Showing posts with label .International. Show all posts
Showing posts with label .International. Show all posts

Monday, July 2, 2012

AU - Women denies trying to kill sex offender

Original Article

You will notice, that in most crime related news articles, if the victim is not an ex-sex offender, they don't mention the victims name but do mention the name of the offender, but when it comes to ex-sex offenders, it's the other way around, as in this article. The woman who "allegedly" attacked this man and women, her name wasn't mentioned while theirs was. Why is that?

07/02/2012

By Sean Fewster

A woman who allegedly tried to murder former cycling coach and convicted sex offender [name withheld] has been ordered to stand trial.

In the Supreme Court this morning the woman, 20, pleaded not guilty to one count of attempted murder.

She further denied one aggravated count of causing serious harm with intent, and one aggravated count of assault.

Court documents allege the offences occurred at Kilburn on September 10 last year.

They further allege the woman used a knife to attack [name withheld] and his wife, [wife name withheld].

[name withheld] received a suspended four and a half-year sentence for unlawful sexual intercourse in 2009.

Today, lawyers for the woman asked the court to suppress any information that could "tend to identify" their client.
- Which they did, but they also name the "victims?"

Corinne Harrison, prosecuting, said any such order should extend only to the woman's name and image.

"The accused has previously been the victim of sexual offending," she said.
- So does that make it alright to list his name?  Apparently so, but he was the "victim" here!

"In relation to that earlier offence, the complainant in this matter ([name withheld]) was named as the perpetrator."

Justice Margaret Nyland suppressed the woman's name and image, saying the order could be reviewed following her trial.

She remanded the woman on continuing bail to a directions hearing next month.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

UK - British Court Blocks Sex Criminal's Removal to US

Original Article

06/28/2012

By RAPHAEL SATTER

Britain's High Court on Thursday blocked a U.S. government bid to extradite a sex criminal to Minnesota, saying the state's restrictive treatment program for sex offenders was far too draconian.

Judges Alan Moses and David Eady endorsed 43-year-old [name withheld]'s appeal against extradition after U.S. authorities refused to guarantee that [name withheld] wouldn't be placed in Minnesota's civil commitment program, which provides for the indefinite detention of people found to be "sexually dangerous."

The judges said that commitment to the program would be in "flagrant denial" of [name withheld]'s human rights.

[name withheld], a dual U.S.-Irish citizen, is accused of raping a 14-year-old girl and sexually molesting two 11-year-olds in Minnesota in the 1990s. He escaped to Ireland as prosecutors prepared to file charges, and while staying there was convicted of sexually assaulting two 12-year-old girls.

Authorities finally caught up with him two years ago in London, where he'd moved using an Irish passport that spelled his last name in Gaelic as "O'Suilleabhain."

The British judges made clear in an earlier decision that they would have supported [name withheld]'s extradition had it not been for the sex treatment program, which they described as among the toughest in the United States.

The Minnesota program, which began in the mid-1990s, allows civil courts to commit a person for sex offender treatment if a judge decides the person is sexually psychopathic or sexually dangerous. As of April 1, 641 people were in the program.

The High Court justices outlined a litany of concerns, noting that offenders don't have to be mentally ill to be committed; their offenses don't have to be recent; and in some cases, those placed in the program don't even have to have been convicted of any crime.

The judges added they'd seen no evidence that anyone had ever been released from the program since it began in its current form in 1988.

"There is a real risk that if returned, Mr. [name withheld] will be the subject of an order of civil commitment," the judges said in the June 20 decision, adding that placing him in the program would be a flagrant denial of his rights.

They gave U.S. officials a week to guarantee that [name withheld] wouldn't be enrolled in the program, but when no assurances were made, the extradition proceedings were dropped Thursday.

The program has been criticized for holding people indefinitely. A 64-year-old man became the first person to be granted a provisional discharge in more than a decade earlier this year when he was allowed to move into a Minneapolis-area halfway house. Only one other person was ever released from the program, and he was soon taken back into custody on a violation.

