Sex Offenders living with children?!

This reporter thinks it’s not dangerous

Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - 05:51 PM Updated: 06:45 PM

The Ohio House of Representatives has recently passed legislation that makes it a case of neglect if a parent allows a sex offender to reside in the same home as children. This legislation needs to be passed by the Senate before it can become law.

A reporter (Margo Pierce) for a Cincinnatti based newspaper (City Beat)  was interviewing a woman (Jackie Sparling)who is a high ranking member of SoClear Media about the effects this law would have on sex offenders.

If you haven't heard before, SoClear Media is a radical group of sex offenders who will do anything to abolish the sex offender registry and other legislation dealing with sex offenders.

I offered Margo Pierce Women Against Sexual Predators opinion of the legislation so that she could have both side of the story for her article.

Margo Pierce intentionally misconstrued what WASP said to fit her own agenda- to defend sex offender rights.

here is my original letter to Margo:

 Dear Margo,
  
I have been informed that you will be interviewing Jackie Sparling concerning HB111. I am sure you would understand my concern about  you running a story about sex offenders living with children, and you only print the sex offenders side of the story.
 I would be willing to give WASP's opinion of the legislation, and even contact information for the parent who asked Rep. Collier to bring this legislation forward.

Tracy Golden

President
Ohio Chapter
WASP  
  
Her reply was this:

Dear Ms. Golden,

Thank you for your interest in my upcoming article. If you've read any of my work you know that I frequently review and analyze state legislation. I have some experience in this area and do not spare poorly written laws criticism, not matter how they are cloaked – helping the elderly, protecting children, saving jobs. Thoughtful analysis that attempts to extrapolate potential consequences (intended or otherwise) and the legality of the action are my primary goals.

Please do not make the mistaken and simplistic assumption that if I do not agree with the way a law is written that I support the opposing view (e.g. if I find this legislation lacking then I support allowing all sexual predators to roam free and victimize whomever they choose).
I support good public policy that is able to accomplish what is is designed to do and call law makes to task on sloppy, inn-conceived work.

If you could take some time to respond to a few questions that would be helpful. I can't make any guarantees about how much, if any, of your responses will be included simply because my word count is only 675 and my editor has final say.

My deadline is Friday, so I will need to you're your responses by noon tomorrow. If I don't hear from you I'll presume you aren't interested,

Best regards,
Margo Pierce

______________________

Her Questions: My answers in purple

How does this law make children any safer when child welfare agencies already have extensive rights to investigate even a hint of abuse and all of the people in any household where an accusation is made?

 
As everyone already knows, Child Welfare Agencies consistantly are poorly ran. Everytime I hear from a family who is having problems getting thier childs sexual abuser prosecuted is due to the lack of help and actual hinderance from Children Services. Unless there is DNA left in the child, many times they refuse to prosecute because they refuse to take the words of a child as true.
This law will make children safer because it will do what some parents lack to do, which is use common sense. You do not place your children in a home with a convicted felon who has a propensity to sexually abuse. We all know the staggering statistic that the over 90% of victims know thier attacker. It would be foolish to assume that this is not occuring in thier home.
From RAINN:

In 1995, local child protection service agencies identified 126,000 children who were victims of either substantiated or indicated sexual abuse.

  • Of these, 75% were girls.
  • Nearly 30% of child victims were between the age of 4 and 7.

93% of juvenile sexual assault victims know their attacker.

  • 34.2% of attackers were family members.
  • 58.7% were acquaintances.
  • Only 7% of the perpetrators were strangers to the victim.



The language for HB111 does not include any language that protects parents who are unaware of a former conviction in their guest's past – if the person lies, is not registered and therefore not on any list, etc. – so what recourse will these parents have to get their children back? What is going to be done to prevent the unnecessary trauma children will face being wrongly separated from their families?

 

Parents will have to prove to children services that they are no longer neglectful IE: remove the offender from the home.

They will not be wrongly seperated from thier families. They will be seperated for thier own protection until the sexual offender is removed from the home. You do not leave the fox in the chicken coop and hope that he leaves. First you protect the chickens, then remove the fox.

Your own analysis of this bill makes it clear that you expect many children to be removed form their homes. Why is there no funding included to pay for the added burden this will place on the already under-funded child welfare system?

 

I don't know if there will be a significant number of children affected due to the fact that most sex offenders are "loners" after release.

I did not write the legislation, so I don't know. This bill was mirrored after one in Florida.

As I'm sure you know, up to 95 percent of the victims of sexual abuse know their attackers – a parents, sibling, aunt, uncle, coach, teacher.
If incest is identified and reported, the families will never be allowed to reunite and heal under the threat of minor children being taken away when parents are charged with neglect. How does this help the child?

