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Wikipedia

Sex offender

A sex offender (sexual offender, sex abuser, or sexual abuser) is a person who has committed a sex crime. What constitutes a sex crime differs by culture and legal jurisdiction. The majority of convicted sex offenders have convictions for crimes of a sexual nature; however, some sex offenders have simply violated a law contained in a sexual category. Some of the serious crimes which usually result in a mandatory sex-offender classification are sexual assault, statutory rape, bestiality, child sexual abuse, incest, rape, and sexual imposition.

Sex offender registration laws in the United States may also classify less serious offenses as sexual offenses requiring sex offender registration. In some states public urination, having sex on a beach,[1] or unlawful imprisonment of a minor also constitute sexual offenses requiring registration.[2][3]

Overview

In looking at various types of offenses, an example of a digital obscenity offense is child pornography. In the modern world of technology, many jurisdictions are reforming their laws to prevent the over-prosecution of sex offenders and focusing on crimes involving a victim. The term sexual predator is often used to describe a sex offender or any of the "tier offenders"; however, only the category just below sexually violent sexual predator is reserved for a severe or repeated sex offender: sexual predator.

In the United States, the Adam Walsh Act (AWA) proposed to provide funding to each jurisdiction which would agree to incorporate its Act into their law. In the few jurisdictions accepting the agreement, there are Tier I, Tier II, or Tier III sex offenders. Individuals convicted of petty crimes not covered by the AWA are still liable to abide by the previous regulations denoting them as a sex offender (or habitual sex offender, sexual predator, sexually violent sexual predator, or child-victim offender).

In the United States, the United Kingdom, and other countries, a convicted sex offender is often required to register with the respective jurisdiction's sex offender registry. In the U.S., registry databases are often open to the public. Sexual offenders are sometimes classified by level.[4] The highest-level offenders generally must register for their entire lives; low-level offenders may only need to register for a period of time.

Recidivism

The level of recidivism in sexual offenders varies by surveys and by the types of sex offense.[5] Some surveys reported it is lower than is commonly believed.[6][7] However, according to the Office of Justice Programs (OJP) of the United States Department of Justice, observed recidivism rates of sex offenders are underestimated of actual reoffending.[5] This is due to reasons such as the frequency with which sex crimes are not reported to police, the disparity between the number of sex offenses reported and those solved by arrest, and the disproportionate attrition of certain sex offenses and sex offenders within the criminal justice system. For example, Grotpeter and Elliot (2002) found that only 2.5 % of sexual assaults and 10 % of serious sexual assaults resulted in an arrest.[8]

A 2002 study by the OJP following 9,691 male sex offenders released from prisons in 15 US states in 1994 indicated that within the first 3 years following their release, rearrest and reconviction rates for new sex offenses were 5.3 and 3.5 percent, respectively; that is, about 1 in 19 of released sex offenders were arrested within three years for another sex crime. The same study found that during the same 3 years from release, 68 percent of released non-sex offenders were re-arrested for any crime (and 47.8 percent reconvicted), while 43 percent of the released sex offenders were rearrested for any crime (and 24 percent reconvicted).[9]

According to the OJP,[10] the recidivism rate for sex offenders has been shown to be lower than any other crime except murder in New York State. Another report from the OJP which studied the recidivism of prisoners released in 1994 in 15 states (accounting for two-thirds of all prisoners released in the United States that year) reached the same conclusion.[11]

Of released sex offenders who allegedly committed another sex crime, 40 percent perpetrated the new offense within a year or less from their prison discharge. Within three years of release, 2.5 percent of released rapists were rearrested for another rape, and 1.2 percent of those who had served time for homicide were arrested for a new homicide. Sex offenders were about four times more likely than non-sex offenders to be arrested for another sex crime after their discharge from prison (5.3 percent of sex offenders, versus 1.3 percent of non-sex offenders). In 1991, an estimated 24 percent of those serving time for rape and 19 percent of those serving time for sexual assault had been on probation (or parole) at the time of the offense for which they were in state prison.[9]

Approximately 4,300 child molesters were released from prisons in 15 U.S. states in 1994. An estimated 3.3 percent of these 4,300 were rearrested for another sex crime against a child within 3 years of release from prison. Among child molesters released from prison in 1994, 60 percent had been in prison for molesting a child 13 years old or younger. The median age of victims of those imprisoned for sexual assault was less than 13 years old; the median age of rape victims was about 22 years. Child molesters were, on average, five years older than violent offenders who committed their crimes against adults. Nearly 25 percent of child molesters were age 40 or older, but about 10 percent of inmates with adult victims were in that age group.[9]

The recidivism rate for chikans and voyeurs is considerably higher than for other sex offenses, according to the Crime White Paper 2015 published by the Ministry of Justice of Japan.[12] The survey reported 85.0% of the molesters and 64.9% of the voyeurs had a prior conviction for a sex offense.

Risk Assessment

Various methods can be used to assess individual sex offenders' recidivism risk. Some risk assessment tools consider factors that have been empirically linked by research to sexual recidivism risk. These factors include biological and demographic markers, criminogenic correlates, behavioral and developmental indicators, and clinical markers that have been shown to be associated with reoffending.[13] However, the quality of the studies that link various factors to sexual recidivism risk vary widely in terms of methodological rigor. For example, some studies link certain factors to sexual recidivism risk through clinical anecdotal evidence, which are sometimes criticized as less methodologically rigorous than other studies have used empirical approaches, including experimental methods.[13]

There are at least four classifications of structured sexual recidivism risk assessment tools: empirical actuarial, mechanical, adjusted actuarial, and structured professional judgement.[14][15] Of these classifications, empirical actuarial tools are the most methodologically rigorous because they contain explicit empirical risk factors, defined in advance, that are combined mechanically using explicitly defined guidelines into a score or risk category, and then linked to a recidivism probability estimate. Structured professional judgement (SPJ) tools are among the least methodologically rigorous risk assessment tools, because these tools specify items to be considered, and ultimately the clinician subjectively integrates the factors to reach assessment conclusions like "low," "moderate," or "high" risk.[14][15] Furthermore, clinicians may also use unstructured sexual recidivism risk assessments, where they do not use any structured guidelines to aid in their risk assessment.[15]

Researchers and practitioners consider some factors as "static", in that they do not change with time, such as number of prior sex offenses, victim gender, and deviant sexual arousal, and some other factors as "dynamic", such as an offender's compliance with supervision and treatment.[16] By examining both types of factors, a more complete picture of the offender's risk can emerge, compared with static or dynamic factors used alone.