In Minnesota, two county prosecutors said they were disappointed by the decision. The statement from Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman and Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom said it was "not in the interests of public safety" for them to commit to keeping [name withheld] out of the program.

They said they would pursue criminal prosecutions if he returns to the US.

Peter Wold, [name withheld]'s criminal defense attorney in Minnesota, said the British judges had balked at the prospect of indefinite detention. "That offended them, and it should offend a lot of people, to have the prospect of people being committed with no end in sight," he said.

Michael Hall III, the attorney representing the three alleged victims in Minnesota, said it was unfortunate that [name withheld] wouldn't be held accountable by law enforcement.

"Now, really the only avenue available to his victims in the U.S. is through the civil courts," he said.

Hall's clients sued [name withheld] in January. [name withheld]'s attorney had asked that the case be put on hold pending a decision on extradition on criminal charges, but Hall said he anticipated the lawsuit would now go forward.

Hall said he expected a civil jury to award "significant punitive damages" against [name withheld] — though he conceded there could be difficulties enforcing a judgment if [name withheld] remains in Britain.

See Also:

Friday, June 29, 2012

UK - Revealed: the scale of sexual abuse by police officers

Original Article

And I wonder, how many of these corrupt police officers are on a public registry so when a cop moves in next to you, you can use the information to "protect" yourself?

06/29/2012

By Sandra Laville

Guardian investigation finds sexual predators in police are abusing their power to target victims of crime

Sexual predators in the police are abusing their power to target victims of crime they are supposed to be helping, as well as fellow officers and female staff, the Guardian can reveal.

An investigation into the scale and extent of the problem suggests sexual misconduct could be more widespread than previously believed.

The situation raises questions about the efficacy of the police complaints system, the police's internal whistleblowing procedures, the vetting of officers and a failure to monitor disciplinary offences.

Police officers have been convicted or disciplined for a range of offences from rape and sexual assault to misconduct in public office relating to inappropriate sexual behaviour with vulnerable women they have met on duty. Others are awaiting trial for alleged offences, though many are never charged with a criminal offence and are dealt with via internal disciplinary procedures.

The problem is to a large extent hidden, as no official statistics are kept and few details are released about internal disciplinary action in such cases.

By analysing the data available – including court cases and misconduct proceedings – the Guardian has attempted to document the scale of the corruption for the first time.

In the past four years, there were 56 cases involving police officers and a handful of community support officers who either were found to have abused their position to rape, sexually assault or harass women and young people or were investigated over such allegations.
- I think we've documented more than 56 in the state of Florida alone, yet alone the entire US.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) and the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) are so concerned they are carrying out a rare joint inquiry into the scale of the problem, which will be published in September, the Guardian can reveal.

Their work was prompted by the case of the Northumbria police constable Stephen Mitchell, 43, who was jailed for life in January 2011 for carrying out sex attacks on vulnerable women, including prostitutes and heroin addicts, while he was on duty.

Despite being the subject of previous disciplinary offences, involving one inappropriate relationship with a woman and the accessing of the force computer to find private details of an individual, Mitchell had not been subjected to extra supervision or dismissed by the force.

Those targeted by the officers are predominantly women, but in some cases are children and young people, many of them vulnerable victims of crime.

The Guardian's investigation has uncovered evidence of:
  • Vetting failures, including a concern that vetting procedures may have been relaxed post-2001 during a surge in police recruitment.
  • Concerns over the recording and monitoring of disciplinary offences as officers progress through their career.
  • A tendency for women who complain they have been sexually attacked by a policeman not to be believed.
  • A pervasive culture of sexism within the police service, which some claim allows abusive behaviour to go unchecked.

Debaleena Dasgupta, a lawyer who has represented women sexually assaulted and raped by police officers, said: "I don't think any [victims] are quite as damaged as those who are victims of police officers."

"The damage is far deeper because they trusted the police and … believed that the police were supposed to protect them from harm and help catch and punish those who perpetrate it."