Are you serious? Most children do not want to "reunite" with someone who has raped or molested them. The farther away from thier abuser they are , the more safe they feel. If the childs parents still want to hang out with Uncle Joe who raped thier little girl, then they can go to his house and visit him, and leave thier child with a babysitter.

The goal of the child welfare system is to reunite families whenever possible – to help create healthy family environments – but this legislation will eliminate that possibility because any placement of the child back in the home will result in another charge of neglect if the offender is in the family. How can HB 111 be a protection for
children when you eliminate the possibility of returning to their biological families?

The possibility is not eliminated. The child can return home when it is offender free. The child cannot LIVE with a sex offender. If the family really felt that the offender was an important member of thier family, they would visit them. This law is not about keeping children out of the presence of all sex offenders  ~ it is about keeping KNOWN sexual abusers out of the homes with children. A child cannot dictate who they live with, but this law will at least keep sexual abusers out of thier homes. A child has a right to not be FORCED to live with thier abuser.



It is impossible to prevent a crime – if another person wants to commit a crime, they are going to do it. The most anyone can do is practice personal safety – if protecting children is what you want to do then why is there no provision for educating the public about how to practice personal safety related to sexual assault and identify the behaviors in children that are hiding the fact that they are being hurt? (When a child's parent is threatened by her attacker, the child does not tell so how is a parent.)

 

I'm sure you have heard , but the Gov. has decided to cut funding in those areas. I would love to see some type of legislation that makes this mandatory in schools.

I do not see any language in the bill that addresses false accusation – how is a family or parent supposed to defend themselves against this open-ended language and vindictiveness of others? Say an ex-husband doesn't like the man his ex-wife marries, so he makes an unfounded
accusation that subjects the children and the family to an unnecessary invasion of their privacy. (The number of false charges that occur in divorce situations alone make it impossible to say this kind of thing will not happen.)

This legislation only is geared towards convicted sex offenders, not "suspected".

Her response:

Dear Ms. Golden,

Thank you for taking time to respond to my questions. Just like everyone else, I have a boss and my editor is the one who makes all final decisions about what ends up in print.  As soon as the HB 111 review is up on line I'll forward a link so that you will be able to see what answers you provided are printed, poor grammar and all.

In the meantime, I am writing to remind you that your responses are all "on the record" and can be used in the article. You avoided directly answering a number of questions. made some broad and potentially inaccurate assumptions about the victims of sex crimes and misrepresent the truth of the potential repercussion of this legislation.

Best regards,
Margo

___________________________
Margo Pierce
Staff Writer, CityBeat
513.665.4700 Ext. 136
mpierce@citybeat.com

811 Race Street, Fifth Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202

www.citybeat.com

NICE HUH?

Her Article:

http://citybeat.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A145630

News: Background Checks for Houseguests
Ohioans might be at risk of losing their kids if they don't know a visitor's criminal history

BY Margo Pierce | Posted 07/16/2008

A friend from another state spends a few nights in your home. One morning before he leaves, a social worker shows up on your doorstep with a cop telling you that she's there to remove your children pending an investigation of an anonymous allegation of negligence.

If convicted of child endangerment, you could lose custody of your children. Permanently.

Sound like a bad made-for-TV-movie? It's a real-life scenario that will play out all over Ohio if House Bill 111, already passed by the Ohio House, moves out of a Senate committee and is voted into law by legislators.

The brief summary provided by the bill's author, State Rep. Thom Collier (R-Mount Vernon), states that the law will in part "expand the definition of neglected child to include a child whose parent, guardian or custodian knowingly allows certain sexually oriented offenders or child-victim offenders to reside in the same residence as that child."

If you're not aware of a houseguest's conviction on a sex-related crime, your children could be defined as  "neglected." Can't prove you didn't "knowingly" allow this to happen? You're going to be in deep, because anyone could make an anonymous call to the Ohio Department of Job & Family Services (JFS) and start an investigation.

One of the many problems with this law -- beyond unnecessary trauma for children who aren't at risk and debates over wrongful convictions -- is that it's redundant. JFS already has the power to launch investigations of parents; all they need is a suggestion of abuse, according to Jackie Sparling, administrative assistant for the Sex Offender Support and Education Network.

Sparling is a child-victim of molestation at the hands of a family member. She passionately believes that former offenders have the right to a second chance.

Sparling says that most individuals on the Ohio electronic sex offender registry are male and many have children. She says HB111 all but guarantees that former sex offenders will be prohibited from living with and therefore parenting their own children.

"Case workers are human beings," she says. "Human beings come with their own set of prejudices. ... They're going to go in (to home investigations) with a preconceived notion ... and I fear happy, healthy, well-adjusted children are going to be taken out of perfectly fine and wonderful homes ... and put into foster care."

