Showing posts with label 2020 Worst News Mutt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2020 Worst News Mutt. Show all posts

Saturday, October 3, 2020

Phil Gianficaro follows up Shiitake-Worthy performance with follow-up OpEd full of lies

Phil Gianficaro is already a Shiitake Award nominee, but he followed up his stupid and blatantly false claim that 40% of registered persons commit a sex offense within a year of release with an even worse OpEd filled with numerous lies from dubious sources. In just this short OpEd, he includes:

1. The intentional use of the erroneous term "convicted pedophile";

2. The misuse of the term pedophile when the offender's intended target was a teenager;

3. The dubious claim that "pedophiles molest hundreds of children on average"

4. Making the 17-year old claim of 100,000 "missing sex offenders"

5. Citing such resources as "A Secure Life", a home security business that completely pulled their stats out of the ether to sell their home security products. 

https://www.buckscountycouriertimes.com/story/opinion/2020/10/02/gianficaro-readers-say-longer-prison-sentences-child-sex-predators/5890283002/

Gianficaro: Readers demand longer prison sentences for child sex predators

Phil Gianficaro

Burlington County Times

Dana Harter is absolutely certain I was wrong to suggest in a recent column that convicted pedophile William Singleton, 25, of Pemberton Township, should not get the four-year prison sentence he recently received, but 10 years for attempting to lure 14-year-old girls to meet him for sex. 

“He should’ve gotten 20, maybe 30 years!” said the Burlington City resident and mother of two. “You were too lenient. Scum balls like him should be off the street and away from our kids for as long as possible. 

“Like you said, he gets out in four years and what do you think he’s gonna do? Why the law believes a guy who wants to trick young girls into having sex with him doesn’t deserve more time behind bars than four years makes my head hurt.”

Singleton was among 24 men arrested in September 2018 during “Operation Open House.” Detectives with the New Jersey Regional Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force posed online as underage girls. The defendants, believing the undercover detective was a 14-year-old girl, asked the "girl" to meet him at a Toms River house for sexual activity.

Jayne Marie Bardo is certain Harter is wrong to suggest Singleton should get 20 or 30 years.  

“Throw away the key on guys like that — or worse!” the Willingboro resident said in her best hanging judge voice. “They shouldn’t be on the street.”  

Unfortunately, predators like Singleton are not on the street, but in our children’s chatrooms, sometimes pretending to be teenage boys trying to convince them to meet for sex.  

But a more common strategy applied by predators, experts say, is to manipulate teenage girls or boys into having sex by taking advantage of inexperienced and vulnerable young teens by appealing to the teens’ desire to be appreciated, understood, take risks, and find out about sex.  

What’s more shocking to some of us than creeps like Singleton getting only four years in prison for using social media to lure children for sexual activity?   

 • According to riseaboveabuse.org, the average pedophile molests 260 victims during their lifetime. Other sites that monitor such data believe the number is closer to 400.  

• Of the 750,000 registered sex offenders in the US, an estimated 80,000-100,000 are non-compliant or missing, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

The good news for New Jersey: The state has the eighth-lowest rate of convicted sex offenders in the nation, with 183 per 100,000 people, according to asecurelife.com.  

The bad news: We have no idea how many pedophiles like Singleton are out there who have never been caught. We have no idea how many live in your town or, more frighteningly, in your neighborhood. What's a parent to do?

"I trust my kids," Harter said. "But I do everything I can to track what they do online, who they're communicating with, what's their online history like. They don't like it, but I don't care. I see stories like the one about Singleton and it worries me to no end. I show them what can happen when you get tricked by a grown-up. I tell them that if they don't know the person, don't talk to the person. I tell them one bad decision is all it takes and they could be gone forever.

"I respect their privacy, but only to a degree. I love them too much to worry about them being mad at me for snooping. Guys like Singleton force me to snoop."

Columnist Phil Gianficaro can be reached at 215-345-3078, pgianficaro@theintell.com, and @philgianficaro on Twitter.  

Friday, September 18, 2020

Phil Gianficaro claims 40% of Registered Persons will commit sex crimes within a year of release

 In addition to posting the intentional "sex offenders are 4 times as likely to reoffend" myth as well as an impliit endorsement of vigilante violence, Phil Gianficaro claims 2 out of every 5 registered persons commit a sex offense within a year of release from prison. What a complete tool!

This has to be some kind of new record for outlandish claims about Registered Persons. 



https://www.burlingtoncountytimes.com/story/opinion/2020/09/17/gianficaro-prison-sentence-child-predators-must-pack-more-punch/3460005001/

Gianficaro: Prison sentence for child sex predators must pack more punch

Phil Gianficaro

Burlington County Times

As the parent of a teenage daughter we love more than life itself, the child sexual predator’s prison sentence feels more like a jab to the chin than the iron-fisted haymaker it requires.

Four years? Only four years for attempting to lure 14-year-old girls to meet him for sex? Only four years for 25-year-old William Singleton of Pemberton Township who, but for the invaluable work of New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal’s multi-agency undercover operation, may have committed the unthinkable on someone’s young daughter and gotten away with it? Only four years for changing a young girl’s world forever? Maybe next time he would’ve remained undetected behind the cloak of social media and lured your neighbor’s daughter into his dark lair. Or maybe your daughter. Maybe mine. Only four years? For God’s sake!

Singleton was among 24 men arrested in September 2018 during “Operation Open House.” Detectives with the New Jersey Regional Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force posed online as underage girls. The defendants, believing the undercover detective was a 14-year-old girl, asked the "girl" to meet him at a Toms River house for sexual activity. 

Singleton last week agreed to a guilty plea to avoid trial and was sentenced to four years in state prison. In New Jersey, second-degree child molestation or child sex abuse of a child 13 to16 years old is punishable by a prison sentence of 5 to 10 years. So, Singleton gets a light sentence only because he was caught by the law before getting the chance to carry out his heinous crime. Four years? He shouldn't get points for that.

Fathers of teenage daughters have a completely understandable and contrary view. In a father’s eyes, the attempt is seen as egregious as the act. A father's meting out of justice is this: Throw the book at the perp, and throw away the key.

Sex offenders are at least four times more likely than other criminals to be rearrested for a sex crime, according to the US Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics. Know this: Singleton will be released from prison before he’s 30 and, statistically, there’s a 40 percent chance he’ll commit or attempt to commit the same crime within one year of discharge from prison. Maybe next time, he slips through the cracks of law enforcement. And when it comes to a next time, there’s unlikely to be a maybe.

Opportunities for predators like Singleton have increased this year, with the COVID-19 pandemic closing down schools and leading to children spending increased time on the internet. According to Grewal, from March through July, there was a 50 percent increase in tips to the task force that nabbed Singleton compared to the same months last year.

When asked what he might due if one of the William Singletons of the world lured his young daughter into a hotel room or apartment and did the unthinkable, a friend didn't hesitate.

"If I ever found him, I'd introduce the sweet spot of my Louisville Slugger to the back of his head," he said. "Prison is too good for these dirt bags."

As I look at a photo of our daughter, I understand. Don't know a father who wouldn't.

When child sex predators like Singleton are arrested, the punch of justice should be haymaker instead of jab. You get caught luring underage kids for sex, you sit in prison for a minimum of 10 years. No plea agreement, no early parole, no nothing. Prison. For a decade.

Where young girls would be safely away from a predator.

And the predator safely away from their dads.

Phil Gianficaro can be reached at 215-345-3078, pgianficaro@theintell.com, and @philgianficaro on Twitter. 

Friday, September 4, 2020

The Center Square writer Bethany Blankley uses "pedophile" and "sex offender" interchangeably in attack on Romeo and Juliet bill

Here we have yet another example of a poorly written article by a reporter with an agenda. 

My email to this reporter, sent to bblankley@watchdog.org

Your use of the term “pedophile” is incorrect.

By your own words, “The bill specifically gives judges discretion over whether to make an adult register as a sex offender if they had anal or oral sex with a willing minor, and only if the minor is 14 years old or older and the statutory rapist is less than ten years older.”