"The breach of that trust has an enormous effect: they feel that if they can't trust a police officer, who can they trust? They lose their confidence in everyone, even those in authority. It is one of the worst crimes that can be committed and when committed by an officer, becomes one of the greatest abuses of power."

The officers involved come from all ranks within the service: the most senior officer accused of serious sexual harassment was a deputy chief constable, who was subject to 26 complaints by 13 female police staff.

David Ainsworth, deputy chief constable of Wiltshire police, killed himself last year, an inquest heard this month, during an inquiry into his behaviour. He is one of two officers accused of sexual misconduct to have taken their own lives over the past four years.

In one of the worst cases in the past four years, Trevor Gray, a detective sergeant with Nottinghamshire police, broke into the home of a woman he met on a date and raped her while her young child slept in the house. Gray was jailed for eight years in May for rape, attempted rape and sexual assault.

Many of the cases documented involve police officers accessing the police national computer to gain access to the details of vulnerable women and young people in order to bombard them with texts and phone calls and initiate sexual contact.

Deputy Chief Constable Bernard Lawson of Merseyside police, the Acpo lead on counter-corruption, who is working with the IPCC on the joint report, said: "Police officers who abuse their position of trust have an incredibly damaging impact on community confidence in the service."

"There is a determination throughout policing to identify and remove those who betray the reputation of the overwhelming majority of officers."

In its report on corruption within the police service published last month, the IPCC identified abuse of authority by officers for their own personal gain, including to engage in sexual intercourse with a vulnerable female while on duty, and the misuse of computer systems to access details of vulnerable females, as two of the five key corruption threats to the service.

IPCC figures show that 15% of the 837 corruption cases referred by forces to the watchdog between 2008 and 2011 involved abuse of authority by a police officer, and 9% involved misuse of systems.

Clare Phillipson, director of Wearside Women in Need, who supported some of Mitchell's victims, said: "What you have here is the untouched tip of an iceberg in terms of sexually questionable behaviour and attitudes. The police service, in my experience, has an incredibly macho culture and women are seen as sexual objects."
- Come on, I'm sure women are doing this as well.

"Police officers have a duty to steer away from vulnerable women in distress, some of whom see these police officers as their saviours. It is an abuse of their power to exploit that."

One area to be examined by the IPCC is whether there might have been vetting failures from 2001 onwards during a massive recruitment drive in the police.

Between 2001 and 2007, the overall strength of the service grew by more than 16,000, with around 2,666 officers recruited each year on average.

Six years ago, a study of vetting within the police service by Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary revealed "disturbing" failures that had allowed suspect individuals to join the service. The report, Raising the Standard, exposed more than 40 vetting failures among police officers and support staff. The report concluded: "The potential damage that can be caused by just one failure should not be underestimated."

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

UK - To Catch a Paedophile

VI - Senators forward legislation to toughen sex offender rules

Original Article

06/26/2012

By ALDETH LEWIN

ST. THOMAS - The Senate Rules and Judiciary Committee amended and passed a bill to update the sex offender registry laws in the territory.

The bill would bring the territory into compliance with federal regulations that would qualify the territory for some federal law enforcement funding.

The bill first was heard in the committee in February but was held for additional changes.

The legislation amends the V.I. Sexual Offender Registration and Community Protection Act of 1997 to increase reporting requirements for convicted sex offenders.

Gov. John deJongh Jr. submitted the bill to the Legislature last year.

The measure requires all sex offenders to register with the V.I. government within three days of coming to the territory or changing residences within the territory. Reporting requirements vary depending on the crime for which the offender was convicted.

Concerns were raised at February's hearing about the reporting requirement for a sex offender who wants to leave the territory or the United States. Under the proposed law, a registered sex offender must give the government 21 calendar days advance notice before he or she leaves the country.

Sen. Ronald Russell offered an amendment Monday that allows that time to be shortened at the discretion of the V.I. attorney general as long as information or documentation is provided to support the request.