The potential for false accusations and botched investigations is something Tracy Golden, president of the Ohio chapter of Women Against Sexual Predators, avoids addressing. When asked to comment about the potential harm done to children and families when false accusations of abuse are made, she doesn't respond. She does point out problems within the agencies as proof this law is necessary.

"As everyone already knows, child welfare agencies consistently are poorly run," Golden says. "Every time I hear from a family who is having problems getting their child's sexual abuser prosecuted (it's) due to the lack of help and actual hindrance from Family Services. Unless there is DNA left in the child, many times they refuse to prosecute because they refuse to take the words of a child as true.

"This law will make children safer because it will do what some parents lack to do, which is use common sense. You do not place your children in a home with a convicted felon who has a propensity to sexually abuse. We all know the staggering statistic that the over 90 percent of victims know their attacker. It would be foolish to assume that this is not occurring in their home."

Golden says children won't be taken from a safe home environment as a result of HB111.

"They will not be wrongly separated from their families," she says. "They will be separated for their own protection until the sexual offender is removed from the home. You do not leave the fox in the chicken coop and hope that he leaves. First you protect the chickens, then remove the fox."

Aside from providing no evidence to support her claims about JFS obstructing investigations, Golden's logic is flawed. She assumes that any person convicted of any sex crime is a risk to a child.

The nature of the mental health issues that cause people to act out sexually aren't all the same (see "Postcards from the Edge," issue of Jan. 12, 2005). Portraying people convicted of any sex crime as out to molest children and a guaranteed repeat offender isn't helping children or anyone else, according to Sparling.

"There are about 600,000 people in the national registry," she says. "According to the Department of Justice, only about 5.3 percent are people you'd really want to know if they were your neighbor -- they are of the predator caliber. The rest of them are paying for that 5.3 percent.

"Ninety five percent of all new sex crimes are committed by people who are not on that registry. So tell me, what good is it? It's a public gallows. It's a shaming tool. We should know from past history that it does not work."

One of the things that concerns Katherine Blacksmith (not her real name) of Northern Ohio is the "false sense of security" laws like HB111 give the general public. She believes the money spent on registries and enforcing laws that prohibit former offenders from living within 1,000 feet of a school perpetuate a "lie" that children are safe from sexual abuse if these laws are enforced.

After working with former offenders for five years, Blacksmith says that most people still aren't aware that most offenders know their victims.

"It's a false sense of security because ... it's normally someone that's close to the victim," she says. " 'Stranger danger,' are there those icky pedophiles out there? Yes. But they make up such a minute part of the population and yet everybody is being classified as being that dangerous."

Now married to a former sex offender who committed his crime more than 25 years ago, Blacksmith says the stigma is an added punishment but the laws on top of that make it difficult to move on.

"We have the worst of the worst case here with my husband," she says. "What I find very disturbing is that he spent over 19 years in prison. He received treatment. He got a very good job since he got out. He's getting on with his life. He has remorse. He doesn't blame anyone else for what he did, and yet he's going to be persecuted for life."

Unwilling to subject his victim to potential publicity participating in an interview could bring, Blacksmith and her husband decided to remain anonymous. They want to live their life together with their daughter, who's a toddler, and that's what they're trying to do despite his requirement to register for life as a sex offender.

"My husband is a lot of things: He's a husband, a father, a Viet Nam veteran," Blacksmith says. "He had a great naval career, he's a hard worker, he's a friend. He's somebody's uncle, cousin. But sex offender still remains. ... Does that ever go away?"

HB111 additionally mandates that former sex offenders can't change their name or they'll face fraud charges. It also contains outdated language -- the passage of Senate Bill 10 last year changes all of the offender categories -- and includes an exception for an offender who's a juvenile in order to allow families to deal with problems related to incest when the offender is under age and a blood relative.

 

Did you notice that they focus entirely on the fact that most abusers are known to the child
*THE VERY REASON for this bill that they now deny a need for

Now does that seem like a fair story?

I didn't think so.......

so I decided to write the editor of the paper, John Fox

My Letter..........

Dear Mr. Fox,

 
I am writing in complaint of the article recently published about HB111. I contacted Margo when I learned through the sex offender support forums that she was writing an article against HB111, and was planning on asking one of the senior members of the sex offender support group for an interview (Jackie Sparling). I offered Margo my opinion on the legislation  so that she could get both sides of the story for her article.
 
Little was I aware that Margo seems to think that the sex offenders are the victims. I came to this conclusion after reviewing Margo's numerous articles on the subject of sex offenders and the legislation against them. In every article she quotes individuals from various groups that support sex offenders, or advocate for thier rights- yet she rarely interviews victims advocates about thier side. When she does, she makes them appear as if they are crazed lunatics.
 