There is no criminal statute called pedophilia, only a clinical diagnosis.

From Psychology Today: “Pedophilia is an ongoing sexual attraction to pre-pubertal children. It is considered a paraphilia, a condition in which a person's sexual arousal and gratification depend on fantasizing about and engaging in sexual behavior that is atypical and extreme. Pedophilia is defined as recurrent and intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors involving sexual activity with a prepubescent child or children—generally age 13 years or younger—over a period of at least six months. Pedophiles are more often men and can be attracted to either or both sexes.”

This law by its very structure cannot even cover an event that could meet the criteria for pedophilia. In other words, your headline is entirely incorrect. It seems you do not seem to understand that “sex offender” and “pedophile” are not interchangeable.

I doubt she has the intelligence to respond. After all, she cited Urban Dictionary as a reference in her report. 

https://www.thecentersquare.com/california/california-assembly-passes-bill-allowing-some-pedophiles-to-not-register-as-sex-offenders-with-stipulations/article_c8497582-edee-11ea-935e-03c280391711.html

California Assembly passes bill allowing some pedophiles to not register as sex offenders, with stipulations

By Bethany Blankley | The Center Square Sep 3, 2020 

(The Center Square) – The California State Assembly this week voted to revise the state’s penal code that regulates the registration of sex offenders by passing SB-145. The revision of the bill would allow pedophiles to not be registered on the sex offender list as long as they are not 10 years older than the minor they were convicted of molesting.

The bill, introduced by Sen. Scott Weiner 18 months ago, relaxes sex offender registry requirements for sodomy and other acts with minors to reportedly end “discrimination against LGBTQ young people on the sex offender registry,” according to Weiner.

The bill states that, “Existing law, the Sex Offender Registration Act, requires a person convicted of one of certain crimes, as specified, to register with law enforcement as a sex offender while residing in California or while attending school or working in California, as specified.

“This bill would exempt from mandatory registration under the act a person convicted of certain offenses involving minors if the person is not more than 10 years older than the minor and if that offense is the only one requiring the person to register.”

The bill specifically gives judges discretion over whether to make an adult register as a sex offender if they had anal or oral sex with a willing minor, and only if the minor is 14 years old or older and the statutory rapist is less than ten years older.

It passed by a vote of 41-18; 22 legislators did not vote on it. The Speaker of the House, Anthony Rendon, and 40 Democrats voted in favor. The Speaker’s office did not return a request for comment.

The bill passed by a vote of 23-10 in the state Senate.

Assemblyman Steven Choi, R-Irive, spoke out against the bill. He said, “In the age of historic sex trafficking and child trafficking here in California, I think this bill is entirely inappropriate. I don’t understand why a 24-year-old volunteer coach should not have to register as a sex offender for being with a 15-year-old student. Statutory rape should be a registerable offense either way. … This is intolerable.”

Assembly Appropriation Committee Chair Lorena Gonzalez, D-San Diego, vehemently opposed the bill. She said, “I cannot in my mind as a mother understand how sex between a 24-year-old and a 14-year-old could ever be consensual, how it could ever not be a registerable offense. We should never give up on this idea that children are not, should be in any way subject to a predator. And that is what it is.”

In a recent report on the crisis of sexual predators in the U.S., the New York Times reported that “Images of child sex abuse have reached a crisis point on the internet, spreading at unprecedented rates in part because tech platforms and law enforcement agencies have failed to keep pace with the problem. But less is understood about the issue underlying it all: What drives people to sexually abuse children?”

“A majority of convicted offenders are men who prey on children ages 6 to 17,” the Times reports. “But women also commit hands-on offenses; rough estimates put the rate of pedophilic attraction at 1 to 4 percent in both men and women. Studies suggest that a small subset of male and female pedophiles have an interest in toddlers, or even infants.”

A new movement to normalize pedophilia, MAPs “minor-attracted persons” or NOMAPs or “Non-Offending Minor Attracted Persons” has emerged, which has caused concern among the gay community.

According to Gay Star News, "Many on social media are warning LGBTI people and allies to be wary of the MAPs flag during Pride season. Additionally, many also called out the problematic nature of using a term like ‘minor attracted persons’ to normalize pedophilia."

According to Urban Dictionary, MAPs include Infantophiles (being attracted to infants), Pedophiles (attracted to pre-pubescent children), Hebephiles (attracted to pubescent children), and Ephebophiles (attracted to post-pubescent children).

Below are some more of Bethany's beliefs:




Tuesday, August 25, 2020

Cheryl W. Thompson uses her reporting at NPR to harm Registered Persons


Cheryl W. Thompson wrote a shameless article claiming FTR cases are rampant and implying that everyone failing to keep their confusing sex offense registration pin-point accurate is out committing sex offenses even though that myth has been proven wrong. Personally, I find her going after a registrant in hit piece to be beyond yellow journalism (brown journalism, perhaps?). 

As other activist put it, "Incredibly, the reporter tracks down one of the people who the D.C. registry lists as non-compliant and interviews them. Whether or not what NPR did here is ethical — that is tracking down and hassling a 61-year old man over a 30-year-old conviction and functionally threatening him with imprisonment because his paperwork wasn’t in order — is up for debate... At least, unlike the USA TODAY piece that ran a little while ago, it didn’t include his home address in the story. Small blessings. But the point is that Mr. Lang wasn’t “hiding,” he was just living his life, and ostensibly isn’t a threat to anyone. The piece could ask why are we harassing this man? why are we devoting public safety resources to tracking him over a crime that occurred in the early 90’s? but, of course, does not."



When I contacted this reporter with a few facts, her only response was to question if I live in one state or another (I visited a friend earlier this month in Oregon, and Nebraska illegally posted the temporary address). 

She was not interested in rational discussion; she was hoping to find another victim of her crappy reporting. I can't help but question the integrity of this reporter. NPR used to be a good source for information but it seems they've bent the knee to the victim industrial complex. 

And for anyone who thinks maybe that's a stretch, I'll leave this here:

Perhaps most disturbing is she teaches journalism. 

https://www.npr.org/2020/08/25/808229392/sex-offender-registries-often-fail-those-they-are-designed-to-protect?t=1598362751061

Sex Offender Registries Often Fail Those They Are Designed To Protect

August 25, 20205:00 AM ET

Heard on All Things Considered

Cheryl W Thompson

Inside the sprawling two-story tan and coral stucco building on New York Avenue in Northeast Washington, D.C., is a men's homeless shelter that once served as a halfway house run by the government.

It's a place that some 20 registered sex offenders call home — according to the city's sex offender registry. But at least one-third of them don't really live there, and D.C. authorities have no idea where they are.

The men are among the more than 25,000 convicted sex offenders and predators across the U.S. who have absconded, their whereabouts unknown to law enforcement or the victims — often children — whom they sexually assaulted or abused, an NPR investigation has found. Tens of thousands of others are out of compliance with sex offender registry laws.

"Law enforcement are losing people," says Kelly Socia, an associate professor of criminology and justice studies at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell.

Like so much else in American life, enforcement of sex offender registries across the country has been upended by the effects of the coronavirus pandemic. Many states with in-person monitoring and registration have had to search for alternatives. Some states have seemingly stopped enforcement altogether.

But most of the shortcomings predate the pandemic. NPR reviewed sex offender registry databases and records from all 50 states and the District of Columbia and found that a system intended to keep track of sex offenders often fails the very people it was designed to protect.

Many state registries are rife with errors, such as wrong addresses or names of offenders who died as long as 20 years ago. Others include the names of hundreds of offenders who have failed to verify their whereabouts in more than a decade.

The registries also list absconders whom law enforcement say they can't find but often are hiding in plain sight. Like a Colorado man — one of that state's 100 most wanted sex offender fugitives — on the run since 2016. NPR found him in Washington state, where he has never registered as a sex offender, according to public records.

Some sex offenders commit additional sex crimes after failing to tell police their whereabouts. In Missouri, for instance, a man who pleaded guilty in 1991 to sexually abusing a 5-year-old girl was convicted in 1998 and in 2017 of sex crimes against other minors, after moving between states without registering.

