 |
| photo:John Whipple |
Beyond the
Registry By
Rick Marshall
Keeping our communities safe from sex offenders
requires getting past the hysteria to solutions that really
work
‘It’s the worst thing that could happen. I hear on the
news that another sex offender has been arrested, and I start
thinking, ‘Please don’t be one of my guys.’ ”
Richard Scott, probation officer for Rensselaer
County’s 40-plus supervised sex offenders, looks down at the
small, wooden desk between us, runs a hand over his face and
crosses his arms. The moment has a sense of authenticity
missing from the standard, prepared statements that tend to be
issued in the wake of such news reports. After pausing for a
moment, Scott glances around the probation department’s
closet-sized interview room and continues.
“I know that if it’s one of my cases, I’ll wonder what
I didn’t do right. I’ll wonder if I should have made that
extra visit or how many more times I should have stopped in to
check on [the offender],” he says, his gaze drifting back to
the desktop again. “The thing is, I know I’m already out there
more often than the state says I should be, and I know I just
can’t be everywhere at once.”
Scott, like many professionals directly involved with
the management of sex offenders, is no stranger to the
Sisyphean frustrations of a job that few people envy and even
fewer understand. From prosecution and sentencing to treatment
and supervision, the system for handling sex offenses rarely
receives any attention until a tragedy occurs. However, in
casting such a selective eye at the process, much of the media
and the general public may be missing the most significant
tool for creating both safer communities and a more effective
system of justice: information.
‘Right now, the system just doesn’t work,” shrugs Lisa
Smith, director of the Sexual Assault and Crime Victims
Program for Rensselaer County. “What people don’t seem to
realize is that many [offenders] respond to treatment. They’re
not just throwaway people.”
Forensic psychologist Richard Hamill, one of the
state’s most noted professionals in the treatment of sex
offenders, echoes that sentiment. Hamill says he frequently
encounters misconceptions about offenders’ rates of recidivism
(lowest among all types of criminals), the effect of treatment
(anywhere from 8- to 50-percent reduction in reoffense rates,
depending on quality of treatment) and the merits of
reintegration (a stable home and job cuts reoffense rate by 10
to 30 percent)—even among trained professionals.
“The rates of reoffending are far lower than anyone
realizes,” explains Hamill. “Literally thousands of people
I’ve worked with have successfully integrated back into
communities and never been involved in any more
incidents.”
Like her peers, Smith says that a little information
could go a long way when it comes to making the system more
effective and making their jobs easier. And as someone whose
view of sex-offender management often occurs through the eyes
of victims, Smith’s perspective on the merits of the
reintegration system—and its persistent flaws—may be an
especially important voice in the call for new
solutions.
“Right now, the victims’ systems and offenders’ systems
are entirely separate entities, with everyone just charging
ahead to fulfill their responsibilities,” explains Smith.
“[The public] needs to know more about the system [of
sex-offender management] because they’re the ones that are
going to be chosen for juries. They need to know what the
myths are.”
While Megan’s Law and other federal legislation passed
during the mid-1990s established rules for registering
convicted sex offenders on a statewide database and notifying
communities when offenders changed residence, nearly 10 years
after their implementation, confusion still surrounds these
policies. From who should actually be on the list (and for how
long) to how much information the public should be given about
each type of offender, states are given a significant amount
of leeway in developing their own guidelines for managing
convicted sex offenders. This, combined with some states’
willingness to let their policies evolve while other states
(such as New York) have resisted such change, has created
dramatic differences in the way sexual crimes—and their
perpetrators—are handled across the nation.
“We had a fellow who was transferring here from
Washington,” remembers Hamill, who is the president of both
the New York State Alliance of Sex Offender Service Providers
and the New York State Chapter of the Association for the
Treatment of Sexual Abusers. “In Washington, he was a Level
1.” During their sentencing, offenders are assigned
risk-assessment level of 1, 2 or 3, with level 3 assigned to
those offenders judged most likely to reoffend. The amount of
information made available to the public, as well as the
amount of supervision and treatment required for offenders
upon their reentry into a community, rises according to the
level assigned to each offender. “When he arrived [in New
York], though, he suddenly became a Level 3,” says
Hamill.