I am assuming that Margo must have a sex offender in her family that she feels is getting a bad wrap, or else she would not be interviewing and siding with convicted felons, thier families, and the radical groups that they belong to.
 
SoClear Media- a group almost entirely consisting of child victim sex offenders and thier loved ones. Jackie Sparlin belongs to this group. Her husband tried to lure a 13 year old to his home to be his captive sex slave. Jackie feels that the public should not be aware of sex offenders and thier crimes http://www.wikisposure.com/SOclear_Media_Productions
 
Roar For Freedom- The founders (Betty Price) husband, convicted of sexual battery of a child under 12. One member wanted to start a "sex offender militia". He wanted to arm themselves, and he said that the media and polititcans would be thier targets because of all of the grief that they have caused sex offenders.
 
SOSEN-  The former leader Shirley Lowery believes that pedophiles are a natural part of society and even claimed that Jesus was a pedophile. She also claims that Jessica Lunsfords death was actually an assisted suicide by John Couey. They kicked Shirley out only after she started sabotaging her own group. The new leader Linda Pehrson, welcomed her husband back into her home after he was convicted of molesting her daughter, who is also still in the home. http://www.wikisposure.com/SOSEN
 
Most members of these groups are also members of the other groups. Many have signed this petition created by a NAMBLA member, that basically wants to abolish the sex offender registry, to eliminate the age of consent so that ANY child under 18 can legally consent, and any other law that may restrict sex offenders. http://www.wikisposure.com/Reform_Sex_Offender_Laws_Campaign
 
I could go on and on about the groups she has decided to associate your paper with supporting.
 
Not only that, she misleads the public as to the true consequences of the law. She falsely states that if someone spends the night at your home and they are a sex offender, your kids will be taken away.
 
The law as passed by the house states that if an convicted sex offender resides in a home with children, it is considered neglect. Residence refers to a place of adode that is more than merely temporary. (  http://definitions.uslegal.com/r/residence/ )
 
Then she posts the link to the legislation as it was INTRODUCED, not the link to what the bill was when it was passed - basically leaving out the amendments.
 
I have also attached below the copy of our correspondence. She was exceptionally rude without provocation other than she did not agree with my opinion. 
 
You will also see that she lied about me refusing to answer her questions. If I did not know, I stated so. And when she asked a question about false accusations, I corrected her, I did not refuse to answer. Only people convicted of a sex crime are considered. If you have pled guilty to or been convicted of a sex crime- that is not a false accusation, but a proven fact in the court of law.
 
I suggest you do something about Margo turning your newspaper into a sex offender advocacy "free for all". The vast majority of citizens believe that sex offender restrictions and legislation are important to keep our families safe. Your articles should be about what is important to your readers, not Margo.
 
Oh, and by the way- this is "on the record", as I will be posting this on various websites.
 
Best Regards,
Tracy Golden

 

If anyone feels the need to write the editor, or Margo

thier email as listed on the city beat website is

John Fox - Editor & Co-Publisher
e-mail:
jfox@citybeat.com

Margo Pierce - Staff Writer
e-mail:
mpierce@citybeat.com



Mandatory Sentences for online solicitation 

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Are you leaving your children alone in a room -- with strange men?

Police say you are -- if you are not monitoring them online.

A man who has been behind the law enforcement badge for nearly 30 years is spending his time behind his computer. But, on the other end of his messages is a predator who believes he's talking to a 14-year-old girl. And he is talking about sex, NBC 4's Colleen Marshall reported.

"I guess these predators have always been out there, but the Internet has given them an all new hunting ground," said Lt. Jeff Braley. "This guy is 35. I told him I was 15 and he says he's just looking for a little fun."

Within minutes of logging on, pretending to be teenage girls, Hamilton Township detectives are contacted by dozens of men who want to hook-up.

"I will say to you right now this has been the most eye-opening type of investigation I have ever been involved in," Braley said.

That investigation led to the Ohio Statehouse. While testifying at a hearing on a bill for mandatory penalties for online predators, Lt. Braley had to take a break -- to arrest a Columbus attorney.

Attorney Barry Mentser thought he was going to take a 15-year-old girl away from a field trip. He was willing to walk past state troopers into the statehouse to do it, Marshall reported.

The chance for sex -- outweighed the risk -- of being led through the statehouse in handcuffs, losing his wife, children, and law license.

From inside his office, Mentser sent pictures to Braley -- of his face and genitals.

Senator Tim Schaeffer is pushing Senate Bill 183 that would create mandatory penalties for online importuning.

"It's absolutely essential. We have virtually no deterrent in this state from soliciting these children on-line and then meeting them to commit crimes with them," Schaeffer said.

"They're naturally inquisitive about, you know, love and relationships and they put everything out there on the Internet," said Tracy Golden, a mother.