"The registry really doesn't work," Socia says. "It's a bloated, inefficient system that is incredibly expensive to maintain. I don't think it really protects anybody."

A federal law passed in 1994 known as the Jacob Wetterling Act requires states to establish registration programs for people convicted of sex crimes or crimes against children. The law was named for a Minnesota boy abducted by a man as the 11-year-old rode his bicycle home from the store in 1989. That law also requires states to verify addresses of convicted sex offenders every year for at least 10 years.

Since then, the laws relating to sex offenders have been amended to include such things as making the registries publicly accessible, placing certain juveniles on the registry and requiring law enforcement to notify the public when sex offenders move into the community.

Slipping through the system

NPR combed through those registries and counted tens of thousands of offenders who are considered absconders or whose locations are unknown. Among them were men whom NPR found easily using public records.

Curtis Lang Sr. is a convicted sex offender who hasn't registered for years. He is pictured at Meridian Hill/Malcolm X Park in Washington, D.C., in January 2020.

Lang, 61, was convicted in 1994 of raping an ex-girlfriend in her Washington, D.C., home. He says that he was high on PCP when the woman came home, that he raped her and that she tried to run away.

"I was out of my mind," Lang recalls. "But we did have rough sex and she tried to get away from me and I put my hands on her, yeah."

Lang, who served a decade in prison for the rape, was required to register as a sex offender and update that registration every three months for life. But it has been five years since he registered, according to D.C.'s sex offender registry.

NPR found Lang after checking court documents in Maryland and discovering a traffic citation from May 2019 for driving with an expired license. The court record listed an address in Northwest D.C., about 9 miles from the address he listed on D.C.'s public sex offender registry.

Authorities haven't gone after him for failing to register, despite stopping him for several traffic violations, including the 2019 incident.

"That's the system," Lang says. "I can't help it if I slipped through the system, the cracks, you know? That's on them."

The agency that registers and monitors sex offenders in the nation's capital is called the Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency, or CSOSA. Authorities there are supposed to report noncompliance to the Metropolitan Police Department, which acts as an enforcer.

"When we're notified of a violation, we do everything we can to bring the offender into compliance," says D.C. Police Commander Leslie Parsons, who oversees the sex offender registry.

That's how Jimmy Ferguson came to the department's attention. He is required to register as a sex offender every 90 days because of a conviction for assault with intent to commit rape. But he stopped registering several years ago, records show.

CSOSA said it sent a violation notice about Ferguson to police in March 2017, and again two years later, and police told NPR they tried to find him.

Jimmy Ferguson is required to register as a sex offender every 90 days but stopped for several years, records show. Ferguson registered after NPR found him.

District of Columbia Sex Offender Registry

Ferguson said no one came looking for him in the most obvious place — the address on his sex offender registration form. While Ferguson admitted he wasn't complying with the registration law at the time, he has been living in the same modest second-floor apartment across the street from a school in Southeast D.C. for years, records show.

"I've been living right here going on four years," he told NPR. "If you can find me, why the law can't find me?"

"This is ridiculous, man. I'm not hiding," he added.

Ferguson registered six weeks later, records show.

Alissa Ackerman, an assistant professor of criminal justice at California State University, Fullerton and a sex crimes expert, said she understands why offenders don't register.

"The burdens that come with it are tremendous," Ackerman says. "The shame that it brings upon you is tremendous."

Missing but not a priority

When offenders don't register, state officials throughout the country acknowledge, finding them can be tough. And that difficulty is made worse because law enforcement agencies often don't place a high priority on going after them, even though authorities know the sex offenders have broken the law.

In Illinois, 12.5% of the state's 32,249 sex offenders are missing or have failed to comply with reverification laws. Police there often catch absconders during routine traffic stops or while responding to domestic calls, according to Tracie Newton, the program administrator for the state's sex offender and murder registries.

"Many times, that's how they're found," she says, adding that it is the job of local police or sheriff's departments to track offenders so that they don't abscond.

In Nevada, where 7.5% of the 29,271 offenders are missing or have failed to comply, authorities rarely check to ensure that sex offenders live where they say they do, says Mindy McKay, who oversees the records, communications and compliance division of the Nevada Department of Public Safety.

"Short of implanting a chip in someone ... we can't keep track of people like that," she says. "If they abscond, they abscond. There's nothing we can do about it."

Chelsea Ross, who oversees Nevada's sex offender registry, says the number of absconders or those who are not up to date with their registration is likely to increase because of the coronavirus. That state and others shut down in-person registration offices when the pandemic hit, forcing sex offenders to register online, by phone or by mail, and halting law enforcement efforts to do in-person verification checks.

"We didn't do an announcement to tell the public or to tell the offenders we weren't doing in person," Ross says. "We thought that would open a door for people not to check in. We didn't want offenders to say, 'Hey, nobody's going to be checking on us.' "

Derek Carmon, a spokesman for the Portland Police Bureau in Oregon, says his agency has also halted residence verifications.

"Patrol officers were helping check residences of sex offenders, but since the pandemic ... no checks are being completed by patrol," Carmon says.

NPR also found at least a dozen states where some of the longest-missing offenders actually had died – something the states could have verified with their own records.

In Arkansas, for instance, authorities say Leroy Hair has been missing for nearly two decades — 7,153 days. Hair received a 40-year sentence for a 1979 rape and registered as a sex offender for life on the eve of his release in November 2000.

"He registered, then disappeared," says Paula Stitz, manager of that state's sex offender registry.

Public records show that Hair died in 2001.

A danger to the community again

Austin Kelly was required to register as a sex offender but absconded in both Tennessee and Oklahoma. He was later convicted again of sexual abuse.

Mistakes in the registries can have dire consequences. NPR found examples of unregistered offenders moving undetected — sometimes from one state to another — and committing additional sex crimes.

Austin Kelly, 26, was released from prison in March 2019 after serving 10 years for attempted rape of a child in Tennessee. Officials there placed him on community supervision for life, and he was forced to register as a sex offender.

Within six weeks of leaving prison, Kelly absconded, records show. He landed a job 600 miles away in Owasso, Okla., at the Sonic Drive-In and found a place to live. He filled out a sex offender registration form, but when the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office mailed the address verification form to him, he didn't send it back as required by law, police said. That made him an absconder in Oklahoma, too.

Late last year, police said that Kelly walked into a McDonald's across the street from his job and followed a 3-year-old girl and her 7-year-old brother into the men's bathroom. He was arrested 13 days later and charged with sexual abuse of the girl, along with aggravated possession of child pornography. He was convicted in December and sentenced to 35 years in prison.

Sexual abuse survivor Kristen Trogler says she believes the system created to track sex offenders is broken.

Kristen Trogler, a sexual abuse survivor, says she believes the system designed to track sex offenders is broken: "What's their punishment for not registering? A little bit of time in jail? It's not enough."

She has gone to the Missouri sex offender registry over the years looking for one man in particular: Robert Maurer. He went to jail for sexually abusing her when she was in kindergarten.

She didn't find him.

That's because once Maurer was released from prison for assaulting her, he failed to register at least twice — in Missouri and in Florida, records show. Authorities had no idea of his whereabouts for months at a time.

"The system doesn't work," says Trogler, who lives in St. Louis. "What's their punishment for not registering? A little bit of time in jail? It's not enough."

Robert Maurer went to jail for sexually abusing Kristen Trogler when she was in kindergarten. Once Maurer was released from prison, he failed to register as a sex offender in both Missouri and Florida.

Trogler first met Maurer when she and his daughter sat next to each other in kindergarten at the Oak Hill School in St. Louis and quickly became best friends. When the class took a field trip, Trogler's mother and Maurer chaperoned. Soon after, she allowed Maurer to babysit while she worked.

That's when the inappropriate touching began.

"It started off slowly," Trogler recalls. "I remember thinking it was not right."