This broad-brush approach to putting sex offenders in
the highest risk category has given New York some of the most
unique sex-offender demographics in the entire nation. While
Level 3 offenders constitute only 10 to 15 percent of most
states’ supervised sex offenders, more than 50 percent of the
sex offenders in New York have been assigned a Level 3
ranking.
According to Hamill, New York’s questionable
risk-assessment system, and not an affinity for the state
among high-level offenders, lies at the heart of this dramatic
difference. While other states employ more well-regarded and
widely used assessment tests such as the Minnesota
Sex-Offender Screening Tool or Canada’s Static-99, New York
relies upon its own test, the New York Risk Assessment
Guidelines.
But the NYRAG has become the focus of some harsh
criticism from both the government and professionals in recent
years. For one thing, many professionals say it relies on
factors that have no predictive value whatsoever. And a recent
analysis of the test by psychologists specializing in the
treatment of sex offenders has cast doubts upon some of its
assumptions. In one example, when assessing the risk of
reoffense for an offender who committed a crime via a
professional relationship (i.e., teacher and student or doctor
and patient), the NYRAG assumes that the offender entered that
career with the sole intent of preying upon the individuals
under his or her care. Hamill says that while this does
happen, it is not common—most sex offenses are not so
premediated.
In a recent newsletter issued by the NYSASOSP and
NYSATSA, the inadequacies of the NYRAG are discussed in
detail, with a final conclusion that “neither the reliability
of the New York Risk Assessment Guidelines, nor its validity
appears to have been scientifically examined or
substantiated.”
While the methods for assessing offenders’ threat have
caused headaches among professionals, the public’s awareness
of the types of crimes labeled “sex offense” has become
equally rife with confusion. Though much of the media seem
content with using the terms “sex offender” and “child
molester” as if they were interchangeable, they are not. While
pedophiles are the targets of most media attention, officials’
statements and legislation, they aren’t the only individuals
subject to the state’s standard 10-year inclusion on the
registry upon conviction of a sex crime.
“People talk about the [sex offender] registry as if
it’s this master list of child molesters,” says Smith, who
says she frequently reminds people that “ not every sex
offender chooses a child victim.”
Along with the high population of registry inhabitants
who sexually assault adults, low-level offenders like voyeurs
and people who expose themselves in public occupy a
substantial niche in the state’s database. In fact, the
percentage of these type of offenders in the registry’s
overall population has risen in recent years as more district
attorneys’ offices have adopted policies preventing
individuals accused of a sex crime from pleading down to a
non-sex-related crime and thereby avoiding inclusion on the
registry.
Further complicating the issue are scenarios such as a
17-year-old boy caught engaging in a sexual relationship with
his 15-year-old girlfriend. According to state law, the boy
will likely find himself on the registry alongside peeping
toms and subway gropers and subject to the same home visits,
probation and treatment guidelines required for other
low-level offenders—a condition that provides interesting
context for proposals like Gov. George E. Pataki’s recent call
for lifelong registration for all sex offenders.
“What people don’t seem to realize is that Level 1
offenders get the same 10 years on the registry and the same
10 years on probation as someone who abused a 12-year-old
girl,” explains Scott. “As long as they’re on probation, I
have to check on [Level 1 offenders] every two weeks like the
state says, even though they might be someone who made a
onetime mistake—someone who met a girl in a bar that maybe
shouldn’t have been in that bar in the first place. That’s the
way it works.”
Some argue that the nature of the offenses warrants
placing all offenders under such a high level of supervision,
no matter the uncertainties regarding their actual level of
threat. While this might seem a reasonable theory, the
resources needed to implement such a policy have been
difficult to come by in recent years. With the public eye
often focused on the prosecution and sentencing of sex
offenders and little attention paid to what happens
afterwards—unless another crime occurs, that is—many counties’
post-adjudication resources are stretched thin. It’s a hard
sell to get funding for sex offenders when so many people are
fond of saying they should “stay in jail forever,” as Albany
County Legislator Shawn Morse did Monday.
Currently, few probation or parole agencies have more
than one person on staff with the specialized training
necessary for this type of intense supervision.
“I’ve got about 40 to 45 cases at a time,” says Scott,
the lone probation officer charged with monitoring Rensselaer
County’s sex offenders. “State guidelines say that 20 or 21
[offenders per probation officer] is ideal, but that’s never
going to happen.”