There is no single assessment tool that clinicians must use for assessing sexual recidivism risk, but there are tools that are widely used, such as the Static-99R.[13][17] The Static-99R is the most popular actuarial scale in the United States.[13] The Static-99R is a 10-item scale for ranking a sex offender’s relative risk of sexual recidivism compared other offenders. This scale is based on demographic and criminal history data, for example, age at release and number of prior sex offenses.[13] Researchers have shown that the Static-99R is valid across a wide range of individuals (in terms of demographics, such as race/ethnicity). However, the Static-99R has only a modest ability to discriminate correctly between sex offenders and non sex offenders. This means that a randomly selected sex offender would be correctly classified as higher risk than a randomly selected non sex offender with "modest" accuracy. In addition, the Static-99R does not account for every factor that makes a sex offender more likely to reoffend.[13][17] Despite these shortcomings, the Static-99R is arguably the highest quality tool, in terms of methodological rigor, that is widely available to clinicians to assess sex offender risk of recidivism.[13][17]

Post-incarceration registries and restrictions

A sex offender registry is a system in place in a number of jurisdictions designed to allow authorities to keep track of the residence and activity of sex offenders (including those released from prison). In some jurisdictions (especially in the United States), information in the registry is made available to the public via a website or other means. In many jurisdictions, registered sex offenders are subject to additional restrictions (including housing). Those on parole (or probation) may be subject to restrictions not applicable to other parolees or probationers.[18] These include restrictions on being in the presence of minors, living in proximity to a school or daycare center, or owning toys (or other items of interest to minors). Israel's sex offender registry is accessible only to security officials, rather than to the general public.[19]

Megan's Law, in the U.S., is designed to sanction sex offenders and reduce their recidivism rate. The law is enacted and enforced on a state-by-state basis. Most states also restrict where convicted sex offenders can live after their release, prohibiting residency within a designated distance of schools and daycare centers (usually 1,000–2,000 feet (300–610 m)). Guided by the 2007 Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act, sex offenders must avoid such areas as schools, bus stops, gyms, recreation centers, playgrounds, parks, swimming pools, libraries, nursing homes, and places of worship by 500 to 2,500 feet (150 to 760 m). However, residence stipulations vary from state to state. Some states (such as Arkansas, Illinois, Washington and Idaho) do not require sex offenders to move from their residences if a forbidden facility is built or a law is enacted after the offender takes up residency. Many aspects of the laws are criticised by reformists and civil right groups like National RSOL[20] and Human Rights Watch,[21][22] and treatment professionals as Atsa.[23][24]

Committing to a residence requires a convicted sex offender to be notified of registration regulations by local law enforcement if convicted after January 1, 2005. The offender must act upon the notification within five business days of receipt. If and when an offender is released from incarceration, they must confirm their registration status within five business days. Registration data includes the offender's sex, height, weight, date of birth, identifying characteristics (if any), statutes violated, fingerprints and a current photograph. An offender's email addresses, chat room IDs and instant-messaging aliases must be surrendered to authorities. In Colorado, an offender must re-register when moving to a new address, changing their legal name, employment, volunteer activity, identifying information used online or enrollment status at a post-secondary educational institution. A web-based registration list may be found on county websites, which identifies adult convicted sex offenders who are sexually violent predators convicted of felony sexual acts, crimes of violence or failure to register as required. Legally, "any person who is a sexually violent predator and any person who is convicted as an adult...has a duty to register for the remainder of his or her natural life".[25] Exceptions to this include deferred sentencing for the offense or petition of the court for termination of registration.[26]

Some sex offenders are deemed too dangerous to society to be released, and are subjected to civil confinement — indefinite continuing incarceration, which is supposed to, but does not always, provide meaningful treatment to the offender.

Therapies and treatment

Behavior modification programs have been shown to reduce recidivism in sex offenders.[27] Often, such programs use principles of applied behavior analysis. Two such approaches from this line of research have promise. The first uses operant conditioning approaches (which use reward and punishment to train new behavior, such as problem-solving)[28] and the second uses respondent conditioning procedures, such as aversion therapy. Many of the behaviorism programs use covert sensitization[29] and/or odor aversion: both are forms of aversion therapy, which have had ethical challenges. Such programs are effective in lowering recidivism by 15–18 percent.[30] The use of aversion therapy remains controversial, and is an ethical issue related to the professional practice of behavior analysis.

In 2007, the Texas State Auditor released a report showing that sex offenders who completed the Texas Sex Offender Treatment Program (SOTP) were 61 percent less likely to commit a new crime.[31]

Chemical castration is used in some countries and U. S. states to treat male sex offenders. Unlike physical castration, it is reversible by stopping the medication. For male sex offenders with severe or extreme paraphilias, physical castration appears to be effective. It results in a 20-year re-offense rate of less than 2.3 percent (versus 80 percent in the untreated control group), according to a large 1963 study involving a total of 1036 sex offenders by the German researcher A. Langelüddeke.[32] This was much lower than otherwise expected, compared with overall sex offender recidivism rates. Although considered cruel and unusual punishment by many, physical castration does not otherwise affect the lifespan of men (compared with uncastrated men).[citation needed]

Controversy

It is argued that in the U.S., sex offenders have been selected as the new realization of moral panics about sex, stranger danger, and national paranoia, the new folk devils or boogeymen. People convicted of any sex crime are "transformed into a concept of evil, which is then personified as a group of faceless, terrifying, and predatory devils", who are, contrary to scientific evidence, perceived as a constant threat, habitually waiting for an opportunity to attack.[33] Consequently, sex offenders are brought up by media on Halloween, despite the fact that there has never been a recorded case of abduction or abuse by a registered sex offender on Halloween.[33]