Five years after his release for that crime, police arrested Maurer for molesting two girls, ages 12 and 13, in his home over a two-year period. Maurer pled guilty in 1998 to child molestation and statutory sodomy, and received a 10-year sentence.

After being released in December 2007, Maurer moved to Florida and ignored the requirement to register. He was charged with failure to register and got a six-year prison sentence.

Maurer was released in August 2013 and returned to Missouri without reporting his new address within three days, as required by law. While an absconder, Maurer sexually abused another 12-year-old girl — a relative with whom he lived. Authorities charged him with statutory sodomy and failure to register as a sex offender.

Kristen Trogler keeps family photos, including one of her as a baby and then as a mother with her three children.

A jury convicted Maurer of a lesser charge of attempted statutory sodomy and failure to register in 2017, and a judge sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Trogler testified at his trial, calling him a real-life "boogeyman."

"He is what nightmares are made of," she told the court.

Thirty years have passed since Trogler's abuse, but she relives it daily. She says she turned to drugs and alcohol as a teen.

"I was in pain," she told NPR. "I wanted to not be in this black hole that I'm still in every single day."

Now, at 36, she's divorced with three children. She lives in a small rented house in St. Louis and makes ends meet with a county tax-collecting job.

Prescription drugs sit on a table in Trogler's home in St. Louis. She suffers from depression and anxiety because of sexual abuse she suffered as a child.

Trogler's dining room table is filled with prescription bottles: pills for anxiety, depression and bipolar disorder. She sees a therapist, a decision she made three years ago.

"He's a monster," she says about Maurer. "He stole everything from me. I hate him."

Trogler says law enforcement fail people like her and others by not keeping track of offenders who don't register and abscond.

"The system is broken," Trogler says. "I don't know if there is a way to fix it."

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Josh Salman of USA Today ruins Registered Person's job with hit piece

FAC already says it best: "Well this is horrible… a man convicted of a sexual offense in 2007 turned his life around and started a janitorial business. He gets a contract providing janitorial services for the VA. USA today writes a story about it and the VA cancels the contract. Here we have someone who has tried to turn his life around (and seemingly was successful in doing so) gets re-punished for something he did more than a decade ago. He and the many people who work for him are fired and the agency doing the firing is the VA, who is supposed to help veterans (the man served 8 years in the Army)!

The story is offensive because it illustrates: (a) how people on the registry are barred from career opportunities everywhere, including as janitors, (b) how the label undermines rehabilitation by permanently destabilizing people, (c) how the VA can easily discard a sub-class of persons it’s supposed to be helping, and (d) how the label not only stigmatizes the registrant but anyone who chooses to give them a chance and do business with them."

If you want to tell Josh where he can shove his shitty reporting: Contact him at jsalman@gatehousemedia.com or @joshsalman or (941) 361-4967

https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/investigations/2020/08/11/convicted-sex-offender-got-lucrative-government-covid-19-contracts/3314931001/

Sex offender loses COVID-19 contract at VA hospital after USA TODAY asks questions

Josh Salman, USA TODAY

Ezekiel Lopez is a registered child sexual predator in Illinois who spent more than three years in prison for sexually abusing two teenage girls under his care. 

The conviction was not a barrier between Lopez and more than $700,000 in federal contracts to provide cleaning and janitorial services to help fight COVID-19 at the Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital just outside Chicago.

No rules specifically prevented it.

Government contractors are supposed to indicate on their applications whether they’ve had any felony convictions within the past two years. But Lopez was convicted in 2007.

The federal government can ban vendors convicted of fraud or other procurement violations from future contracts, usually for up to three years. But that debarment does not include sex crimes.

As a result neither Lopez nor his company, America’s Best at Work – which offers auto tire distribution as well as janitorial services – appeared on any list of parties excluded from Department of Veterans Affairs contracting.

VA spokeswoman Christina Noel said the company met the criteria to become a vendor under federal law, which includes being deemed “responsible” through its registration with the System for Award Management. The vendor also was in good standing with the federal government’s database for “performance and integrity.” 

But days after USA TODAY began questioning the agency about Lopez’s background, the VA hospital changed course, ending its relationship with the business as of July 23. 

Candace Oliva, a health systems specialist to the hospital director, said in an email that “nothing questionable” had turned up in the vendor’s two-year background check. But “after discovering this particular issue, Hines VA Hospital terminated its relationship with the contractor.”

Lopez did not respond to several calls and emails seeking comment for this story. A voice mailbox for the number listed for his company was full.

Procurement experts described the situation as a result of federal procurement laws aimed at helping the disadvantaged. Lopez received preferences on all of his contracts because his business is considered small and is owned by a veteran and American Indian.

Some cite the need for offenders released from prison to find meaningful employment and argue laws restricting felons from access to work have gone too far. The Fair Chance to Compete for Jobs Act prohibits federal contractors from requesting criminal histories from candidates until a conditional job offer has been extended, and civil rights laws prohibit discrimination against applicants for prior records.

Others questioned whether a child sex offender should be able to land lucrative public contracts funded by taxpayers. While different in each state, regulations in Illinois bar sex offenders from working in more than 100 professions that either require a license or are off limits to felons, including health care providers.

His prior conviction, they noted, likely would have been more of a hindrance to finding work in the private sector.

“You don’t land on the (excluded parties) list for a sex crime,” said Charles Tiefer, a professor at the University of Baltimore who specializes in federal procurement. “People can just turn right around and do this. The federal government says, ‘We’re open for business – come on in.’”

...

Lopez was convicted of criminal sexual abuse, sexual assault and sexual assault on a victim between the ages of 13 and 17, according to the sex offender registry. He served time in an Illinois state prison from April 2007 through August 2010 and spent another two years on parole before he was discharged from the system. 

The residence listed for Lopez on the sex offender registry matches the business address used by America’s Best at Work Corp. in federal contracting documents. The state corporation database in Illinois lists Lopez as the company’s president.

Federal spending records show Lopez and his business were handed more than $700,000 in COVID-19 work from the federal government this year, all without any competition from other vendors.

The first COVID-19 contract was signed April 8, and through change orders and exercised options the work was scheduled to continue through Sept. 30. After the VA canceled its contract in July, that total obligation amount slid to about $443,000, according to adjustments in the federal data.

Under the contract terms, the company was responsible for managing general janitorial services at the Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital in Cook County. As owner, Lopez was in charge of managing the crews while his employees performed the actual work, said Oliva, the hospital’s health systems specialist.

Leg up in preferences for vendors

The federal government has spent more than $20 billion in response to COVID-19 in a race to secure supplies and prepare its facilities.

An ongoing USA TODAY investigation into those contracts found vendors previously accused of fraud against the government were handed new COVID-19 orders despite their costly settlements. Other vendors without any experience or qualifications also have surfaced overnight to profit from the pandemic, but many ultimately can’t deliver on their promises.

But COVID-19 was not the first time Lopez’s company had landed federal government contracts.

America’s Best at Work Corp. was awarded $139,500 in total award obligations in fiscal year 2014/15 – about three years after Lopez's release from parole. The vendor went on to earn $108,500 worth of federal contracts the following year, about $13,000 in 2016/17 and another $57,500 in 2017/18.

The $700,000 in originally awarded coronavirus contracts brought the largest windfall, federal records show.

In all, since becoming a federal contractor, the company has received eight awards in Illinois ranging from sourcing dental instruments to ground treating and janitorial services. All of that money came from the VA.

Federal agencies like the VA are encouraged to do business with small, disadvantaged companies, along with those owned by veterans – part of an effort to undo past disparities. Presidential candidate Joe Biden has vowed to further improve contracting opportunities for minority-owned businesses.

Lopez checks all the boxes. He was enlisted in the U.S. Army from 1989 to 1997, according to records from his criminal case. His business also has applied as a certified Indian Preference Firm of the Tohono O'odham Nation in Sells, Arizona, the company’s website says. 

That military service, along with the company’s status as Native American-owned, gave Lopez a leg up when he bid for federal government work under rules designed to help these traditionally disadvantaged groups.