The bill also amends the law to expand the requirements of who must register. Currently, anyone who has been convicted of a sexual crime anywhere in the United States or a court of another "competent jurisdiction" must register.

The proposed law would establish a three-tiered classification system, requiring offenders convicted of crimes of varying severity to register for 15 years, 25 years or life. Currently, the law requires sexual offenders to register for either 15 years or life.

The territory already has lost about $92,000 in federal law enforcement funding this year and stands to lose a similar amount for each year that the territory is not in compliance with the mandates required by the federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act of 2006.

Attorney General Vincent Frazer said 34 states also have failed to meet the requirements.

At Monday's hearing, senators were glad the bill finally is moving ahead.

"This bill has been around for a while now, and I think we're seeing some light at the end of the tunnel," Sen. Sammuel Sanes said. "We've had an exodus of individuals coming down here seeing the islands as a safe haven. Hopefully this will put a stop to that."

Update:

Saturday, June 23, 2012

UK - High-tech sex offender tracking on way

Original Article

06/23/2012

By ANDREA VANCE

The Corrections Department is sourcing cutting-edge satellite technology from the UK in time to keep tabs on serial sex offender the Beast of Blenheim.

[name withheld] is to be released from jail on September 1 despite parole board fears he will reoffend immediately, creating a huge headache for Corrections.

Two Corrections staff visited Britain last week to examine global positioning technology (GPS) used to track at-risk offenders out in the community.

Corrections chief executive Ray Smith said the department was ''full on working on it'' to bring the technology here. The monitoring had proved ''pretty effective'' in Britain, he said.

''We are very keen to get this into place as quickly as possible . I expect the [Corrections] minister [Anne Tolley] to be talking a bit more about this in the coming month or so."

''There is no question that it's coming and I think it is going to be a great next step for tracking the people that we are most worried about.''

[name withheld], 65, was sentenced to 25 years behind bars for a catalogue of sexual and violent crimes over a 25-year period including rape, stupefaction, indecent assaults, bestiality and wilful ill-treatment of a child.

The Probation Service has applied to the High Court to have [name withheld] placed under an extended supervision order for more than a decade. The case is due to be heard next month.

If that fails, the government won't need new legislation to roll out GPS tracking. Existing law allows Corrections to monitor the whereabouts of an offender using whatever technology is available at the time.

Tolley said the government was tightening up on supervision orders, and GPS tracking would be part of this.

''For the majority of offenders they work well but for a small number it could be safer to use technology, to know where they are at all times,'' she said. ''We need to remain one step ahead of these people, and GPS tracking should be a great tool for Corrections staff.''

Although she did not want to name specific offenders, she said the tracking would give the public peace of mind.

Plans were underway to build high-security units to house the most dangerous sex offenders, but this election pledge was never intended to deal with Murray. Tolley was also considering establishing a sex-offenders register.

Corrections began a GPS trial in late 2010 but had to abandon it last year because the technology was too cumbersome.

Smith said they need to ensure the devices did not lose range or drop out. He said it had other benefits, such as allowing authorities to keep track of patterns of behaviour.

''When we worry about the higher-risk people, it's the patterns of behaviour rather than what happens on one day and I think to be able to follow that will give us a lot more information.''

Monday, May 28, 2012

NORWAY - Welcome to the world's nicest prison

Original Article

This is what the America concentration camps (prisons) need to be. Prison is suppose to be about rehabilitation, not just locking someone up and forgetting about them, that doesn't do anything.

05/24/2012

By John D. Sutter

Bastoy (CNN) -- Jan Petter Vala, who is serving a prison sentence for murder, has hands the size of dinner plates and shoulders like those of an ox. In an alcoholic rage, he used his brutish strength to strangle his girlfriend to death a few years ago.

On a recent Thursday, however, at this summer-camp-like island prison in southern Norway, where convicts hold keys to their rooms and there are no armed guards or fences, Vala used those same enormous hands to help bring life into the world.