What makes Scott’s caseload even more formidable is the
routine—or lack thereof—such supervision requires. According
to Scott, state law requires that low-risk offenders receive,
at the very least, a weekly visit. For high-risk offenders,
however, Scott says he makes as many visits as time
allows—sometimes it’s just a quick check to make sure the
offender still lives where he or she claims to live, sometimes
it’s a thorough search of the offender’s garbage bags,
library, videotapes, ceiling tiles and every other nook and
cranny for anything that would violate the terms of their
probation, he says.
“It’s at least a two-hour process sometimes,” says
Scott. “That’s why these home visits are so difficult. . . .
If they have 40 books on a shelf, you have to go through every
one of them to make sure there aren’t any with the middles cut
out.”
According to Scott, criss-crossing Rensselaer County
from one sex offender’s home to the next while still trying to
mix up the timing of the visits keeps him on the road much of
the week.
In addition to the standard search routine, officers
like Scott have also had to consider the changing standard for
home technology in their visits, too. In order to account for
offenders’ Internet activities, Albany County Principal
Probation Officer Bill Connors recently spearheaded the
training of his officers in the use of Penguin Sleuth, a
disc-run program that can sift through a personal computer for
pictures, movies or text. The software allows Albany’s lone
specialized officer (the county’s 60-plus offenders are
currently divided between this officer and several others with
low-level offender experience) to simply insert a disc onto an
offender’s computer and conduct a digital search while the
physical one is underway.
“[The program] saves us a tremendous amount of time,”
explains Connors, “not only because we can have it run while
we conduct the rest of the visit, but because we don’t have to
bring the whole setup back to the office here and return it
again afterward.”
Possibly the most controversial—and least
understood—aspect of sex-offender management is the
reintegration of offenders into communities. While the
economic advantages of reintegration over longer incarceration
are clear—incarceration can cost two to three times more than
community supervision and treatment—the policies surrounding
this process are generally misunderstood by the
public.
One popular misconception is that inclusion on the
registry means supervision. In fact, very few of the
individuals listed on the sex-offender registry are actually
under any supervision at all. While every person convicted of
a sex crime after 1994 is included on the registry for some
period of time (10 years on average), post-release supervision
comes into the mix only when an offender volunteers for
treatment while incarcerated. Offenders who refuse treatment
and serve out their full sentence are still included on the
registry, but are not subject to any probation or parole
supervision.
According to many professionals working with sex
offenders, this scenario illustrates one of the most prominent
contradictions in sex-offender policy: Those people most in
need of supervision (i.e., who haven’t had treatment) often
aren’t the ones receiving it.
Earlier this year, sex-offender management made
headlines around the region as local residents—with a nudge
from local media—discovered four paroled sex offenders living
in a Malta motel. Faced with a public outcry over the
situation, town and county officials, along with the motel
owner, forced the offenders to move on to new lodgings.
“We don’t want a concentration,” reasoned Town
Supervisor David R. Meager in the days following the
discovery, echoing the sentiment of many town
residents.
Yet, as with most “not in my backyard” scenarios,
little thought was given to where the offenders would go.
While the county’s parole department probably will be saddled
with the task of finding them new homes, often such offenders
end up in the only lodging available to the recently released:
a homeless shelter.
While most shelters check new residents against the
sex-offender registry, the grouping of convicted sex offenders
with other shelter occupants—frequently homeless women and
children, sometimes fleeing domestic abuse—is an
oft-overlooked consequence of communities’ knee-jerk
reactions. And offenders who are homeless are much harder to
monitor properly.
“It’s certainly something we have to be alert to,” says
Ira Mandelker, executive director of the Homeless and
Travelers Aid Society.
The scenario in Malta serves to illustrate another
unintended—and unfortunate—consequence of misunderstood
policy, in that much of town residents’ complaints focused on
the concentration of sex offenders at the motel. Grouping
supervised sex offenders in one area is actually a common
practice for parole and probation departments around the
nation, as officers’ ability to check in on several offenders
at once rather than having to travel across the county for
each offender not only cuts down on travel expenses, but also
allows for more frequent visits.
In Syracuse, the parole department has been directing
convicted sex offenders to an apartment complex in the city’s
commercial district for several years now, resulting in nearly
30-percent occupancy by offenders. Placing offenders in the
building, which has cameras posted at each entrance and exit,
not only allows for easier policing by parole officers, but
also by fellow occupants. And in the 12 years the building has
been home to this controversial community, there hasn’t been a
single sex crime committed by one of its occupants.