The government also focuses its backgrounding efforts on a company’s history – and not that of its principals and shareholders – looking more at the vendor’s financial strength, past performance and ability to meet the specifications of the contract.

That’s especially true for more routine services like janitorial work, said Benjamin Brunjes, assistant professor at the Daniel J. Evans School of Public Policy and Governance at the University of Washington.

Brunjes said that even if the principal of a company was under sanction, loopholes allow executives convicted of crimes to start new corporations and win new contracts. 

“The federal government is worried about (the) performance and financial solvency of its vendors,” he said, “not the backgrounds of their owners.”

Balance of public safety and recidivism

Industry trade groups for janitorial contractors cite best practices that call for their members to background screen employees. 

Additional oversight followed the 2015 publication of “Rape on the Night Shift,” an investigation by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting and other media partners. It found that the late nights and weekend hours surrounding the commercial janitorial industry created a setting that left workers susceptible to assault. 

While he could not comment on Lopez’s case, Mikel Gabrielson, a representative of ISSA — The Worldwide Cleaning Industry Association – said that if a janitorial employee was hired despite a sex abuse conviction, it could be problematic, especially if the company has any clients near schools, day cares or other places with restrictions and potential access to victims.

Aramark, a Philadelphia-based company that provides facility cleaning, among other services, also requires conditional hires to undergo post-offer, pre-employment screening, as part of the hiring process to “ensure customer safety,” a spokesman said. Other large competitors have similar protocols. 

In addition, in Illinois, sex offenders are not allowed within 500 feet of any school buildings, they are not allowed in public parks and those convicted after 2010 were  banned from using social media until the Illinois Supreme Court struck down the rule last year. They are still prohibited from obtaining various professional licenses, including health care.

That means doctors, nurses and other medical professionals with past sex crime convictions are not allowed to practice in VA hospitals and clinics in Illinois without a special waiver. Others argued those same protections for the public should extend to janitors and other contractors who might work in these buildings, where an offender could have access to VA employees and patients.

Robert Burton, a Washington, D.C., attorney who served as a career procurement official in the White House, said the janitorial contract was an example of a federal acquisition system in need of reform.

“It’s disturbing,” Burton said. “Especially if it’s a small business, you want to look at the business owner and whether they are responsible.”

But industry trade groups have worked with various programs in the past to help train certain inmates. And the “ban the box” movement across the U.S. has emphasized giving offenders a second chance at meaningful work after their release back to society to help lower crime and prevent recidivism.

Jill Levenson, a professor at Barry University in Miami who studies how society monitors and treats sex criminals, said laws designed to protect the public need to be balanced with a past offender’s ability to find work and support themselves.

“It all has to be weighed and balanced,” Levenson said. “People have to work. When people have been incarcerated or committed a crime, the expectation is they go back into society, be acclimated and be law-abiding … employment is a tough one.”

Josh Salman is a reporter on the USA TODAY Network investigations team. Contact him at jsalman@gatehousemedia.com or @joshsalman or (941) 361-4967.  

Saturday, May 30, 2020

Diane Dimond stokes the flames of vigilante violence in poorly worded editorial calling murder a "public service"

Perhaps some of you might have been thinking Diane Dimond was actually a resonable reporter, given her recent skepticism of sex offense registries. Yet, she still refers to a registrant as a "convicted pedophile," and since we all know that there is no crime called "pedophilia" nobody can be a "convicted pedophile."

Her article also shows us that the narrative Fairbanks's victim deserved what he got because he was allegedly "ogling kids while pretending to wash his car" has take hold and is not questioned. How does anyone know Fairbanks didn't make that shit up as an excuse to kill? After all, the media spent a week focused on a dilapidated children's playset in Condoluci's backyard before the Omaha Turd-Herald wrote that it belonged to the landlord of the rental property, not Condoluci.

There are lots of irresponsible people spreading lies on the Internet but it is worse when it is a syndicated columnist.

https://www.creators.com/read/diane-dimond/05/20/murder-as-a-public-service

Murder as a Public Service?
By Diane Dimond
May 30, 2020  5 Min Read

On the evening of May 14, 2020, in Omaha, Nebraska, James Fairbanks went to the home of Mattieo Condoluci and shot him dead. Condoluci, 64, was a twice convicted pedophile, and Fairbanks, 43, had spent years working with troubled kids in the Omaha Public School system.

After the body was discovered, the dead man's daughter, Amanda Henry, was quoted saying, "Murdering my dad was a horrible thing, but children are much safer now."

Fairbanks is now charged with first-degree murder.

During an emotional phone call with Henry, she told me of her father's death: "I was relieved. It finally happened. It's over. It has been hell."

And then Henry told me what life had been like with Mattieo Condoluci.

"I was beaten and raped by my own father for years," she said. "The man who was supposed to protect me instead belittled, humiliated and tortured me until I finally escaped at age 19." This, she told me, is why she is now supporting the man who killed her father.

"James Fairbanks answered a 27-year-long prayer for me," Henry said. "He was there when the police weren't there. He did something when the police didn't."

Henry described how her mother had fought valiantly to maintain custody of her 2-year-old daughter but lost touch when Condoluci took off with the toddler.

While Henry has tried to block out much of her early nomadic years with Dad — they moved to several different cities in California, Florida, New Mexico, Iowa and Nebraska — she remembers her father routinely preyed on single mothers with young children. "He would find a lost soul, bring her home and then do his devil's work," she said.

In 1994, Condoluci pleaded no contest in Florida to molesting the 5-year-old son of a woman he was dating. His sentence? Four years' probation. In 2006, by then relocated to Nebraska, Condoluci was sentenced to five years in prison for sexually assaulting the 12-year-old daughter of another woman in his life. He served less than two years.

Around the same time, Henry says she was befriended by a licensed counselor and foster mother who encouraged her to report her father to the Omaha Police Department. Henry says the Omaha Police Department told her she had waited too long; the statute of limitations had run out.

Today, others, most notably, two of Henry's female cousins, have posted on a "Free James Fairbanks" Facebook page that they were sexually abused by "Uncle Matt," and they are supporting his killer. One told me: "I was raped till I was 13 years old. It started when I was 7."

In a confession Fairbanks distributed to the local media before his arrest, he explained that while looking for a new apartment, he had checked the sex registry for a particular neighborhood and found Condoluci's name. Fairbanks admitted he had watched the convict pretending to wash his car while ogling a group of children playing in the street.

"I felt sick to my stomach," Fairbanks wrote. "I researched him more and more and found he had victimized dozens of kids in different states. ... (He) had a playground set in his backyard." Because of his work with victimized kids, Fairbanks said, "I couldn't in good conscience allow him to do it to anyone else while I had the means to stop him."

Total strangers are sending money to Fairbank's jailhouse account; thousands have signed petitions calling for Fairbanks to be pardoned — unlikely at this point since he hasn't been convicted of anything. Many are saying simply that Fairbanks should not spend another night in lockup, that he did the community a favor.

This case challenges society's ethics and our own morals. It underscores the failure of the statute of limitations laws because as any victim of childhood sex abuse will tell you, they get no reprieve from a lifetime of trauma. The case also highlights those disappointing sex registries that are clogged with the names of teenage Romeos and public urinators but fail to focus strict surveillance on career pedophiles and rapists.

The case leaves us with the unsettling idea that sometimes — when those in authority fail to protect — murder could be seen as a public service.

In that instance, should the murderer get a pass?

To find out more about Diane Dimond, visit her website at www.dianedimond.com. Her latest book, "Thinking Outside the Crime and Justice Box," is available on Amazon.com. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

The Omaha World-Herald spent a week promoting vigilante violence, only now says it is wrong

UPDATE -- After a full week of promoting the Free Fairbanks facebook vigilante group, the fundraisers, and endless stream of articles sympathetic to vigilante killer James Fairbanks, only after an entire week of all this does the Turd-Herald say that vigilante murder is wrong. No takebacks here. Where was this editorial a week ago?

Original - It is a rarity that I choose to nominate an entire news outlet as opposed to a single reporter, but it is not without precedent. The Omaha paper is so full of shit, I've dubbed them the Omaha Turd-Herald.