Golden is a mother turned activist, who testified in favor of tougher penalties for predators. She wants parents to wake up.

"They're leaving their child alone in a room with thousands of strange men," she said.

And what about Mentser? The man who solicited sex online -- believing he was talking to teenagers? The man willing to take a child from a field trip? He was sentenced to 30 days.

NBC 4 looked at the 54 importuning cases in Franklin County in the past two years. Of those 54, 45 didn't serve even a day in prison.

"They get a slap on the wrist and then within two weeks we see them back online under the same screen name in the same chat rooms. They've been ordered by the court to stay off the Internet, and who's going to enforce that?" Braley said.

No one, police say, unless and until the penalties are increased and become mandatory.

Senate Bill 183 would do just that: impose a one-year jail term for anyone convicted of felony importuning.

The bill has passed the Senate and is now in the House.

To push for action, contact your state representative or state senator.

To Contact Your State Rep.: Click here
To Contact your State Sen.: Click here

http://www.nbc4i.com/midwest/cmh/news.apx.-content-articles-CMH-2008-05-20-0028.html


First SASS Meeting
 
Sun, Feb 17, 2008. 05:19 PM
 
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Video Watch Video
 
By: Kelly Gilmartin
 
Local advocacy groups have joined together in an attempt to better serve victims of sexual assault.

Today the first annual Sexual Assault Advocate Summit took place at Papa Chuck's in Zanesville bringing together members of Response, Angels in Action, Citizens Against Sexually Oriented Offenders, Parents of Murdered Children and Women Against Sexual Predators.

"Today we are in an attempt with our bi-annual SASS meeting attempting to make a state registry of those who deal with people afflicted with domestic violence and sexual crimes," said L. Wilson, CASOO.

The groups are hoping that by pulling their resources together it will help them to complete their individual goals easier.

"We were tired of running into road blocks as far as getting help and assistance when it comes to victims of sexual assault and so forth, so we decided that we were going to help everybody help each other and form some bonds with some other groups," said Tracy Golden, WASP.

The newly formed group is planning to meet bi-annually in the spring and fall.
 
http://www.whiznews.com/article.php?articleId=20621
 
 



Sex offenders allowed near schools in Ohio

 

Ruling Allows Some Sex Offenders To Live Near Schools
Wednesday, Feb 20, 2008 - 04:30 PM Updated: 01:03 PM
By Denise Yost

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A new ruling will allow some sex offenders to keep living near your child's school.

"I stay my distance from kids. I don't put my hands on nobody," said David Slack, a registered sex offender.

Slack, like many other registered offenders, has been evicted from his home for living too close to schools.

Now, the Ohio Supreme Court says despite an Ohio law prohibiting it, certain offenders may continue living within the 1,000 feet restriction zone.

Tracy Golden, of Women Against Sexual Predators says she's shocked by the court's decision.

Gerry Porter had challenged the residency restriction after being evicted from his home of 14 years for a sexual battery offense. Now, he'll be moving back.

Some prosecutors are questioning the point of the law if it doesn't apply to all sex offenders.

According to the court, "Because the law was not expressly made retrospective, it doesn't apply to an offender who bought his home and committed his offense before the effective date of the statute."

http://www.nbc4i.com/midwest/cmh/news.apx.-content-articles-CMH-2008-02-20-0033.html





tougher registration requirements



Bill Would Create Mandatory Sentences For Online Predators
Sex offenders rally against laws
Sunday,  December 2, 2007 3:17 AM
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Sex offenders and their supporters ignored a booing crowd during a rally in front of the Statehouse yesterday to protest the toughening of Ohio's registration laws.

 Thomas Madison, a convicted sex offender from Oregon who founded a nonprofit group in defense of sex- offender rights, helped organize the nearly three-hour event. He told a crowd of about 50 supporters that sex-offender registration laws do the public no good, and that no one should feel any shame for standing up for what they believe in.

As 12 speakers took turns at the podium and decried Ohio's registry law, about 25 people gathered along High Street to represent the other side. They brought with them little sympathy.

Jessica Cherchio, 30, carried a handwritten sign: Cry me a river, sex offender.

"This sickens me, and I'm here because I'm not going to take this crap," said Cherchio, of Columbus. "They don't want to register any longer? Well, I think they all should register for life. I'm outraged they have any rights at all."

Madison said he chose Ohio for a "Silent No More" rally because the recently approved changes to this state's sex-offender registration requirements are unfair.

"The government cannot protect your children," he said. "Parents must do that."

To bring Ohio into compliance with a federal law, lawmakers and Gov. Ted Strickland approved changes this year to the classification, registration and notification requirements imposed on sex offenders. The changes, which take effect Jan. 1, will extend the required registration time for many offenders. A constitutional challenge to the law has been filed with the Ohio Supreme Court.