Academics, treatment professionals,[23][34] and law reform groups such as National Association for Rational Sexual Offense Laws[35] and Women Against Registry[36] criticize current sex offender laws as based on media-driven moral panic and "public emotion", rather than a real attempt to protect society.[33][37][38][39][40][41] This can motivate legislators to pass knee-jerk laws[42] to address public hysteria, echoing a "populist punitiveness" perspective.[43] Many lawmakers feel that they will attract votes by appearing to be "tough on sex offenders".[44] One discrepancy pointed out by critics is that John Walsh, father of Adam Walsh and supporter of the Adam Walsh Act, has admitted having a relationship with a 16-year-old girl while being in his early 20s and aware of age of consent being 17 in New York,[45] meaning that, had he been convicted, John Walsh himself could be required to register as a sex offender. Since passage of the Adam Walsh Act, Walsh himself has criticized the law, stating "You can't paint sex offenders with a broad brush."[46]

Critics point out that contrary to media depictions, abductions by predatory offenders are very rare[47] and 93% of child sexual abuse is committed by someone the child knows: a family member, a family friend or someone in a position of authority.[48] According to the U.S. Department of Justice, sex offender recidivism is 5.3%,[49] the lowest for any type of crime except homicide.[50]

Critics say that, while originally aimed at the worst offenders, as a result of moral panic the laws have gone through series of amendments, many named after the victim of a highly publicized predatory offense, expanding the scope of the laws to low-level offenders, and treating them the same as predatory offenders, leading to the disproportionate punishment of being placed on a public sex offender registry, with the consequent restrictions on movement, employment, and housing.[36][47] As a result of this persistent media narrative of sex offenders, this panic is being preserved, leading legislators to make registration mandatory for all sex offences, without the possibility of judicial discretion for less dangerous offenders.[51][52]

See also

Articles

Laws

Monitoring, assessment, other

Offenders

  • Jeffrey Dahmer: American serial killer with 17 known victims. Many of his killings included sexual assaults.
  • Richard Allen Davis: Convicted of kidnapping, committing a lewd act on, and murdering Polly Klaas (see "Victims" section).
  • Josef Fritzl: An Austrian man who began sexually abusing his daughter Elisabeth in 1977 and kept her imprisoned in his home from 1984 until 2008. He repeatedly sexually abused and raped Elisabeth, resulting in the births of seven children and one miscarriage. One of the children died in infancy, and three were imprisoned along with Elisabeth until 2008.
  • Li Hao: Raped six women as sex slaves and murdered two of them in underground dungeon from 2009 to 2011. Li Hao was executed in 2014 via the death penalty.
  • Jesse Timmendequas: A registered sex offender who lured Megan Kanka (see "Victims" section) to his house and then raped and murdered her.
  • Peter Tobin: British criminal with a long record, including convictions for two rapes, who was convicted of the rape and murder of a female Polish student in 2007. After this conviction, he was found guilty of the murders of two teenage girls who disappeared in 1991, and has reportedly claimed to have killed more than 40 other people.
  • Ottis Toole: Serial killer who confessed to multiple murders and rapes; believed to be the killer of Adam Walsh (see "Victims" section).
  • Don Vito: American reality television personality convicted of groping two 12-year-old girls in 2007.
  • Ariel Castro: Suspect in the Kidnappings of Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, and Michelle Knight.
  • Chris Ortloff: Former New York Assemblyman and New York Parole Board member, sentenced August 9, 2010 to twelve years and six months in prison plus lifetime supervision and a US$50,000 fine, after pleading guilty to a federal felony charge of online enticement of minors.[53]
  • John Wayne Gacy: American serial killer who kidnapped, raped, tortured and murdered at least 33 young men and teenage boys.
  • Dean Corll: American serial killer with at least 28 victims in the Houston area known as Houston Mass Murders. All included sexual assaults.
  • Elmer Wayne Henley: American serial killer & accomplice of Dean Corll involved in the crimes known as Houston Mass Murders. All included sexual assaults.
  • André Boisclair: Canadian former politician who pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual assault on two young men.
  • Reynhard Sinaga: Indonesian student who was convicted of 159 sex offences, including 136 rapes of young men in Manchester, England, United Kingdom. Sinaga raped or sexually assaulted at least 206 men, mainly heterosexuals. He is considered to be the most prolific rapist in British legal history.[54]
  • Debra Lafave: School teacher who pleaded guilty to sexual assault on a student teenage boy.
  • Harvey Weinstein: Former film producer accused of sexual assault by more than 80 women. The allegations sparked the MeToo movement.
  • Jeffrey Epstein: Financier and serial sexual offender who was accused of sexually abusing numerous women and underage girls.
  • Ghislaine Maxwell: British socialite who trafficked women and underage girls to be sexually abused by Jeffrey Epstein and his associates.
  • John David Norman: American pedophile and sex trafficker known for his alleged ties to serial killers Dean Corll and John Wayne Gacy.
  • Brendan Smyth: Irish Catholic priest who sexually abused at least 143 children in Northern Ireland, Ireland and the United States.
  • Peter Scully: Australian pedophile accused of sexual assaults against 75 children in the Philippines.

Victims

  • Megan Kanka: raped and murdered by her neighbor, Jesse Timmendequas, in New Jersey in 1994. The murder attracted national attention and subsequently led to the introduction of "Megan's Law", which requires law enforcement to compile and make available to the public information on convicted sex offenders.
  • Polly Klaas: Kidnapped at age 12 from her California home in 1993. Richard Allen Davis, who had a criminal record dating to the late 1960s that included some sex crimes, was convicted of her murder.
  • Jessica Lunsford: Kidnapped at age 9 from her Florida home in 2005 and murdered by John Couey, a previously convicted sex offender. The Jessica's Laws passed in many U.S. states were inspired by her case.
  • Dru Sjodin: University of North Dakota student kidnapped in 2003 and found dead five months later. A registered sex offender was convicted of her murder.
  • Adam Walsh: Six-year-old boy kidnapped and murdered in 1981.
  • Jacob Wetterling: Kidnapped at age 11 from his Minnesota hometown in 1989. His body was discovered in 2016 after suspect Danny Heinrich led police to his burial site.
  • Jaycee Lee Dugard: Kidnapped for 18 years.
  • Virginia Giuffre: Victim of the sex trafficking ring of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Anti-sex trafficking activist.

