the likelihood of a registered offender re-offending.
"A 2010 survey by the Center for Sex Offender Management of the U.S. Department of Justice found that 72 percent of Americans believe that the sex crime recidivism rates are 50 percent or higher, with a third believing it is more than 75 percent. Only 3 percent believe it is less than 25 percent - even though actual recidivism rates are considerably below 25 percent," USAFair said in a Feb. 4 press release. "New studies are constantly confirming low recidivism, with the latest being released last month (PDF) showing a recidivism rate in four states of 10 percent after 10 years, with rates dropping sharply with years of offense-free tenure in the community."
USAFair faults Ahearn's group in particular, arguing that the Parents for Megan's Law website misrepresents recidivism statistics.
"USA FAIR has been attempting to get Parents for Megan's Law to take down misleading statistics from their website that reinforces the 'big lie' of high sex offender recidivism," the organization said in a statement. "Numerous studies, including a landmark 2003 study by the U.S. Justice Department have found that sex offenders actually have one of the lowest recidivism rates in the criminal justice system, about 5.3 percent."
![]() |
| Shana Rowan |
"As executive director of Parents for Megan's Law, Laura Ahearn has shown herself to be a zealot who has built a career demonizing the very people she is now to be charged with monitoring. She has perpetuated the myth of high sex offender recidivism, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, to enrich her organization," Rowan said.
Ahearn dismissed Rowan's criticism, pointing to Rowan's engagement to a registered offender who she said "raped a six year old child." Ahearn also said Rowan is "part of NAMBLA," the North American Man/Boy Love Association. Asked for documentation, Ahearn said, "Just search her name on the Internet."
- That is defamation! Just because something is on the Internet doesn't mean it's true, and she didn't want to show where she got that BS from, which we know where she got it from. It's all BS and we hope she takes you to court and wins!
Rowan categorically denies that she has ever in any way been associated with NAMBLA. A website called evil-unveiled has a page about her with her name in the URL, and it's the top hit in a Google search of her name. The page says she is a member of "the new NAMBLA" a name the website gives to "activists" seeking reform of registry laws, allegedly so that they can have sex with children.
"I think it's very telling that she [Ahearn] would resort to personal attacks instead of discussing the issues on the merits," Rowan said this week.
- We agree. It's the usual Ad Hominem attack.
Rowan said as the recipient of signifcant public funding — Parents for Megan's Law's 2011 federal tax return reports the group received more than $946,000 in government grants in 2011, the lion's share of its total revenue of just under $1.1 million — the group should be held accountable for providing accurate information to the public. "That was really all we were seeking," Rowan said. "The new deal with Suffolk County is a whole other subject," she said.
"Parents for Megan's Law has no experience in sex offender management - none," Rowan said, questioning how the county could "sole-source such an important and costly contract without even considering truly qualified parties - such as the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers, who are mental health professionals and sex-offender policy researchers." Rowan said the vote by the legislature was "a political attempt to purchase Laura Ahearn's support for the controversial proposal at great cost to the taxpayer."
Asked to respond to the criticism of USAFair, Baird-Streeter, the county executive's spokesperson said, "No comment."
Saturday, February 9, 2013
NY - CONFLICT OF INTEREST - New sex offender monitoring law approved by county legislature; DSS trailers to be shut down
Original Article
02/06/2013
By DENISE CIVILETTI
Legislation establishing a new monitoring and enforcement program for Suffolk's registered sex offenders — ending the use of the trailers in Riverside and Westhampton — sailed through the county legislature Tuesday.
The measure won the unanimous approval of legislators present, in a 15-0 by acclamation, despite the reservations of some lawmakers that the bill, which hadn't been delivered to the legislature in final form until 12:30 that afternoon, had not been properly vetted.
Legis. Jay Schneiderman (I-Montauk) who had fought a losing battle with fellow lawmakers and the Levy administration to get the trailers removed, called the new plan "by far the best opportunity we've had to get the trailers closed down since this nightmare began." He said he believed yesterday's action means the trailers will be closed "in a matter of months."