Over the past 2 days, the Turd-Herald has published articles sympathizing with James Fairbanks, a man who abused the Nebraska Registry and influenced by a Facebook vigilante group to commit cold-blooded murder.

Below are just a couple of exerpts from a couple of the articles. There are more and i'm sure there are plenty of links on the article to more reports, but the Turd Herald has done everything it can to demonize the registrant and canonize the murderer.

https://www.omaha.com/news/crime/woman-whose-son-was-molested-by-omaha-homicide-victim-supports-his-alleged-killer/article_1322c1c7-ad55-5c69-9b2c-4d36f90ea20a.html

 Laura Smith created a Facebook group to warn others about the convicted sex offender.

She wrote in June 2016 that Condoluci preys on the single mother “to get his hands on her children.”

“He must be stopped,” she added. “He has been convicted twice but back on the streets.”...

When Smith discovered that Condoluci had been found slain in Omaha on Saturday, she reignited her postings in the group.

“Flush that POS remains down the toilet and save the tax payers money,” she wrote the day after Condoluci’s body was found. “Justice served!”

https://www.omaha.com/news/crime/ex-wife-omaha-man-arrested-in-killing-of-registered-sex-offender-fearful-man-would-offend/article_ca281537-18e6-5e9f-8bd6-3cee4499b939.html

Fairbanks has no history of violent crimes, according to a review of court records, but his ex-wife, Kelly Tamayo, applied for protection orders against him in 2016 and 2018 while they were going through a divorce.

Tamayo said Tuesday that her ex-husband “called me yesterday afternoon and told me what he had done and that he was turning himself in to police.”

Fairbanks, she said, “was apologetic and asked me to tell the kids that he loved them.”
...

The writer of the email, sent to The World-Herald and other local news media outlets, claimed to have shot Condoluci after learning that he was listed on Nebraska’s sex offender registry. The author said he or she was apartment hunting in the neighborhood where Condoluci lived and learned of him while investigating the neighborhood.

“We are all in shock to say the least,” said Tamayo, who divorced Fairbanks in 2016. “Jim is a protector. He has worked with vulnerable kids his entire career. He took it very personally to protect his kids and other kids from (sex) offenders like that man was.”

Tamayo, who said she has a doctorate in psychology, said she thinks Fairbanks was “overwhelmed by the thought that this man was going to offend again.” He most likely was living in fear of that possibility, she said.

“He would have been that way because the penal system fails to rehabilitate these individuals,” she said. “They just put them back in our neighborhoods.”...

Saturday, May 16, 2020

Anna Holtzman is the Alex Jones of the #MeToo Movement

It is 2020 and we still have people pushing the debunked Repressed Memory pseudoscience from the 1980s, but it fits perfectly with the mindless #MeToo narrative. If we automatically believe all accusers rather than the the presumption of innocence until proven guilty, then we risk many innocent people having their lives completely destroyed by a false accusation. That is the true danger of movements like #MeToo. They simply do not want to believe anyone can make a false allegation

I'm not going to publish the entire crap piece -- it is long and publishing it is like trying to unclog a sewer. There's just too much shit to unpack. She goes into Alex Jones levels of conspiracy theories like MKUltra, coverups of Freud's theories on child abuse, and that proof of innocence does not mean innocence.

This crackpot article has popped up on Google News Feeds, so apparently, Google has low standards as to what constitutes as "news" these days.

And to think, a number of people in this Anti-Registry Movement are foolish enough to believe these crackpots can be reasoned with. 

https://goodmenproject.com/featured-content/harvey-weinsteins-false-memory-defense-and-its-shocking-origin-story-kpkn/

Harvey Weinstein’s ‘False Memory’ Defense and its Shocking Origin Story How powerful sex offenders manipulated the field of psychology.
May 15, 2020 by Anna Holtzman

During the Harvey Weinstein rape trial, the defense called to the stand expert witness Elizabeth Loftus, a researcher on the phenomenon of so-called “false memory.” This legal tactic, explicitly designed to discredit the testimony of sexual abuse survivors, has a sordid and astonishing history dating back to the 1980s and 90s, an era known to the psychology field as the “memory wars.”

The “memory wars” were essentially a war on sexual abuse survivors who dared to speak out in an era before #METOO. More specifically, the “memory wars” targeted a particular group of sexual abuse victims: Incest survivors.

Incest is one of the most common forms of sexual abuse, and yet — despite the gains of the #METOO movement — it remains conspicuously missing from the conversation. This is largely because the “false memory” defense that was created to silence incest survivors has somehow persisted, both in the public consciousness and in the field of psychology itself.

This essay will examine the history of the “false memory” defense and its far-ranging impacts. To fully explore the issue, readers will have to open their minds to the possibility that the field of modern psychology is entrenched in pseudoscientific propaganda created by alleged child abusers, that some of Freud’s most enduring theories were based on protecting incest perpetrators, and that during the Cold War, the CIA engaged in widespread sexual abuse of children. It sounds fantastical, I know. But, so did the Weinstein case when it first broke. I hope you’ll bear with me.

... So how does Project MKUltra connect to the “false memory” propaganda campaign? One of the MKUltra intelligence-hacking experiments involved a “honey trap” strategy whereby prostitutes were trained to extract information from intelligence officers using sex. Some of these sex workers were consenting adults. Others were sex trafficked children that MKUltra researchers gained access to under the pretext of medical treatment....

The “False Accusations” Deception

The notion that legal exoneration of an alleged perpetrator is proof of a “false accusation” resulting from a “false memory.”

Unless you are a men’s rights activist or living under a rock, anyone in the age of #METOO should understand that legal exoneration is not proof that sexual abuse did not occur. The legal system is rigged against sexual abuse victims, as has been shown time and time again — even in cases where irrefutable physical evidence has been present.

The “Due Process” Deception

The notion that sexual abuse memories should be treated as courtroom accusations and thus regarded with suspicion — even in a therapeutic setting — in order to honor due process for the accused.

While blanket skepticism certainly makes sense in a courtroom setting, it is not consistent with the general goals or attitudes of psychotherapy. Just imagine how a therapy session might go if the therapist viewed a client’s every memory with skepticism — childhood birthdays, the loss of a beloved pet, a fight with a best friend. Generally, therapists are trained to respond to clients’ memories with acknowledgment, empathy and curiosity. Only on the topic of childhood sexual abuse are therapists warned to be wary of “false memories.”

What we know about childhood sexual abuse is that — like adult sexual abuse — it occurs at epidemic rates and is grossly underreported, under-prosecuted and routinely disbelieved. Warning therapists to be wary of “false” abuse memories reinforces the status quo of disbelieving sexual abuse survivors....

The “satanic panic” deception is designed to make abuse survivors appear “crazy” or “hysterical” — a tactic that deflects attention from perpetrators by discrediting their victims.

While the term “satanic ritual abuse” may sound out-there, it refers to a very real and commonplace phenomenon. The more ordinary term for this phenomenon is “organized abuse.” Put simply, it is the practice of organized groups perpetrating abuse as a condoned, intentional and habitual activity. ...

A theory, espoused by Peter Levine and others, that when an individual experiences unexplained emotional distress, the mind may create or latch onto a “false memory” of incest out of a “desperate” need to explain the distress.

The term “desperate” as used here is a dog whistle for sexism — similar to words like “hysterical” that cast women’s emotional reactions to oppression and gaslighting as “crazy.”...

I don’t question the fact that memories can come back spontaneously, that details can be forgotten, or even that memories of abuse can be triggered by various cues many years later.
Based on well-known literature by both trauma experts and survivors, the above is a fairly sound description of repressed memory. It’s hard to understand, then, Loftus’s insistence that repressed memory is a myth.

That is because Loftus’s definition of repressed memory is not derived from trauma experts or survivors, but rather from the population that she is steeped in: Alleged perpetrators.