The 42-year-old murderer stood watch while an oversize cow gave birth to a wobbly, long-legged, brown-and-white calf. He cried as the baby was born, he said, and wiped slime off of the newborn's face so she could gulp her first breath.

Afterward, Vala called his own mother to share the good news.

"I told my family that I'm going to be a dad," he said, beaming with pride.

This is exactly the type of dramatic turnabout -- enraged killer to gentle-giant midwife -- that corrections officials in Norway hope to create with this controversial, one-of-a-kind prison, arguably the cushiest the world has to offer.

Founded in 1982, Bastoy Prison is located on a lush, 1-square-mile island of pine trees and rocky coasts, with views of the ocean that are postcard-worthy. It feels more like a resort than jail, and prisoners here enjoy freedoms that would be unthinkable elsewhere.

It's the holiday version of Alcatraz.

Overheard on CNN.com: What's prison for?

There's a beach where prisoners sunbathe in the summer, plenty of good fishing spots, a sauna and tennis courts. Horses roam gravel roads. Some of the 115 prisoners here -- all men and serving time for murder, rape and trafficking heroin, among other crimes -- stay in wooden cottages, painted cheery red. They come and go as they please. Others live in "The Big House," a white mansion on a hill that, on the inside, looks like a college dorm. A chicken lives in the basement, a guard said, and provides eggs for the inmates.

When you ask the cook what's for dinner, he offers up menu choices like "fish balls with white sauce, with shrimps" and "everything from chicken con carne to salmon."

Plenty of people would pay to vacation in a place like this.

On first read, all of that probably sounds infuriating. Shouldn't these men be punished? Why do they get access to all these comforts while others live in poverty?

But if the goal of prison is to change people, Bastoy seems to work.

"If we have created a holiday camp for criminals here, so what?" asked Arne Kvernvik Nilsen, the prison's governor and a former minister and psychologist. He added, "We should reduce the risk of reoffending, because if we don't, what's the point of punishment, except for leaning toward the primitive side of humanity?"

Take a quick look at the numbers: Only 20% of prisoners who come through Norway's prisons reoffend within two years of being released, according to a 2010 report commissioned by the governments of several Nordic countries.

At Bastoy, that figure is even lower, officials say: about 16%.

Compare that with the three-year re-offense rate for state prisons in the U.S.: 43%, according to a 2011 report from the Pew Center on the States, a nonpartisan research group. Older government reports put that number even higher, at more than five in 10.

Ryan King, a research director at Pew and an author of the group's recent report, said it's difficult to compare recidivism rates from state to state, much less from country to country. Instead of focusing on the numbers, he said, one should focus on what a country is or isn't doing to tackle re-offense rates.

Still, Bastoy remains controversial even in academia. Irvin Waller, president of the International Organization for Victim Assistance and a professor at the University of Ottawa, said in an e-mail that the relative niceness of a prison has no effect on whether people commit crimes when they're released. "The key is not that much what happens in prison but what happens when the men are released," he said.

But officials here maintain that their methods do make a difference, and they follow it up with post-release programs. The aim of Bastoy is not to punish or seek revenge, Nilsen said. The only punishment is to take away the prisoner's right to be a free member of society.

Even at a time when Anders Behring Breivik is on trial in Norway for killing 77 people in a terror attack last year -- and the remote possibility he could end up at Bastoy or a similar prison some day -- Nilsen and others stand up for this brand of justice.

Life at Bastoy

To understand Norway's pleasant-prison philosophy, first you have to get a sense of how life at a cushy, low-security prison like Bastoy actually plays out.

There are few rules here. Prisoners can have TVs in their rooms, provided they bring them from "outside" when they're sentenced. They wear whatever clothes they want: jeans, T-shirts. One man had a sweater with pink-and-gray horizontal stripes, but that's as close as it got to the jailbird look. Even guards aren't dressed in uniform, which makes conducting interviews tricky. It's impossible to tell an officer from a drug trafficker.

A common opening question: "So, do you live here?"