Activists

  • John Walsh: Father of Adam Walsh and host of America's Most Wanted.
  • Patty Wetterling: Mother of Jacob Wetterling. Notable for opposing very broad registration laws that classify minor offenders on the same scale as high-risk predators.

Shows and organizations

References

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  45. ^ Walsh, John; Walsh, Susan (2008). Tears of rage : from grieving father to crusader for justice: the untold story of the Adam Walsh case. New York: Pocket Books. p. 9. ISBN 978-1439136348. I never gave much thought to how old Revé was. She was pretty, and she dressed sharp. And there was also that body. We were starting to kind of hang around together. She took me horseback riding, and we went skiing. She was always into her own thing, and I like that. Then one night Tom Roche was sitting around in my place and picked up a copy of that day's Buffalo Evening News. It was a picture of Revé, who had just won an art contest. 'Holy Jesus, Mary, and Joseph,' Tom said. 'There is a picture of Revé in the paper, John, and she's 16 years old.' But you know, she had this way about her. She had a certain presence. And after a while I just got over how young she was. She was way more sophisticated than anybody in her high school and she always dated older guys. She had a fake ID. That's how she got into Brunner's. She was bored with high school. She was into art and her horses. And even then, she always seemed very… I don't know, serene. We weren't madly in love with each other. Though we had a good time together, and I relaxed a little after she turned 17."
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  48. ^ U.S. Department of Justice, "Common Questions" (reference updated), retrieved September 10, 2015.
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  51. ^ Knowles, Jon (2019). How Sex Got Screwed Up: The Ghosts that Haunt Our Sexual Pleasure - Book Two. Vernon Press. p. 799. ISBN 9781622736928.
  52. ^ Fox, Kathryn J. (28 February 2012). "Incurable Sex Offenders, Lousy Judges & The Media: Moral Panic Sustenance in the Age of New Media". American Journal of Criminal Justice. 38 (1): 160–181. doi:10.1007/s12103-012-9154-6. ISSN 1936-1351. S2CID 143562435.
  53. ^ "Former New York State Parole Board Member and State Assemblyman Sentenced for Online Enticement of Minors". FBI Official Website. US Federal Bureau of Investigation. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
  54. ^ "Reynhard Sinaga: 'Evil sexual predator' jailed for life for 136 rapes". BBC News. 2020-01-06. Retrieved 2022-12-30.

External links

  • Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers
  • CSOM Publications - Myths and Facts About Sex Offenders 2015-04-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • Ten Things You Should Know About Sex Offenders and Treatment
  • Human Rights Watch Report - No Easy Answers: Sex Offender Laws in the US
  • Internet Safety Technical Task Force Report - Enhancing Child Safety and Online Technologies
  • FBI - Registries for each state
  • National Sex Offender Registry
  • Recidivism: How often do Child Molesters go on to Reoffend?
  • Reform Sex Offender Laws, Inc.