“If you talk to parole officers, they’ll tell you they
prefer to have sex offenders clustered together,” says Hamill.
“It allows [the officers] to do a better job of keeping an eye
on the offenders.”
Still, among all of the difficulties inherent to
successful reintegration, one obstacle tends to receive more
echoes among professionals than any other: lack of
communication.
Whether it’s between different county agencies,
agencies in the same county or agencies and the public, when
the topic turns to sex crimes, lines of communication have a
nasty habit of getting crossed, say many of those involved
with managing offenders.
With this in mind, Hamill, Connors, and a host of other
local law-enforcement representatives, victim advocates,
prosecutors and treatment specialists established the Capital
District Coalition for Sex Offender Management in 1999. The
coalition’s purpose, according to members, is to bring
together not only the representatives from each aspect of
offender management—prosecution, investigation, supervision,
treatment and victim advocacy—but also each of five counties
around the Capital Region. Only by taking an in-this-together
approach, reasons Hamill, can the system work the way it’s
intended.
“One county is not big enough to do a truly good job
with [sex-offender management],” explains Hamill, who also
serves as CDCSOM’s project director. “[CDCSOM] is an
experiment. It’s intended to show exactly how much can get
done—and how much safer communities can be—when there’s a
regional approach.”
And with its mix of urban and rural environments, the
Capital Region seemed an entirely appropriate testing ground
for such a project, says Hamill. After securing a grant from
the U.S. Department of Justice in 2002, the CDCSOM project
began its two-year experiment in bringing together
professionals like Smith and Scott and the public they serve.
The success of this one-of-a-kind collaboration has, to
put it mildly, surprised even the coalition’s
members.
It was during a meeting earlier this year of CDCSOM’s
core group of representatives that members showed how they
could strip away the usual formalities and get right to the
heart of their issues:
As Project Coordinator Noel Thomas begins listing the
results of a survey, Hamill interjects, “Rather than going
through a list here, let’s stop and find out what’s catching
people’s attention.”
As with many of the group’s activities, there’s a
decidedly unbureaucratic feel to the assembly of prosecutors,
probation officers, victim advocates and other professionals.
Rather than meeting for meeting’s sake, many of the room’s
occupants appear eager to discuss the problems they’ve
encountered since they last met and—in possibly the most
unbureaucratic activity of all—find solutions.
When one member mentions a county policy in which no
sentence is handed down on a sex crime until the offender
undergoes a specialized evaluation, Hamill defers to
representatives of the various county prosecution and
probation agencies, asking if this is a policy they are all
operating under.
“I don’t know if our judges realize it’s an option,”
says Scott, while another attendee asks how such evaluations
are funded.
And the meetings continue as such, with each county’s
representatives describing the practices they’ve had success
with, the areas they’d like to improve and the situations that
are giving them trouble. These days, though, there’s a sense
of urgency in the group’s discussions, as the project is
funded only through the end of 2005 and there’s no certainty
that the coalition’s accomplishments thus far will be enough
to encourage renewal.
What is certain, however, is that great strides have
been made. The group recently contracted with a specialized
polygraph (lie detector) expert to provide services to all the
coalition members—a handy tool for determining whether they’re
being honest about their past and present activities. Having
someone on staff is saving counties money over out-sourcing
each time it’s needed.
The coalition also has provided training for town and
village magistrates in the handling of sex-related
misdemeanors (i.e., public lewdness and other noncontact
activities), in the hope of bringing every level of offender
management up to speed with current practices. Under Connors’
instruction, the various probation departments around the
region have begun training on Penguin Sleuth, while plans are
still underway to provide workshops for some of the region’s
oft-overlooked homes for offenders: the local juvenile
detention facilities.
The coalition also hopes to convince lawmakers of the
merits in using new technology like Global Positioning
Satellite units to keep tabs on high-level offenders (Albany
County passed a resolution supporting this on Monday) and push
for more liberal use of probation periods—lifetime, in some
cases—during the sentencing of such offenders. Keeping
high-risk offenders on probation—and, of course, having enough
funds to properly monitor them—would allow probation officers
to stop many incidents of recidivism before they happen, says
Hamill.