Everyone at Bastoy has a job, and prisoners must report to work from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. weekdays. Some people garden; others farm. Some chop down trees and slice them into firewood (It's hard not to think about the wood chipper scene in "Fargo" when you see inmates filleting tree trunks with an enormous circular saw). Others tend to a team of horses, which are used to cart wood and supplies from one part of the island to another. Everyone moves about freely during these tasks. Guards are sometimes present, sometimes not. No one wears shackles or electronic monitoring bracelets.

The idea is for prison to function like a small, self-sustaining village.

For their work, inmates are paid. They get a stipend of 59 Norwegian kroner per day, about $10. They can save that money or spend it on odds and ends in a local shop. Additionally, they get a monthly stipend of about $125 for their food. Kitchen workers -- that's another inmate job -- serve Bastoy residents dinner each day. For breakfast and lunch, inmates use their stipend to make purchases in the local shop and then cook for themselves at home. Many live in small houses that have full kitchens. Others have access to shared cooking space.

The goal, Nilsen said, is to create an environment where people can build self-esteem and reform their lives. "They look at themselves in the mirror, and they think, 'I am s***. I don't care. I am nothing,' " he said. This prison, he says, gives them a chance to see they have worth, "to discover, 'I'm not such a bad guy.' "

In locked-down prisons, inmates are treated "like animals or robots," he said, moving from one planned station to the next, with no choice in the matter. Here, inmates are forced to make choices -- to learn how to be better people.

Prisoners, of course, appreciate this approach.

Kjell Amundsen, a 70-year-old who said he is in jail for a white-collar financial crime, was terrified when he rode the 15-minute ferry from the mainland out to Bastoy.

On a recent afternoon, he was sweeping up in a plant nursery while John Lennon's "Imagine" played on the radio. "I think it's marvelous to be in a prison this way," he said.

He plans to keep up the task after his sentence ends. "I'm living in a flat (when I get out), but I am convinced I should have a little garden," he said.

Some prisoners get schooling in a yellow Bavarian-style building near the center of the island. On a recent afternoon, three young men were learning to use computer programs to create 3-D models of cars. All expressed interest in doing this sort of work after their prison terms end.

Tom Remi Berg, a 22-year-old who said he is in prison for the third time after getting into a bar fight and beating a man nearly to death, said he is finally learning his lesson at Bastoy.

He works in the kitchen and is seeking training to become a chef when he's released. He also plays in the prison blues band -- Guilty as Hell -- and lives with his bandmates.

"It's good to have a prison like this," he said. "You can learn to start a new page again."

If escaped, please call

The prisoners are required to check in several times a day so guards can make sure they're still on the island. Nothing but 1½ miles of seawater stops them from leaving; they'd only have to steal one of the prison's boats to cross it, several inmates said.

An escape would be relatively easy.

Prisoners have tried to escape in the past. One swam halfway across the channel and became stranded on a buoy and screamed for rescuers to help, prison officials said. Another made it across the channel by stealing a boat but was caught on the other side.

Many, however, don't want to leave. If they tried and failed, they would be forced to go to a higher-security prison and could have their sentences extended.

When inmates come to his island jail, Nilsen, the governor, gives them a little talk.

Among the wisdom he imparts is this: If you should escape and make it across the water to the free shore, find a phone and call so I know you're OK and "so we don't have to send the coast guard looking for you."

This kind of trust may seem shocking or naïve from the outside, but it's the entire basis for Bastoy's existence. Overnight, only three or four guards (the prison employs 71 administrative staff, including the guards) stay on the island with this group of people who have been convicted of serious crimes. If guards carried weapons (which they don't) it might encourage inmates to take up arms, too, he said.

Further complicating the security situation, some inmates, toward the end of their terms, are allowed to leave the island on a daily ferry to work or attend classes on the mainland.

They're expected to come back on their own free will.

Inmates are screened to make sure they're mentally stable and unlikely to plot an escape before they come to Bastoy. The vast majority -- 97%, according to Nilsen -- have served part of their sentences at higher-security jails in Norway. In the four years Nilsen has been heading up the prison, there have been no "serious" incidents of violence, he said.