County Executive Steve Bellone, who last May promised to have the trailers closed by the end of 2012, worked very hard to secure support for the new plan in the legislature, Schneiderman said. But the South Fork legislator, whose district encompasses both the Riverside and Westhampton hamlets where the county department of social services trailers are place, did not expect it to be unanimous. His face lit up with a grin as his colleagues seated around the horseshoe in the crowded legislative auditorium one by one expressed support.
"It's very gratifying after all this time to finally have a solution that's not only promising for the whole county but a big win for the East End," Southampton Town Councilwoman Bridget Fleming said after the vote. Fleming, fellow councilman Chris Nuzzi and Southampton Town Supervisor all attended the meeting and spoke in support of the bill at the hearing.
Riverhead assessor Mason Haas, a Jamesport resident who's been an outspoken opponent of the trailer in Riverside since 2006, also spoke in support of the measure at the hearing. Haas said he was speaking as a representative of the Riverhead Town Board, which had its regular semi-monthly meeting that afternoon in Riverhead and did not make the trip to Hauppauge.
A contingent of Riverhead and Southampton residents filled the auditorium. Many spoke in support of the bill, focusing on its language requiring "no more than one hard to place individual shall be placed at any location and to the extent practicable, clustering in any one community should be avoided."
Civic leaders from other parts of Suffolk asked the legislature to slow down and send the bill to committee for deliberation.
Sandra Thomas of Wheatley Heights complained about the lack of community input and said she believed, despite language about avoiding "clustering" of homeless registered sex offenders, it was unavoidable.
"There are not enough single men's shelters" in the county to have one offender per shelter, as has been discussed, Thomas said. Housing multiple offenders in a single shelter is unavoidable, she said. And minority communities are bound to bear a greater burden, she said.
"Minority communities and comminuties of color that already bear a lot of social ills are going to bear even more," Thomas said.
Alice Cone, of West Babylon, president of Belmont Lake Civic Association, said minority communities "are already overwhelmed with group homes, homeless shelters, and halfway houses...and cannot absorb any more."
Bayview Pines resident Carl Iacone said his "diversified" community of Flanders has "just as many homeless shelters and group homes."
"There is a cluster of sex offenders," Iacone said, "and it's in our neighborhood. Nobody on this board wants them. Nobody sitting in this audience wants them. Yet we've had them for six years," Iacone said. "Don't keep the whole burden on the people in the Flanders area."
- Get rid of the residency restrictions and most of the problem will go a way. The residency laws are what is creating the clustering in the first place.
The "Community Protection Act" was introduced yesterday by County Executive Steve Bellone, accompanied by a certificate of necessity asking the legislative body to consider it immediately, circumventing the normal legislative committee process.
"The Suffolk County Police Department has crafted the most comprehensive sex offender monitoring, verification and enforcement program in the nation in order to protect our families and this program should be implemented without delay," said the certificate of necessity signed by Deputy County Executive Jonathan Schneider.
- Why is he wanting to quickly push this through bypassing the process? Maybe to save his own reputation since he made promises years ago to shut them down?
Legislators John M. Kennedy (R-Nesconset) and Rick Montano (D-Brentwood) questioned the need for acting on the measure the same day it was introduced, without review, hearing and vote by the public safety committee. Suffolk Police Chief James Burke and Parents for Megan's Law executive director Laura Ahearn presented the plan to the Public Safety Committee on Thursday, but there was no legislation then pending — or, apparently, even drafted — at the time.
Amol Sinha, director fo the Suffolk Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union, during a public hearing , faulted the county for "the harried way this law is being pushed through the legislature," which he said was acting without taking adequate time for deliberation, debate and input from experts in sex offender management. Sinha said the new law is "grounded in misinformation about sexual assault and the context in which such crimes take place."
- Well, they've seen this current president and previous presidents bypass congress and hurry to get things pushed through, and we allow that to happen, so this is a slippery slope, and the more it's allowed, the more it will be used!