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This article is about the criminal term For the novel see The Sex Offender A Novel For the Polkadot Cadaver album see Sex Offender album This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate April 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message A sex offender sexual offender sex abuser or sexual abuser is a person who has committed a sex crime What constitutes a sex crime differs by culture and legal jurisdiction The majority of convicted sex offenders have convictions for crimes of a sexual nature however some sex offenders have simply violated a law contained in a sexual category Some of the serious crimes which usually result in a mandatory sex offender classification are sexual assault statutory rape bestiality child sexual abuse incest rape and sexual imposition Sex offender registration laws in the United States may also classify less serious offenses as sexual offenses requiring sex offender registration In some states public urination having sex on a beach 1 or unlawful imprisonment of a minor also constitute sexual offenses requiring registration 2 3 Contents 1 Overview 2 Recidivism 2 1 Risk Assessment 3 Post incarceration registries and restrictions 4 Therapies and treatment 5 Controversy 6 See also 6 1 Articles 6 2 Laws 6 3 Monitoring assessment other 6 3 1 Offenders 6 3 2 Victims 6 3 3 Activists 6 4 Shows and organizations 7 References 8 External linksOverviewIn looking at various types of offenses an example of a digital obscenity offense is child pornography In the modern world of technology many jurisdictions are reforming their laws to prevent the over prosecution of sex offenders and focusing on crimes involving a victim The term sexual predator is often used to describe a sex offender or any of the tier offenders however only the category just below sexually violent sexual predator is reserved for a severe or repeated sex offender sexual predator In the United States the Adam Walsh Act AWA proposed to provide funding to each jurisdiction which would agree to incorporate its Act into their law In the few jurisdictions accepting the agreement there are Tier I Tier II or Tier III sex offenders Individuals convicted of petty crimes not covered by the AWA are still liable to abide by the previous regulations denoting them as a sex offender or habitual sex offender sexual predator sexually violent sexual predator or child victim offender In the United States the United Kingdom and other countries a convicted sex offender is often required to register with the respective jurisdiction s sex offender registry In the U S registry databases are often open to the public Sexual offenders are sometimes classified by level 4 The highest level offenders generally must register for their entire lives low level offenders may only need to register for a period of time RecidivismThe level of recidivism in sexual offenders varies by surveys and by the types of sex offense 5 Some surveys reported it is lower than is commonly believed 6 7 However according to the Office of Justice Programs OJP of the United States Department of Justice observed recidivism rates of sex offenders are underestimated of actual reoffending 5 This is due to reasons such as the frequency with which sex crimes are not reported to police the disparity between the number of sex offenses reported and those solved by arrest and the disproportionate attrition of certain sex offenses and sex offenders within the criminal justice system For example Grotpeter and Elliot 2002 found that only 2 5 of sexual assaults and 10 of serious sexual assaults resulted in an arrest 8 A 2002 study by the OJP following 9 691 male sex offenders released from prisons in 15 US states in 1994 indicated that within the first 3 years following their release rearrest and reconviction rates for new sex offenses were 5 3 and 3 5 percent respectively that is about 1 in 19 of released sex offenders were arrested within three years for another sex crime The same study found that during the same 3 years from release 68 percent of released non sex offenders were re arrested for any crime and 47 8 percent reconvicted while 43 percent of the released sex offenders were rearrested for any crime and 24 percent reconvicted 9 According to the OJP 10 the recidivism rate for sex offenders has been shown to be lower than any other crime except murder in New York State Another report from the OJP which studied the recidivism of prisoners released in 1994 in 15 states accounting for two thirds of all prisoners released in the United States that year reached the same conclusion 11 Of released sex offenders who allegedly committed another sex crime 40 percent perpetrated the new offense within a year or less from their prison discharge Within three years of release 2 5 percent of released rapists were rearrested for another rape and 1 2 percent of those who had served time for homicide were arrested for a new homicide Sex offenders were about four times more likely than non sex offenders to be arrested for another sex crime after their discharge from prison 5 3 percent of sex offenders versus 1 3 percent of non sex offenders In 1991 an estimated 24 percent of those serving time for rape and 19 percent of those serving time for sexual assault had been on probation or parole at the time of the offense for which they were in state prison 9 Approximately 4 300 child molesters were released from prisons in 15 U S states in 1994 An estimated 3 3 percent of these 4 300 were rearrested for another sex crime against a child within 3 years of release from prison Among child molesters released from prison in 1994 60 percent had been in prison for molesting a child 13 years old or younger The median age of victims of those imprisoned for sexual assault was less than 13 years old the median age of rape victims was about 22 years Child molesters were on average five years older than violent offenders who committed their crimes against adults Nearly 25 percent of child molesters were age 40 or older but about 10 percent of inmates with adult victims were in that age group 9 The recidivism rate for chikans and voyeurs is considerably higher than for other sex offenses according to the Crime White Paper 2015 published by the Ministry of Justice of Japan 12 The survey reported 85 0 of the molesters and 64 9 of the voyeurs had a prior conviction for a sex offense Risk Assessment Various methods can be used to assess individual sex offenders recidivism risk Some risk assessment tools consider factors that have been empirically linked by research to sexual recidivism risk These factors include biological and demographic markers criminogenic correlates behavioral and developmental indicators and clinical markers that have been shown to be associated with reoffending 13 However the quality of the studies that link various factors to sexual recidivism risk vary widely in terms of methodological rigor For example some studies link certain factors to sexual recidivism risk through clinical anecdotal evidence which are sometimes criticized as less methodologically rigorous than other studies have used empirical approaches including experimental methods 13 There are at least four classifications of structured sexual recidivism risk assessment tools empirical actuarial mechanical adjusted actuarial and structured professional judgement 14 15 Of these classifications empirical actuarial tools are the most methodologically rigorous because they contain explicit empirical risk factors defined in advance that are combined mechanically using explicitly defined guidelines into a score or risk category and then linked to a recidivism probability estimate Structured professional judgement SPJ tools are among the least methodologically rigorous risk assessment tools because these tools specify items to be considered and ultimately the clinician subjectively integrates the factors to reach assessment conclusions like low moderate or high risk 14 15 Furthermore clinicians may also use unstructured sexual recidivism risk assessments where they do not use any structured guidelines to aid in their risk assessment 15 Researchers and practitioners consider some factors as static in that they do not change with time such as number of prior sex offenses victim gender and deviant sexual