Cherchio said she was surprised that so many people showed up in support of Madison and his message. Currently, 16,316 registered sex offenders are listed on Ohio's electronic notification Web site.

Madison, despite writing in printed materials that he is required to register as a sex offender, is not listed on the Web site of offenders in the state of Oregon.

According to literature, a goal of his group is to dismantle publicly available sex-offender registries. Law-abiding citizens who have done their time should be left alone, he said.

One high-school sophomore from Paulding County in western Ohio agrees. Ali Metz, 16, has an older brother in jail, convicted of pandering sexually oriented material. His mother said he took pictures of his underage girlfriend.

Under Ohio's new classification system, Metz's brother must register with authorities for 15 years once out of jail. Metz defended him at the rally.

"The laws have to be changed so that people like him can live a normal life," she said. "All he did was fall in love with a girl."

hzachariah@dispatch.com

Booed by protesters, supporters say offenders who have done time should be left alone.


http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2007/12/02/THERALLY.ART_ART_12-02-07_B4_FF8L84F.html?type=rss&cat=&sid=101




Parents Testify In Support Of Senate Importuning Bill
 
Wednesday, Nov 07, 2007 - 05:10 PM 

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Some want tougher laws for offenders who attempt to solicit sex from kids on the web. 

Many parents want those convicted of importuning behind bars for longer periods of time, but others said that such legislation could be a mistake.

Local parents testified for Senate Bill 183 Wednesday, outraged at the lack of jail time most sex offenders in Ohio get for importuning or soliciting sex from kids online, NBC 4's Erin Tate reported.

Police said that they're frustrated, too. The Buckeye State Sheriffs' Association, the Fraternal Order of Police and Troopers for a Safer Ohio favor the legislation and mandatory minimum jail sentences for those convicted of the crime.

But many Ohio judges and prosecutors said that since there's no set jail time for those who actually have sex with kids, there shouldn't be for those who simply solicit the sex.

Often those charged with importuning are caught soliciting sex from an undercover cop, not necessarily a real child.

To some, that doesn't matter, Tate reported.

"When the police are doing their job and catching these guys, it's like a slap in face to parents who find out these predators… do not receive any punishment," Tracy Golden, a parent, said.

http://www.nbc4i.com/midwest/cmh/news.apx.-content-articles-CMH-2007-11-07-0024.html



Lawmakers Consider Harsher Penalties For Online Predators
 
Tuesday, Oct 09, 2007 - 05:22 PM Updated: 11:09 AM
 
http://www.nbc4i.com/midwest/cmh/news.apx.-content-articles-CMH-2007-10-09-0020.html

By Brad Pauquette

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Some lawmakers want to change the sentencing guidelines for importuning.

After one local police agency reported that suspects convicted of importuning rarely spend more than 24 hours in jail in Ohio, some lawmakers are attempting to toughen laws against online predators, NBC 4's Erin Tate reported.

One such suspect, Tim Rifenburg, allegedly had an elaborate plan to lure a 14-year-old Central Ohio girl to his home in New York, have sex with her and then hide her in his basement from his wife and kids. Police said that he sent her sexy underwear, a web camera and bus tickets, and arranged to meet her at the station.

However, his alleged victim never went because the teen Rifenburg thought he was chatting with was actually an undercover cop.

According to the FBI, Rifenburg faces a minimum of 10 to 15 years in prison if convicted on federal charges.

However, in Ohio, there's no mandatory minimum sentence for importuning.

Senate Bill 183 has proposed a 6 moth to 2 year mandatory sentence for the crime, depending on the age of the victim.

"This crime is essentially the same as walking into a bank with a mask on and a handgun in your hand and saying 'I'm here to rob a bank', but you don't actually rob it," Senator Tim Schaffer, a proponent of the bill, said.

According to Westerville Police, of 55 internet predators they have arrested, in most cases the suspects were sentenced to probation instead of prison time.

Tracy Golden, a sexual abuse survivor and stay-at-home mother, has organized a group to support legislation like Senate Bill 183.

"I got tired of being mad about it and decided to do something about it," she explained.

That's when she founded Women Against Sexual Predators, or WASP, which fights for harsher penalties for sex offenders.

Some judges and prosecutors, however, are not in favor of mandatory minimum sentences, Tate reported. So legislation like Senate Bill 183 will still have to fight to pass.

THIS BILL DID PASS!!!


MySpace gets the credit.... I did the work!
That's okay..... I still like the results!!!