“You wouldn’t need [offenders] to commit a crime in
order to respond,” he says.
By keeping high-risk offenders on probation, legal
activities that occasionally precede reoffense (i.e.,
drinking, visiting a playground, etc.) could be made grounds
for violation of the offender’s terms of probation, explains
Hamill.
The most important of the coalition’s goals also seems
to be the one that has met with the most success: more
regional communication. Immeasurable as such an accomplishment
is, it tends to be the first thing members mention when
discussing the program’s value.
“If I know one of my guys is moving to Schenectady, now
I know I can just pick up the phone,” says Scott of the
working relationships the coalition has fostered between
counties. “In the past, it might take a judge two or three
months to sign a transfer order, and until that paperwork hit
my desk, [the offender] would be unsupervised.”
Although CDCSOM’s mem bers realize that the steps
they’re taking are simply one small part of a longer journey,
there’s a sincere sense of accomplishment among the various
agencies associated with the project. The next step, according
to Hamill, is bringing those accomplishments into the public
eye.
Amid all the recent headlines and hysteria, however,
generating public interest in anything related to sex
offenders that doesn’t advocate their complete removal from
society is a tough sell.
“We’ve talked about creating more publicity—so that
people know we’re out there and we’re trying to make the
system work better,” sighs Smith. “But whenever we hold
community forums or town-hall meetings, we rarely get a good
turnout. Sometimes it feels like people aren’t necessarily
ready to hear this information.”
Until they are, though, Hamill and other members of the
coalition insist that they’ll continue to look for ways to
solve the red-tape and revenue problems of sex-offender
management. They’re quick to point out, however, that the most
effective method for keeping your family and community safe
may be the actions you can take in your own home.
“To tell you the truth,” says Hamill, “I haven’t even
looked at the registry to see if there are any sex offenders
in my neighborhood. What I have done, is have a lot of
conversations with my family about what to do in different
situations. Just keeping the lines of communication open is
sometimes the most important safety measure you can
take.”
rmarshall@metroland.net
photocap:Knowledge is safety: CDCSOM's Noel Thomas
and Richard Hamill.
photocredit:Chris Shields
While stories involving both sex and crime can make
media providers salivate, the desire for eye-catching
headlines may be doing a disservice when it comes to giving
the public an accurate representation of the threat posed by
sex offenders. Here, we provide a brief summary of some facts
that tend to be glossed over, misrepresented or outright
ignored by mainstream coverage of sex-offender issues. This
information, along with other myth-versus-fact comparisons and
reference materials, can be found at the Web site for the
Center of Sex Offender Management, a project of the United
States Department of Justice
(http://www.csom.org/pubs/mythsfacts.html).
Strangers rarely commit sexual assaults.
Ninety percent of adult victims of sexual assault
had a prior relationship (family member, intimate or
acquaintance) with the offender.
In sexual offenses against children, the offender is
known to the family in 60 percent of the incidents involving
boys and 80 percent in those involving girls.
Not all sex offenders reoffend. In fact, sex offenders
are less likely to reoffend than other criminals.
Rates of reoffense vary among the types of sex
offenders. According to a 1998 study, 13 percent of child
molesters and 19 percent of rapists are reconvicted for sexual
offenses. However, 35 to 45 percent of these offenders are
reconvicted for non-sex offenses over a five-year period.
Another study determined that 9 percent of incest offenders
reoffend.
In contrast, a 1983 study found that 63 percent of
criminals incarcerated for non-sexual offenses were rearrested
for felonies or serious misdemeanors within three years of
their release.
Fewer sexual-offense crimes are happening each
year.
According to statistics from the FBI, the arrest
rate for all sexual offenses dropped 16 percent between 1993
and 1998.
Most sex offenders were not abused as children and
abused children do not automatically become sex
offenders.
Only 30 percent of adult sex offenders were sexually
abused as children. However, approximately 40 to 80 percent of
all juvenile sex offenders, who commit for 20 percent of all
rapes and 50 percent of all child molestations, were sexually
abused.
It’s not cheaper to keep sex offenders in
prison.
A single year of high-level supervision and
treatment in the community costs between $5,000 and $15,000
for each offender. A single year of incarceration, without
treatment, costs approximately $22,000 for a single
prisoner.
|