arousal and some other factors as dynamic such as an offender s compliance with supervision and treatment 16 By examining both types of factors a more complete picture of the offender s risk can emerge compared with static or dynamic factors used alone There is no single assessment tool that clinicians must use for assessing sexual recidivism risk but there are tools that are widely used such as the Static 99R 13 17 The Static 99R is the most popular actuarial scale in the United States 13 The Static 99R is a 10 item scale for ranking a sex offender s relative risk of sexual recidivism compared other offenders This scale is based on demographic and criminal history data for example age at release and number of prior sex offenses 13 Researchers have shown that the Static 99R is valid across a wide range of individuals in terms of demographics such as race ethnicity However the Static 99R has only a modest ability to discriminate correctly between sex offenders and non sex offenders This means that a randomly selected sex offender would be correctly classified as higher risk than a randomly selected non sex offender with modest accuracy In addition the Static 99R does not account for every factor that makes a sex offender more likely to reoffend 13 17 Despite these shortcomings the Static 99R is arguably the highest quality tool in terms of methodological rigor that is widely available to clinicians to assess sex offender risk of recidivism 13 17 Post incarceration registries and restrictionsA sex offender registry is a system in place in a number of jurisdictions designed to allow authorities to keep track of the residence and activity of sex offenders including those released from prison In some jurisdictions especially in the United States information in the registry is made available to the public via a website or other means In many jurisdictions registered sex offenders are subject to additional restrictions including housing Those on parole or probation may be subject to restrictions not applicable to other parolees or probationers 18 These include restrictions on being in the presence of minors living in proximity to a school or daycare center or owning toys or other items of interest to minors Israel s sex offender registry is accessible only to security officials rather than to the general public 19 Megan s Law in the U S is designed to sanction sex offenders and reduce their recidivism rate The law is enacted and enforced on a state by state basis Most states also restrict where convicted sex offenders can live after their release prohibiting residency within a designated distance of schools and daycare centers usually 1 000 2 000 feet 300 610 m Guided by the 2007 Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act sex offenders must avoid such areas as schools bus stops gyms recreation centers playgrounds parks swimming pools libraries nursing homes and places of worship by 500 to 2 500 feet 150 to 760 m However residence stipulations vary from state to state Some states such as Arkansas Illinois Washington and Idaho do not require sex offenders to move from their residences if a forbidden facility is built or a law is enacted after the offender takes up residency Many aspects of the laws are criticised by reformists and civil right groups like National RSOL 20 and Human Rights Watch 21 22 and treatment professionals as Atsa 23 24 Committing to a residence requires a convicted sex offender to be notified of registration regulations by local law enforcement if convicted after January 1 2005 The offender must act upon the notification within five business days of receipt If and when an offender is released from incarceration they must confirm their registration status within five business days Registration data includes the offender s sex height weight date of birth identifying characteristics if any statutes violated fingerprints and a current photograph An offender s email addresses chat room IDs and instant messaging aliases must be surrendered to authorities In Colorado an offender must re register when moving to a new address changing their legal name employment volunteer activity identifying information used online or enrollment status at a post secondary educational institution A web based registration list may be found on county websites which identifies adult convicted sex offenders who are sexually violent predators convicted of felony sexual acts crimes of violence or failure to register as required Legally any person who is a sexually violent predator and any person who is convicted as an adult has a duty to register for the remainder of his or her natural life 25 Exceptions to this include deferred sentencing for the offense or petition of the court for termination of registration 26 Some sex offenders are deemed too dangerous to society to be released and are subjected to civil confinement indefinite continuing incarceration which is supposed to but does not always provide meaningful treatment to the offender Therapies and treatmentBehavior modification programs have been shown to reduce recidivism in sex offenders 27 Often such programs use principles of applied behavior analysis Two such approaches from this line of research have promise The first uses operant conditioning approaches which use reward and punishment to train new behavior such as problem solving 28 and the second uses respondent conditioning procedures such as aversion therapy Many of the behaviorism programs use covert sensitization 29 and or odor aversion both are forms of aversion therapy which have had ethical challenges Such programs are effective in lowering recidivism by 15 18 percent 30 The use of aversion therapy remains controversial and is an ethical issue related to the professional practice of behavior analysis In 2007 the Texas State Auditor released a report showing that sex offenders who completed the Texas Sex Offender Treatment Program SOTP were 61 percent less likely to commit a new crime 31 Chemical castration is used in some countries and U S states to treat male sex offenders Unlike physical castration it is reversible by stopping the medication For male sex offenders with severe or extreme paraphilias physical castration appears to be effective It results in a 20 year re offense rate of less than 2 3 percent versus 80 percent in the untreated control group according to a large 1963 study involving a total of 1036 sex offenders by the German researcher A Langeluddeke 32 This was much lower than otherwise expected compared with overall sex offender recidivism rates Although considered cruel and unusual punishment by many physical castration does not otherwise affect the lifespan of men compared with uncastrated men citation needed ControversyIt is argued that in the U S sex offenders have been selected as the new realization of moral panics about sex stranger danger and national paranoia the new folk devils or boogeymen People convicted of any sex crime are transformed into a concept of evil which is then personified as a group of faceless terrifying and predatory devils who are contrary to scientific evidence perceived as a constant threat habitually waiting for an opportunity to attack 33 Consequently sex offenders are brought up by media on Halloween despite the fact that there has never been a recorded case of abduction or abuse by a registered sex offender on Halloween 33 Academics treatment professionals 23 34 and law reform groups such as National Association for Rational Sexual Offense Laws 35 and Women Against Registry 36 criticize current sex offender laws as based on media driven moral panic and public emotion rather than a real attempt to protect society 33 37 38 39 40 41 This can motivate legislators to pass knee jerk laws 42 to address public hysteria echoing a populist punitiveness perspective 43 Many lawmakers feel that they will attract votes by appearing to be tough on sex offenders 44 One discrepancy pointed out by critics is that John Walsh father of Adam Walsh and supporter of the Adam Walsh Act has admitted having a relationship with a 16 year old girl while being in his early 20s and aware of age of consent being 17 in New York 45 meaning that had he been convicted John Walsh himself could be required to register as a sex offender Since passage of the Adam Walsh Act Walsh himself has criticized