Illinois MySpace Sex Offender Arrested On Child Porn / Child Sex Charges

Groundbreaking Investigation Stemmed From MySpace Information

August 31, 2007 -- Granite City – Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Madison County State’s Attorney Bill Mudge announced today that they have filed charges against a Granite City sex offender resulting from the Attorney General’s investigation into registered sex offenders with MySpace profiles. The charges were filed today in Madison County Circuit Court and stemmed from the subpoenas issued earlier this year by 31 attorneys general to MySpace, a popular social networking site.

Carl Courtright of Granite City was arrested today by the Granite City Police Department and charged with one count of solicitation of Child Pornography (Class 1 Felony), eleven counts of production of Child Pornography (Class 1 Felony), two counts of Aggravated Sexual Abuse (Class 2 Felony) and 12 counts of possession of Child Pornography (Class 3 Felony). The charges allege that Courtright not only possessed child pornography, but also was actively involved in the production of pornographic images.

Investigators with the Attorney General’s High Tech Crimes Bureau used IP address information received from MySpace to determine that Courtright had been actively trading child pornography over the Internet. The Attorney General’s investigators worked with officials from the Granite City Police Department, the Madison County Sheriff’s Office and the Madison County State’s Attorney’s office to obtain a search warrant to seize Courtright’s computer equipment and recovered the evidence needed to file charges today. A computer’s Internet protocol (IP) address is a unique set of numbers that are assigned to a computer as it transmits information on the Internet.

“Child predators who think they are safe hiding behind a computer screen are no longer anonymous,” said Attorney General Madigan. “We have the technology and we are committed to using all of our resources to seek them out and hold them accountable for their crimes.”

“I commend Attorney General Lisa Madigan for pursuing Internet predators that target our children online,” States Attorney Mudge stated. “Her initiatives are consistent with the policy of my office of bringing these perpetrators to justice in the effort to keep our children safe.”

Based on these charges, Courtright faces the following possible penalties:
Class 1 felony: 4-15 years in prison;
Class 2 felony: 3-7 years in prison; and
Class 3 felony: 1-5 years.

Cartwright is currently being held on $250,000 bond at the Madison County Jail in Edwardsville. The public is reminded that these charges are merely accusations. The defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Today’s charges against Courtright are the first child pornography charges to result from the investigations stemming from the MySpace subpoenas. To date, information provided by MySpace to the Attorney General’s office earlier this year has proved to be a useful tool for enforcing sex offender registration laws and parole restrictions, revealing sex offenders who had failed to comply with mandatory registration requirements, exposing those sex offenders subject to parole restrictions, and resulting in some parolees being sent back to prison for parole violations. Attorney General Madigan’s High Tech Crimes investigators – in coordination with the office’s Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force – have taken the lead nationwide on using IP address information for investigating sex crimes on the Internet.

“According to law enforcement reports over the past two years, more than 56,000 individual IP addresses engaged in some form of trading or distribution of child pornography within the State of Illinois,” said Madigan. “Based on this number, there is ample evidence to suggest that trading and distributing child pornography over the Internet is reaching epidemic proportions. Based on this information, we are increasing our efforts to track child pornographers.”

The Attorney General's office, through a grant from the Department of Justice, operates the Illinois Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force (ICAC), one of 46 such task forces across the nation designed to investigate child exploitation crimes and deliver Internet safety education. Illinois' ICAC officers are responsible for the arrest of 104 child predators and have trained 36,500 parents and children on Internet safety. This year to date, the task force has conducted 25 training sessions attended by approximately 800 law enforcement officers and prosecutors and has conducted 96 Internet safety presentations for approximately 14,000 parents, teachers and students.

Source: Illinois Attorney General





Here is an article about a sex offender whom W.A.S.P. reported to the Illinois Attorney General which resulted in his removal from MySpace.



Posted on Sun, Aug. 19, 2007
 


Pastor who is sex offender loses his MySpace page

State pressure sputs removal from Web site

BY BRIAN BRUEGGEMANN
News-Democrat  

Who can your kids meet on MySpace?

People like self-styled Pastor Carl Courtright, registered sex offender.

MySpace, a social networking Web site popular with youth, recently took down Courtright's Web page after the state attorney general's office asked MySpace to turn over the identities of any Illinois registered sex offenders who have MySpace pages.

Courtright, of Granite City, thinks his rights have been violated. He said he put a warning on his MySpace page stating he's a registered sex offender, and that he took steps to block minors from accessing it.

"I felt it was a violation of freedom of speech, everything that this country's founded on," Courtright said. "I wasn't trying to be like some of the perverts out there."

Police searched Courtright's home recently and seized a vast array of powerful computer equipment and other items. A police affidavit that was filed for a search warrant states that in December, Courtright's Internet Protocol address was used to offer for trade on the Internet pornographic images of girls -- some who appear to be younger than 8.