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Patrick Kelleher of Pink News thinks that Tiger King having an autographed picture of Bill Cosby is somehow newsworthy

I get it, people are bored due to COVID-19. Well, I've been busy keeping up with the news to pay much attention to this whole Tiger King thing everyone else seems to be enamored with. To me it is just another flash in the pan think like Kony 2012 was. But I suppose some of you saw the documentary about it and some of you may be fans. But this reporter for PinkNews thinks it is somehow big news that Joe Exotic, the Tiger King guy, once had a picture of Bill Cosby on his wall during a 2011 film, long before people started accusing Cosby of sexual assault.

Of course, my response is so the hell what? Why is this news? Are we that bored that this is what passes as news? And writing "Twitter responds" articles are among the laziest articles to write.

I guess if you've ever bought a Jello Pudding Pop as a kid you must also support accused rapists judging by the fault logic in this article.

https://www.pinknews.co.uk/2020/04/13/joe-exotic-bill-cosby-tiger-king-louis-theroux/

"Those who didn’t get enough of Exotic from watching Tiger King have flocked to Louis Theroux’s documentary America’s Most Dangerous Pets, in which he also appears.

In the 2011 documentary, Theroux visited Exotic’s zoo to find out more about his tigers — but it’s a signed photograph of Bill Cosby that is capturing people’s attention.

The photo, seen in the background in one scene, is black and white and bears a hand-written message apparently from Cosby himself.

Twitter spots signed Bill Cosby photograph in the home of Joe Exotic.
“To G.W. Exotic Animal Park, Good Work!” the message from Cosby reads..."


Thursday, April 9, 2020

Avery Seeger of Kentucky New Era believes getting a pardon is "skirting the registry"

The days of "impartial journalism" are long gone, as reporters use their platform to make personal attacks and promote an agenda rather than just report the news.

https://www.kentuckynewera.com/web/article_d90a5d42-2574-5bd1-8f92-ec78d97319fd.html

Dayton Jones files lawsuit to skirt sex offender registry
By Avery Seeger New Era staff writer Mar 24, 2020  0

Dayton Jones and his defense counsel have filed a lawsuit on the grounds that he should not have to register as a sex offender.

The lawsuit was filed March 3 against the commonwealth, Kentucky Justice and Public Safety Cabinet as well as Probation and Parole officer Megan Goss.

Attorneys Daniel J. Canon of Saeed and Little, LLP out of Indianapolis, and Darren C. Wolff, a Louisville attorney, are representing Jones.

The lawsuit alleges Jones’ constitutional rights were violated for being required to register as a sex offender after receiving a pardon and commutation letter from former Gov. Matt Bevin.

The lawsuit states, “To counsel’s knowledge, there is no Kentucky case which squarely addresses whether a convicted felon must comply with Kentucky Sex Offender Registration Act once their sentence has been pardoned or commuted.

“However, the Kentucky Supreme Court has stated that a pardon relieves a convicted felon of ‘all the consequences which the law has annexed to the commission of the public offense of which he has been pardoned and [the convicted person] attains new credit and capacity, as if he had never committed that public offense.”

Jones’ counsel states that nothing in the pardon and commutation document suggests that Jones should have to register, noting that it would have been within the power of the governor to require him to do so.

“If forced to register under SORA, Jones’ rights under Kentucky law will be violated,” the document states.

The suit further claims that if Jones is required to register as a sex offender, he will suffer “immediate and irreparable injury, loss and/or damage.”

The suit claims Jones will suffer from registering in the form of reduced employment opportunities, severe social stigma, traveling restrictions, psychological harm and the ability to live wherever he chooses.

It also argues that Jones was granted a pardon instead of a commutation.

“On December 9, 2019, Bevin issued Executive Order No. 2019-1332, which styled ‘PARDON & COMMUTATION,’ ” the lawsuit wrote.

“Though the document clearly states that it is a ‘PARDON,’ the document simply states the fact of Jones’ conviction, and concludes that the Governor ‘hereby commute[s] the sentence of Dayton Ross Jones to time served.’

“There is no further limitation or requirement placed on Jones by the plain language of the ‘Pardon & Commutation’ document. The Secretary of State’s Website lists this document as granting an ‘unconditional pardon’ to Petitioner (Jones).”

It goes on to say that since the executive order was made by Bevin, the commonwealth has treated the document as granting a pardon.

However, on Jan. 13, the Kentucky Secretary of State’s office clarified to the New Era that the 15-year sentence of Dayton Jones was commuted, not pardoned, after the heading on the executive order was unclear.

While the lawsuit focuses largely on the commonwealth’s actions against Jones, it also accuses Goss of violating Jones’ rights.

The lawsuit alleges Goss caused a letter to be delivered to Jones’ grandparents’ house, which contained a signed notice of discharge declaring that Jones is on sex offender post-incarceration supervision.

However, Jones and his counsel say Jones had not signed the notice and had not seen it prior to Feb. 26, the date the letter was received by his grandparents.

His counsel further alleged that Goss required Jones to report to her office Feb. 28 for sex offender supervision.

In the lawsuit, Jones’ counsel requests several orders be made by Franklin Circuit Court, including a speedy hearing and declaring that Jones was granted an unconditional pardon by the former governor and doesn’t have to register, among other requests...

Friday, February 28, 2020

Melissa Martin seems to have a personal problem with me. Well this post isn't going to change that

I guess this idiot felt that if she did not mention my name, I would not read her tripe. Well I did. I was in the Dayton Daily News article. She saw fit not to mention my name but spent time bashing me. I wrote to the paper with my counterpoint to this fluff piece. I also challenged her to a debate, but all victim advocates are afraid of being outed as being full of shiitake, so don't expect her to take me up on it.

https://www.portsmouth-dailytimes.com/opinion/46789/ohio-sex-offender-registry-needs-to-stay

Ohio Sex Offender Registry needs to stay
OPINION

By Melissa Martin

Ohio’s sex offender registry has 18,894 offenders who have been convicted of various levels of sex crimes. There are currently 139 adult registered sex offenders in Scioto County.

Registered sex offenders in Ohio are required by law to register their home address, work address, and vehicle information with their local sheriff’s office to be publicly accessible through the eSORN database. Each of Ohio’s 88 county sheriff offices input the information into the system. Supplemental information, such as phone numbers, email addresses, screen names, and handles are also required, but are not public. www.ohio.gov.

A 2018 article in the Dayton Daily News, interviewed a male who was convicted in Alabama in 2001 of sexually abusing an 11-year-old girl when he was 22, and spent three years in prison. When he was released, he moved to Cincinnati and was required by the state of Ohio to register as a “predator.” Throughout the article he complains about the consequences of his atrocious crime. And he is receiving disability due to depression and anxiety because of housing and employment from being a registered sex offender per his opinion.

So, taxpayers are financially paying for the fallout from his heinous crime, while he spends his time running a website advocating to reform Ohio sex offender laws. What is wrong with this picture?

Who are the perpetrators of child sexual abuse?

The US Department of Justice reports that 93 percent of child sex abuse is committed by a person whom the child knows. In 47 percent of the cases, the perpetrator is a member of the family. And 7 percent of offenses are committed by strangers.

“Abusers can manipulate victims to stay quiet about the sexual abuse using a number of different tactics. Often an abuser will use their position of power over the victim to coerce or intimidate the child. They might tell the child that the activity is normal or that they enjoyed it. An abuser may make threats if the child refuses to participate or plans to tell another adult,” according to RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network), the nation’s largest anti-sexual violence organization.

Do child molesters re-offend by sexually abusing more children after being released from prison?

Studies are flawed and do not reflect crimes that are not prosecuted or not reported by victims. Information from studies do not accurately reflect what happens over a longer period of time.

The following classifications are used by Ohio’s system:

Sexual Predator: An individual who has been convicted of, or pleaded guilty to, committing a sexually-oriented offense and is considered likely to commit additional sexually oriented offenses. Offenders with this designation are subject to registration/verification requirements for life, unless a judge modifies or terminates the designation. They are subject to neighbor/community notification provisions and reporting requirements at 90-day intervals.