the law stating You can t paint sex offenders with a broad brush 46 Critics point out that contrary to media depictions abductions by predatory offenders are very rare 47 and 93 of child sexual abuse is committed by someone the child knows a family member a family friend or someone in a position of authority 48 According to the U S Department of Justice sex offender recidivism is 5 3 49 the lowest for any type of crime except homicide 50 Critics say that while originally aimed at the worst offenders as a result of moral panic the laws have gone through series of amendments many named after the victim of a highly publicized predatory offense expanding the scope of the laws to low level offenders and treating them the same as predatory offenders leading to the disproportionate punishment of being placed on a public sex offender registry with the consequent restrictions on movement employment and housing 36 47 As a result of this persistent media narrative of sex offenders this panic is being preserved leading legislators to make registration mandatory for all sex offences without the possibility of judicial discretion for less dangerous offenders 51 52 See alsoArticles Child sexual abuse Day care sex abuse hysteria Ephebophilia Exhibitionism Frotteurism Hebephilia Incest Paraphilia Pedophilia Prevention Project Dunkelfeld Sex and the law Sex offender registries in the United States Sex offender registration Sexual predator United States National Sex Offenders Public Registry VoyeurismLaws Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act Jessica s Law Megan s LawMonitoring assessment other Ankle monitor Circles of Support and Accountability Civil confinement Global Positioning System GPS Penile plethysmograph RecidivismOffenders Jeffrey Dahmer American serial killer with 17 known victims Many of his killings included sexual assaults Richard Allen Davis Convicted of kidnapping committing a lewd act on and murdering Polly Klaas see Victims section Josef Fritzl An Austrian man who began sexually abusing his daughter Elisabeth in 1977 and kept her imprisoned in his home from 1984 until 2008 He repeatedly sexually abused and raped Elisabeth resulting in the births of seven children and one miscarriage One of the children died in infancy and three were imprisoned along with Elisabeth until 2008 Li Hao Raped six women as sex slaves and murdered two of them in underground dungeon from 2009 to 2011 Li Hao was executed in 2014 via the death penalty Jesse Timmendequas A registered sex offender who lured Megan Kanka see Victims section to his house and then raped and murdered her Peter Tobin British criminal with a long record including convictions for two rapes who was convicted of the rape and murder of a female Polish student in 2007 After this conviction he was found guilty of the murders of two teenage girls who disappeared in 1991 and has reportedly claimed to have killed more than 40 other people Ottis Toole Serial killer who confessed to multiple murders and rapes believed to be the killer of Adam Walsh see Victims section Don Vito American reality television personality convicted of groping two 12 year old girls in 2007 Ariel Castro Suspect in the Kidnappings of Amanda Berry Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight Chris Ortloff Former New York Assemblyman and New York Parole Board member sentenced August 9 2010 to twelve years and six months in prison plus lifetime supervision and a US 50 000 fine after pleading guilty to a federal felony charge of online enticement of minors 53 John Wayne Gacy American serial killer who kidnapped raped tortured and murdered at least 33 young men and teenage boys Dean Corll American serial killer with at least 28 victims in the Houston area known as Houston Mass Murders All included sexual assaults Elmer Wayne Henley American serial killer amp accomplice of Dean Corll involved in the crimes known as Houston Mass Murders All included sexual assaults Andre Boisclair Canadian former politician who pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual assault on two young men Reynhard Sinaga Indonesian student who was convicted of 159 sex offences including 136 rapes of young men in Manchester England United Kingdom Sinaga raped or sexually assaulted at least 206 men mainly heterosexuals He is considered to be the most prolific rapist in British legal history 54 Debra Lafave School teacher who pleaded guilty to sexual assault on a student teenage boy Harvey Weinstein Former film producer accused of sexual assault by more than 80 women The allegations sparked the MeToo movement Jeffrey Epstein Financier and serial sexual offender who was accused of sexually abusing numerous women and underage girls Ghislaine Maxwell British socialite who trafficked women and underage girls to be sexually abused by Jeffrey Epstein and his associates John David Norman American pedophile and sex trafficker known for his alleged ties to serial killers Dean Corll and John Wayne Gacy Brendan Smyth Irish Catholic priest who sexually abused at least 143 children in Northern Ireland Ireland and the United States Peter Scully Australian pedophile accused of sexual assaults against 75 children in the Philippines Victims Megan Kanka raped and murdered by her neighbor Jesse Timmendequas in New Jersey in 1994 The murder attracted national attention and subsequently led to the introduction of Megan s Law which requires law enforcement to compile and make available to the public information on convicted sex offenders Polly Klaas Kidnapped at age 12 from her California home in 1993 Richard Allen Davis who had a criminal record dating to the late 1960s that included some sex crimes was convicted of her murder Jessica Lunsford Kidnapped at age 9 from her Florida home in 2005 and murdered by John Couey a previously convicted sex offender The Jessica s Laws passed in many U S states were inspired by her case Dru Sjodin University of North Dakota student kidnapped in 2003 and found dead five months later A registered sex offender was convicted of her murder Adam Walsh Six year old boy kidnapped and murdered in 1981 Jacob Wetterling Kidnapped at age 11 from his Minnesota hometown in 1989 His body was discovered in 2016 after suspect Danny Heinrich led police to his burial site Jaycee Lee Dugard Kidnapped for 18 years Virginia Giuffre Victim of the sex trafficking ring of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell Anti sex trafficking activist Activists John Walsh Father of Adam Walsh and host of America s Most Wanted Patty Wetterling Mother of Jacob Wetterling Notable for opposing very broad registration laws that classify minor offenders on the same scale as high risk predators Shows and organizations America s Most Wanted Megan Nicole Kanka Foundation National Center for Missing and Exploited Children Polly Klaas Foundation Reform Sex Offender Laws Inc To Catch a PredatorReferences Irby Kate 4 May 2015 Couple found guilty of having sex on Florida beach Miami Herald Retrieved 10 September 2015 Sex offender ordinance catches family in legal Trouble MSNBC com Court keeps man on sex offender list but says troubling Toledo News Now 28 March 2015 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 US Office of Justice Programs Archived from the original 2012 05 05 a b Sex Offender Management Assessment and Planning Initiative Office of Justice Programs Retrieved 2022 08 02 Levenson Jill S Brannon Yolanda N Fortney Timothy Baker Juanita 12 April 2007 Public Perceptions About Sex Offenders and Community Protection Policies PDF Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy 7 1 6 doi 10 1111 j 1530 2415 2007 00119 x dead link Harris Andrew J R Hanson Karl 2004 Sex Offender Recidivism PDF Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada Grotpeter J K Elliot D S 2002 Violent Sexual Offending PDF University of Colorado Retrieved 2022 08 02 a b c Recidivism of Sex Offenders Released from Prison in 1994 PDF U S Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Archived from the original PDF on 26 August 2015 U S Department of Justice Criminal Offenders Statistics Recidivism Archived 2008 07 16 at the Wayback Machine statistical information from the late 1990s and very early 2000s retrieved May 4 2007 Recidivism of Prisoners Released in 1994 PDF U S Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Archived