Courtright, 35, denied that he offered child pornography via the Internet, saying he had loaned one of his computers to a convict he was counseling. No charges have been filed against Courtright since the search of his home Aug. 9. Granite City Detective Kenneth Wojtowicz said his department and other agencies, including the FBI, are conducting an investigation.

Courtright said he is the pastor of Truth of God Ministries, which he said helps convicts and the homeless, does "a lot of witnessing online" and is run by "me and other volunteers." The ministry, which has a post office box but no building, seeks donations through its Web site, www.truthofgodministries.org, but Courtright said it receives only "five dollars here or five dollars there."

Courtright said he set up a MySpace page to stay in contact with his three stepdaughters in Louisiana.

"That was a very cheap, easy and efficient way to have contact with them, constantly," he said. "I could literally talk to them every night."

In May, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan asked MySpace for the identities of any Illinois registered sex offenders who had MySpace pages. Since then, MySpace has turned over the identities of 1,809 Illinoisans and taken down their Web pages.

According to the affidavit for the search warrant, police learned about Courtright's MySpace page through Madigan's request, then began investigating his Internet Protocol address -- a unique set of numbers that identifies a computer on the Internet.

Courtright said he activated a tool on his MySpace page that blocked access to it by any MySpace users 18 or younger. But he agreed that a minor could still get access to it, for example, by using a parent's computer or giving a fake age when the minor signed up for MySpace. He said he understands why some people wouldn't want him to have a MySpace page.

"I understand the logic, which is why I purposefully disclosed who I was on my MySpace page," he said. "I red-flagged myself."

Courtright said the page contained a single picture of himself and little else.

The gear seized from Courtright includes four computers and several external hard drives, some of which have a terabyte of storage capacity. It would take about 1,000 budget-model desktop computers to have a terabyte of storage.

Courtright said he was making copies of legal movies -- he estimated up to 500 of them.

Robyn Ziegler, a spokeswoman for Madigan, said she can't comment on pending investigations. She said the attorney general's office requested the names of sex offenders with MySpace pages to determine whether they're violating any provisions of their parole or probation by being on the Web site.

As for whether any rights are being violated, Ziegler said: "We didn't kick anybody off MySpace. MySpace voluntarily removed the profiles of the sex offenders from their site."

MySpace representatives did not return a message seeking comment.

Madigan, in a prepared statement she issued in July about why she requested the information from MySpace, said: "I am very concerned that sex offenders are using popular Internet sites, like MySpace, to gain access to children. We must take every possible step to make it clear to sex offenders that they cannot hide in cyberspace and continue to target our children."

Other items seized from Courtright's home include equipment to make identification cards and a DVD of the "Dateline NBC" show "To Catch a Predator," in which people are lured into a home after having contact online with a person they believe to be a minor interested in a sexual encounter. 

Courtright said he made identification cards for his employees when he owned a swimming-pool company, and he enjoys the Dateline show.

"Watching these idiots walk in, I find it entertaining," Courtright said. "They used to make me go to groups with those, I call them, freaks."

Courtright was charged in 1999 with child pornography and sexual assault. He was accused of molesting two girls and photographing one of them having sex with his roommate. He pleaded guilty to reduced charges and was placed on probation for three years. Courtright said he was innocent but pleaded guilty at the advice of his lawyer.

Contact reporter Brian Brueggemann at bbrueggemann@bnd.com or 692-9481.


Group Warning Schools About Nearby Sexual Offenders 
Monday, Jan 29, 2007 - 
06:47 PM Erin Tate Reporter 

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A local mother has decided to take a proactive approach when it comes to protecting children from convicted sexual offenders. 
The woman, a recovering rape victim and mother to three children, formed Women Against Sexual Predators (WASP) – a group that wants to remove convicted sex offenders who break state law by living within 1000 feet of a school, NBC 4's Erin Tate reported. 
"I'm tired of being angry about it," she said. "I'm going to do something about it." 
Using a Web site that locates sexual offenders, she categorized sexual offenders by the types of crimes they had committed, Tate reported. 
Then she wrote letters to more than 100 schools that are located near the addresses registered to offenders. One of those schools is Ohio Avenue Elementary.
 "(It has) 71 (offenders) within a half mile and 9 within 1000 feet," the woman said. "It is a concern. I know the Sheriff's Office has a huge problem keeping up with them. They need more funding and more people." Until a letter from WASP arrived, officials at Capitol City Academy near downtown Columbus were unaware of the eight registered sex offenders living nearby. 
"It is something we have to be aware of and be a good neighbor and help each other out," said Capitol City Academy director Tara VanderWerf –Meyerink. 
WASP's founder said she only wants to help authorities protect kids by doing what she can. "I just want to help," she said. "Mom's and Dads: please start teaching your kids today." 
Stay with NBC 4 and refresh nbc4i.com for additional information.


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