Habitual Sex Offender: An individual who has been convicted of, or pleaded guilty to, committing a sexually oriented offense, and who has been previously convicted of or pleaded guilty to one or more sexually oriented offenses. Offenders with this designation are subject to registration/verification requirements each year for a period of 20 years after release. A judge may rule that a habitual sex offender is subject to neighbor/ community notification.

Sexually Oriented Offender: A person who has been convicted of, or pleaded guilty to, committing a sexually oriented offense, but who has not been designated as a sexual predator or habitual sex offender. Offenders with this designation are subject to the registration/verification requirements annually for a period of 10 years after release. They are not subject to neighbor/community notification.

Offense tiers used by Ohio are as follows:

Tier I: Importuning; unlawful sexual conduct with a minor, non-consensual and offender less than 4 years older than victim, not previously convicted of certain offenses; voyeurism; sexual imposition; gross sexual imposition; illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material or performance; child enticement with sexual motivation; pandering obscenity; menacing by stalking with sexual motivation; and unlawful restraint with sexual motivation — this includes an attempt, complicity or conspiracy to commit any of these offenses. Child-victim offenders not in Tier II or Tier III.

Tier II: Compelling prostitution; pandering obscenity involving a minor; pandering sexual oriented material involving a minor; illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material or performance; when offender is at least four years older; or when the offender is less than four years older and has prior conviction for certain other offenses; gross sexual imposition victim under 13; child endangering; kidnapping with sexual motivation; kidnapping victim over 18; and abduction with sexual motivation — any sexual offense that occurs after the offender has been classified as a Tier I offender. This includes an attempt, complicity or conspiracy to commit any of these offenses. Pre-AWA habitual offenders, unless re-classified.

Tier III: Rape; sexual battery; aggravated murder with sexual motivation; murder with sexual motivation; unlawful death or termination of pregnancy as a result of commit- ting or attempting to commit a felony with sexual motivation; kidnapping of minor to engage in sexual activity; kid- napping of minor, not by parent; and felonious assault with sexual motivation. — Pre-AWA predators unless re-classified after hearing. Any sexual offense that occurs after the offender is classified as a Tier II or Tier III offender. This includes an attempt, complicity or conspiracy to commit any of these offenses.

The Ohio Sex Offender Registry needs to stay.

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Bye, Felicia! Felicia Sonmez of the Washington Post tweets about NBA legend Kobe Bryants's 20-year-old rape allegation just minutes after his tragic death


If it wasn't for the fact that Kobe Bryant was a famous basketball player, Felicia would not have been suspended. I ranted about how the media loves to shame people even in death, so it was refreshing to see someone actually get reprimanded for doing so.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/washington-post-suspends-reporter-who-tweeted-about-kobe-bryant-rape-allegations-following-his-death/2020/01/27/babe9c04-413b-11ea-b5fc-eefa848cde99_story.html

Washington Post reporter who tweeted about Kobe Bryant rape allegations placed on administrative leave

By: Paul Farhi
January 27, 2020 at 7:10 PM EST

The Washington Post has placed on administrative leave a reporter who tweeted a link to a news story about rape allegations against the late basketball star Kobe Bryant after his death on Sunday, saying “her tweets displayed poor judgment that undermined the work of her colleagues.”

The tweet by political reporter Felicia Sonmez sparked a furious backlash on social media, with many deeming it inappropriate just hours after Bryant and his daughter, Gianna, were killed in a helicopter crash outside of Los Angeles. In the wake of her posting, Sonmez said she received death and rape threats and her home address was posted online, compelling her to stay at a hotel overnight.

The Post placed Sonmez on paid leave while newsroom managers look into the episode.

Sonmez sparked the uproar by linking to a 2016 Daily Beast article headlined “Kobe Bryant’s Disturbing Rape Case: The DNA Evidence, the Accuser’s Story, and the Half-Confession.”

The story recounted details of an accusation of sexual assault against Bryant by a 19-year-old woman employed by a Colorado hotel that Bryant visited in 2003. Bryant was charged with sexual assault and false imprisonment, but the charges were dropped after the woman declined to testify. The Los Angeles Lakers star acknowledged having sexual relations with the woman but said the relationship was consensual. He later apologized to the woman, acknowledging that she hadn’t given her consent.

In an interview, Sonmez said her intent was to fill in an important piece of information in the early accounts of Bryant’s life and career and to counter tweets that had popped up dismissing the allegations against Bryant as insignificant.

“It was jarring to me to see the initial coverage [of Bryant’s death] omitting any mention” of the 2003 case, she said. “The early obits and news stories made only passing mention” to it. “The seriousness of those allegations is a valid part of his legacy and his life. Those allegations should not be minimized in any way.”

Sonmez, who has been open about her own experience with sexual assault, said survivors of assault and their family members praised her for highlighting the Bryant allegations. Rather than undermining her colleagues, she said, her tweets did the opposite. “It demonstrates to survivors that we see them and hear them, and they are not ignored,” she said. “No matter how rich and powerful and beloved [an alleged perpetrator is], we will treat them with the seriousness they deserve.”

As the criticism of Sonmez mounted Sunday night, a Post managing editor, Tracy Grant, instructed Sonmez to delete any tweets referring to her original posting. Sonmez complied.

News organizations have repeatedly disciplined employees for social-media postings that run afoul of general newsroom guidelines and violate journalists’ obligation of neutrality. But the rules don’t cover every circumstance and are sometimes irregularly enforced.

In a letter to Grant and Post Executive Editor Martin Baron, The Post’s newsroom union, the Newspaper Guild, protested Sonmez’s suspension.

“We write to share our alarm and dismay that our newsroom leaders have chosen to place Felicia Sonmez on leave over a social media post,” the letter said.

It added: “We understand . . . the hours after Bryant’s death were a fraught time to share reporting about past accusations of sexual assault. The loss of such a beloved figure, and of so many other lives, is a tragedy. But we believe it is our responsibility as a news organization to tell the public the whole truth as we know it — about figures and institutions both popular and unpopular, at moments timely and untimely.”

The letter urged The Post to ensure Sonmez’s safety in the face of threats, to make a statement condemning abuse of its reporters and to rescind any disciplinary action against her.

Sonmez said that she had been warned previously by Post management about statements on social media regarding her own sexual assault allegations and that this has left her “deeply frustrated.”

Grant on Monday referred to her statement that Sonmez’s conduct had “undermined” her colleagues. She declined further comment.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Mike Gauntner of WFMJ thinks that people care about an arrest for speeding is important because the one arrested was a registrant

TMI, Mike.

https://www.wfmj.com/story/41565615/columbiana-man-clocked-driving-91-mph-in-washingtonville-charged-with-child-endangering

Sex offender clocked driving 91 mph in Washingtonville with teens

A Columbiana man who is a registered sex offender is due in court Thursday to answer claims that he drove 91 miles an hour through the small community of Washingtonville with a car full of juveniles.
Wednesday, January 15th 2020, 8:37 AM EST by Mike Gauntner
Updated: Wednesday, January 15th 2020, 9:14 AM EST

A Columbiana man who is a registered sex offender is due in court Thursday to answer claims that he drove 91 miles an hour through the small community of Washingtonville with a car full of juveniles.

A Washingtonville police officer says radar showed 26-year-old Antonio DeLeon driving a Cadillac CTS 56 miles per hour over the 35 mph speed limit on State Route 14 Saturday night.

When DeLeon was pulled over, he told the officer he thought he was still on the 55 mph portion of Route 14 outside the village.

Inside DeLeon's car were four teenagers; a boy and a girl, both 14, as well as a 15-year-old girl, and a 16-year-old boy.

According to state records, DeLeon was sentenced to one-and-a-half years in prison and declared to be a Tier One Sex Offender after being convicted of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor in Cuyahoga County.  Those records say the victims were two 14-year-old girls.

DeLeon was arrested and booked into the Mahoning County Jail on charges of child endangering, speeding, and reckless operation.

Washingtonville Police tell 21 News that DeLeon's sex offender information will be presented to the court when he appears on Thursday.