"The unfortunate reality is that most sexual violence is committed not by strangers, but by acquaintances and family members, most of whom are committing a crime for the first time. According to the Department of Justice, 85 percent of all sexual assaults are committed by someone known to the victim," Sinha said. "The New York Office of Sex Offender Management reports on its website that 94 percent of people arrested for sexual offenses in New York State had no prior conviction. That means that the overwhelming majority of people arrested for sexual crimes in New York are not subject to the types of notification and monitoring that the county is proposing, because they are committing a crime for the first time."
Bill O'Leary, a forensic therapist who works with registered sex offenders under contract with law enforcement agencies, including the departments of parole and probation, made the same argument to legislators during the public hearing. He said he also said the same things to the county executive and police chief.
"What is the number of sex crimes in Suffolk County committed by registered offenders?" O'Leary asked. "I can't get an answer to that." O'Leary said he is not an advocate for registered offenders, but wants to see the county take action to prevent sexual crimes by education and strengthening its child protective services unit, which he said has suffered budget cuts. "If there's money to be spent, that's where the county should spend it."
The bill authorizes a new contract with Parents for Megan's Law, a private nonprofit organization, of up to $900,000 per year for three years.
- This is a major conflict of interest. This is like letting identity thieves guard peoples identities.
Under the terms of the legislation, the group is to enhance its website and email notification system, improve community reporting of violators, develop a smart phone app for community reporting and make home visits to verify, twice a year, the residence addresses listed in the state registry for all of Suffolk County's registered sex offenders. The group will also compile a database of employment addresses for the county's level 3 offenders.
The bill also requires the group to conduct "community outreach and education" for the purpose of preventing sexual crimes.
02/06/2013
By DENISE CIVILETTI
Legislation establishing a new monitoring and enforcement program for Suffolk's registered sex offenders — ending the use of the trailers in Riverside and Westhampton — sailed through the county legislature Tuesday.
The measure won the unanimous approval of legislators present, in a 15-0 by acclamation, despite the reservations of some lawmakers that the bill, which hadn't been delivered to the legislature in final form until 12:30 that afternoon, had not been properly vetted.
Legis. Jay Schneiderman (I-Montauk) who had fought a losing battle with fellow lawmakers and the Levy administration to get the trailers removed, called the new plan "by far the best opportunity we've had to get the trailers closed down since this nightmare began." He said he believed yesterday's action means the trailers will be closed "in a matter of months."
County Executive Steve Bellone, who last May promised to have the trailers closed by the end of 2012, worked very hard to secure support for the new plan in the legislature, Schneiderman said. But the South Fork legislator, whose district encompasses both the Riverside and Westhampton hamlets where the county department of social services trailers are place, did not expect it to be unanimous. His face lit up with a grin as his colleagues seated around the horseshoe in the crowded legislative auditorium one by one expressed support.
"It's very gratifying after all this time to finally have a solution that's not only promising for the whole county but a big win for the East End," Southampton Town Councilwoman Bridget Fleming said after the vote. Fleming, fellow councilman Chris Nuzzi and Southampton Town Supervisor all attended the meeting and spoke in support of the bill at the hearing.
Riverhead assessor Mason Haas, a Jamesport resident who's been an outspoken opponent of the trailer in Riverside since 2006, also spoke in support of the measure at the hearing. Haas said he was speaking as a representative of the Riverhead Town Board, which had its regular semi-monthly meeting that afternoon in Riverhead and did not make the trip to Hauppauge.
A contingent of Riverhead and Southampton residents filled the auditorium. Many spoke in support of the bill, focusing on its language requiring "no more than one hard to place individual shall be placed at any location and to the extent practicable, clustering in any one community should be avoided."
Civic leaders from other parts of Suffolk asked the legislature to slow down and send the bill to committee for deliberation.
Sandra Thomas of Wheatley Heights complained about the lack of community input and said she believed, despite language about avoiding "clustering" of homeless registered sex offenders, it was unavoidable.