from the original PDF on 11 August 2015 性犯罪者の実態と再犯防止 PDF in Japanese 法務省 p 39 Retrieved 2022 08 02 a b c d e f g Melton Gary B Petrila John Poythress Norman G Slobogin Christopher Otto Randy K Mossman Douglas Condie Lois O 2017 12 04 Psychological Evaluations for the Courts Fourth Edition A Handbook for Mental Health Professionals and Lawyers Guilford Publications ISBN 978 1 4625 3553 8 a b Hanson R Karl Morton Bourgon Kelly E 2009 The accuracy of recidivism risk assessments for sexual offenders A meta analysis of 118 prediction studies Psychological Assessment 21 1 1 21 doi 10 1037 a0014421 ISSN 1939 134X PMID 19290762 a b c Helmus L Maaike 2018 Sex Offender Risk Assessment Where Are We and Where Are We Going Current Psychiatry Reports 20 6 46 doi 10 1007 s11920 018 0909 8 ISSN 1535 1645 PMID 29779064 S2CID 29165424 Hanson R Karl 1998 What do we know about sex offender risk assessment Psychology Public Policy and Law 4 1 2 50 72 doi 10 1037 1076 8971 4 1 2 50 ISSN 1939 1528 a b c Phenix Amy Fernandez Yolanda Harris Andrew J R Helmus Maaike Hanson R Karl Thornton David 2017 Static 99R Coding Rules Revised 2016 Public Safety Canada 2017 Identity Protection amp Security Services Top Ten Reviews Page 1 Archived from the original on 2007 10 02 Retrieved 2007 09 12 Rubin Shira 8 April 2016 Child Abusers Find Refuge in Israel The Daily Beast via www thedailybeast com Lovett Ian October 1 2013 Restricted Group Speaks Up Saying Sex Crime Measures Go Too Far The New York Times Retrieved 14 November 2014 No Easy Answers Sex Offender Laws in the US Human Rights Watch 11 September 2007 Retrieved 2011 02 21 Raised on the Registry The Irreparable Harm of Placing Children on Sex Offender Registries in the US Human Rights Watch 2013 ISBN 978 1 62313 0084 a b The Registration and Community Notification of Adult Sexual Offenders Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers April 5 2010 Retrieved 14 November 2014 Sexual Offender Residence Restrictions Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers April 5 2010 Retrieved 14 November 2014 Committee of Legal Services State of Colorado General Assembly Colorado Bureau of Investigation Colorado Division of Criminal Justice Colorado Sex Offender Management Board Marshall W L Jones R Ward T Johnston P amp Bambaree H E 1991 Treatment of sex offenders Clinical Psychology Review 11 465 485 Maguth Nezu C Fiore A A amp Nezu A M 2006 Problem Solving Treatment for Intellectually Disabled Sex Offenders International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy 2 2 266 275 BAO Rea J 2003 Covert Sensitization The Behavior Analyst Today 4 2 192 201 BAO Marshall W L Jones R Ward T Johnston P amp Bambaree H E 1991 Treatment of sex offenders Clinical Psychology Review 11 465 485 An Audit Report on Selected Rehabilitation Programs at the Department of Criminal Justice Report No 07 02 Texas State Auditor March 2007 Retrieved October 20 2009 J M W Bradford THE PARAPHILIAS OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE SPECTRUM DISORDER AND THE TREATMENT OF SEXUALLY DEVIANT BEHAVIORS www brainphysics com a b c Extein Andrew 25 October 2013 Fear the Bogeyman Sex Offender Panic on Halloween Huffington Post Retrieved 26 November 2014 Rogers Laura July 30 2007 Comments on Proposed Guidelines to Interpret and Implement the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act SORNA PDF Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers Archived from the original PDF on October 12 2011 Our History Reform Sex Offender Laws Inc Archived from the original on 28 November 2014 Retrieved 25 November 2014 a b Levin Sam 5 September 2013 Missouri Sex Offenders Women Against Registry Says Labels Unfairly Destroy Lives Riverfront Times Archived from the original on 29 November 2014 Retrieved 26 November 2014 Maguire Mary Singer Jennie Kaufman 4 December 2010 A False Sense of Security Moral Panic Driven Sex Offender Legislation Critical Criminology 19 4 301 312 doi 10 1007 s10612 010 9127 3 S2CID 144431817 Walker Bela 19 January 2011 Essay Deciphering Risk Sex Offender Statutes and Moral Panic in a Risk Society The University of Baltimore Law Review 40 2 Spohn Ryan 31 July 2013 Nebraska Sex Offender Registry Study Final Report PDF University of Nebraska Omaha p 51 Retrieved 21 November 2014 Fox Kathryn J 28 February 2012 Incurable Sex Offenders Lousy Judges amp The Media Moral Panic Sustenance in the Age of New Media American Journal of Criminal Justice 38 1 160 181 doi 10 1007 s12103 012 9154 6 S2CID 143562435 Lancaster Roger 20 February 2013 Panic Leads to Bad Policy on Sex Offenders The New York Times Wright Richard G 2014 Sex offender laws failed policies new directions Second ed Springer Publishing Company p 64 ISBN 978 0826196712 Mcalinden Anne Marie 1 May 2006 Managing risk From regulation to the reintegration of sexual offenders Criminology and Criminal Justice 6 2 201 doi 10 1177 1748895806062981 S2CID 145256781 Mansnerus Laura 29 May 2005 ON POLITICS Stoking Moral Panic Over Sex Offenders The New York Times Walsh John Walsh Susan 2008 Tears of rage from grieving father to crusader for justice the untold story of the Adam Walsh case New York Pocket Books p 9 ISBN 978 1439136348 I never gave much thought to how old Reve was She was pretty and she dressed sharp And there was also that body We were starting to kind of hang around together She took me horseback riding and we went skiing She was always into her own thing and I like that Then one night Tom Roche was sitting around in my place and picked up a copy of that day s Buffalo Evening News It was a picture of Reve who had just won an art contest Holy Jesus Mary and Joseph Tom said There is a picture of Reve in the paper John and she s 16 years old But you know she had this way about her She had a certain presence And after a while I just got over how young she was She was way more sophisticated than anybody in her high school and she always dated older guys She had a fake ID That s how she got into Brunner s She was bored with high school She was into art and her horses And even then she always seemed very I don t know serene We weren t madly in love with each other Though we had a good time together and I relaxed a little after she turned 17 Koch Wendy 26 February 2007 Sex offender residency laws get second look USA Today a b Lancaster Roger 20 February 2013 Panic Leads to Bad Policy on Sex Offenders The New York Times Retrieved 26 November 2014 U S Department of Justice Common Questions citing reference updated retrieved September 10 2015 Langan Patrick Schmitt Erica Durose Matthew November 2003 Recidivism of Sex Offenders Released from Prison in 1994 PDF U S Department of Justice Retrieved 26 November 2014 Langan Patrick Schmitt Erica Durose Matthew November 2003 Recidivism of Prisoners Released in 1994 PDF U S Department of Justice Retrieved 26 November 2014 Knowles Jon 2019 How Sex Got Screwed Up The Ghosts that Haunt Our Sexual Pleasure Book Two Vernon Press p 799 ISBN 9781622736928 Fox Kathryn J 28 February 2012 Incurable Sex Offenders Lousy Judges amp The Media Moral Panic Sustenance in the Age of New Media American Journal of Criminal Justice 38 1 160 181 doi 10 1007 s12103 012 9154 6 ISSN 1936 1351 S2CID 143562435 Former New York State Parole Board Member and State Assemblyman Sentenced for Online Enticement of Minors FBI Official Website US Federal Bureau of Investigation Retrieved 31 August 2015 Reynhard Sinaga Evil sexual predator jailed for life for 136 rapes BBC News 2020 01 06 Retrieved 2022 12 30 External linksAssociation for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers Bureau of Justice Statistics Recidivism of Sex Offenders Released from Prison in 1994 CSOM Publications Myths and Facts About Sex Offenders Archived 2015 04 01 at the Wayback Machine Ten Things You Should Know About Sex Offenders and Treatment Human Rights Watch Report No Easy Answers Sex Offender Laws in the US Internet Safety Technical Task Force Report Enhancing Child Safety and Online Technologies FBI Registries for each state National Sex Offender Registry Recidivism How often do Child Molesters go on to Reoffend Reform Sex Offender Laws Inc Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sex offender amp oldid 1151584098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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