"There are not enough single men's shelters" in the county to have one offender per shelter, as has been discussed, Thomas said. Housing multiple offenders in a single shelter is unavoidable, she said. And minority communities are bound to bear a greater burden, she said.
"Minority communities and comminuties of color that already bear a lot of social ills are going to bear even more," Thomas said.
Alice Cone, of West Babylon, president of Belmont Lake Civic Association, said minority communities "are already overwhelmed with group homes, homeless shelters, and halfway houses...and cannot absorb any more."
Bayview Pines resident Carl Iacone said his "diversified" community of Flanders has "just as many homeless shelters and group homes."
"There is a cluster of sex offenders," Iacone said, "and it's in our neighborhood. Nobody on this board wants them. Nobody sitting in this audience wants them. Yet we've had them for six years," Iacone said. "Don't keep the whole burden on the people in the Flanders area."
- Get rid of the residency restrictions and most of the problem will go a way. The residency laws are what is creating the clustering in the first place.
The "Community Protection Act" was introduced yesterday by County Executive Steve Bellone, accompanied by a certificate of necessity asking the legislative body to consider it immediately, circumventing the normal legislative committee process.
"The Suffolk County Police Department has crafted the most comprehensive sex offender monitoring, verification and enforcement program in the nation in order to protect our families and this program should be implemented without delay," said the certificate of necessity signed by Deputy County Executive Jonathan Schneider.
- Why is he wanting to quickly push this through bypassing the process? Maybe to save his own reputation since he made promises years ago to shut them down?
Legislators John M. Kennedy (R-Nesconset) and Rick Montano (D-Brentwood) questioned the need for acting on the measure the same day it was introduced, without review, hearing and vote by the public safety committee. Suffolk Police Chief James Burke and Parents for Megan's Law executive director Laura Ahearn presented the plan to the Public Safety Committee on Thursday, but there was no legislation then pending — or, apparently, even drafted — at the time.
Amol Sinha, director fo the Suffolk Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union, during a public hearing , faulted the county for "the harried way this law is being pushed through the legislature," which he said was acting without taking adequate time for deliberation, debate and input from experts in sex offender management. Sinha said the new law is "grounded in misinformation about sexual assault and the context in which such crimes take place."
- Well, they've seen this current president and previous presidents bypass congress and hurry to get things pushed through, and we allow that to happen, so this is a slippery slope, and the more it's allowed, the more it will be used!
"The unfortunate reality is that most sexual violence is committed not by strangers, but by acquaintances and family members, most of whom are committing a crime for the first time. According to the Department of Justice, 85 percent of all sexual assaults are committed by someone known to the victim," Sinha said. "The New York Office of Sex Offender Management reports on its website that 94 percent of people arrested for sexual offenses in New York State had no prior conviction. That means that the overwhelming majority of people arrested for sexual crimes in New York are not subject to the types of notification and monitoring that the county is proposing, because they are committing a crime for the first time."
Bill O'Leary, a forensic therapist who works with registered sex offenders under contract with law enforcement agencies, including the departments of parole and probation, made the same argument to legislators during the public hearing. He said he also said the same things to the county executive and police chief.
"What is the number of sex crimes in Suffolk County committed by registered offenders?" O'Leary asked. "I can't get an answer to that." O'Leary said he is not an advocate for registered offenders, but wants to see the county take action to prevent sexual crimes by education and strengthening its child protective services unit, which he said has suffered budget cuts. "If there's money to be spent, that's where the county should spend it."
The bill authorizes a new contract with Parents for Megan's Law, a private nonprofit organization, of up to $900,000 per year for three years.
- This is a major conflict of interest. This is like letting identity thieves guard peoples identities.
Under the terms of the legislation, the group is to enhance its website and email notification system, improve community reporting of violators, develop a smart phone app for community reporting and make home visits to verify, twice a year, the residence addresses listed in the state registry for all of Suffolk County's registered sex offenders. The group will also compile a database of employment addresses for the county's level 3 offenders.
The bill also requires the group to conduct "community outreach and education" for the purpose of preventing sexual crimes.
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