By the time they get to Bastoy, inmates view the island as a relief.

'It's still prison'

There's a question inmates here get asked frequently: When your sentence is up, will you want to leave?

The answer, despite the nice conditions, is always an emphatic yes.

"It's still prison," said Luke, 23. He didn't want his full name used for fear future employers would see it. "In your mind, you are locked (up)."

The simple fact of being taken away from family members is enough to stop Benny, 40, from wanting to offend again. The refugee from Kosovo said he was convicted on drug charges after he was found with 13 pounds of heroin. He didn't want his full name used because he doesn't want to embarrass his family or jeopardize his chance of finding a job after he's released.

Before coming to Bastoy, he sat in a higher-security prison while one of his children was born.

"It doesn't matter how long the sentences get. The sentence doesn't matter," Benny said. "When you take freedom from people, that's what's scary."

There are only 3,600 people in prison in this country, compared with 2.3 million in the United States, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Relative to population, the U.S. has about 10 times as many inmates as Norway.

More than 89% of Norway's jail sentences are less than a year, officials said. In U.S. federal prisons, longer sentences are much more common, with fewer than 2% serving a year or less, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Some researchers support Norway's efforts to lighten sentences.

Think of prison like parenting and it starts to make sense, said Mark A.R. Kleiman, a professor of public policy at UCLA and author of "When Brute Force Fails."

"Every parent knows this. What if you tried to discipline your kid by saying, 'If you don't clean your room, there's a 10% chance I'll kick you out of the house and never see you again'?" he said, referencing the fact that many crimes in America go unpunished, but the justice system issues harsh sentences when offenders are caught. Grounding the child immediately, a softer sentence, would work better, even though the punishment is less severe, he said.

"We have a criminal justice system (in the United States) that, if it were a parent, we would say it's abusive and neglectful."

Kleiman said victims do have a right to see offenders punished. But in Norway, a country with one of the highest standards of living in the world, staying on a resort-like island with horses might feel like punishment to many people, he said.

Research also suggests that programs like Bastoy that train inmates for their transition back into the free world -- with education, counseling and such -- do help prisoners adjust.

"There is overwhelming evidence that rehabilitation works much better than deterrence as a means of reducing re-offending," said Gerhard Ploeg, a senior adviser at the Ministry of Justice, which oversees Norway's corrections system.

"It's all in the name of reintegration," he added. "You won't be suddenly one day standing on the street with a plastic bag of things you had when you came in."

Mass shooting challenges system

Norway's unusual prison policies have been pushed into the international spotlight after a bombing and shooting spree last year in which 77 people were killed, including children.

There's a chance -- although minimal -- that Anders Behring Breivik, who confessed to those crimes, could end up in Bastoy, one of Norway's "open prisons," Nilsen said.

Norwegians value respecting killer's human rights

It's more likely Breivik will be sent to one of Norway's many high-security "closed" prisons, which look much more like their U.S. counterparts.

He also could be set free some day. Norway has a maximum jail sentence of 21 years, which can be extended only when an inmate is deemed to be a real and imminent threat to society. The country expects nearly every prisoner to be returned to society, which influences its efforts to create jail environments that reduce re-offense rates.

Lawyer: Norwegian killer vows not to appeal guilty verdict if found sane

"The question we must ask is, 'What kind of person do I want as my neighbor?' " Ploeg said. "How do we want people to come out of prison? If your neighbor were to come out of prison, what would you want him to be like?"

Still, it's likely Breivik's sentence will be extended to the point that he will spend his life in a high-security prison, he said. Or he could go into life-long psychiatric care.

Breivik's case challenges a system that hopes to fix everyone.

The case has unearthed levels of anger that are uncharacteristic of Norway, which prides itself as a home for conflict mediation and human rights, a place that hosts the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony and has one of the best standards of living in the world.

Last week, a man lit himself on fire outside the Oslo courthouse where Breivik's trial is taking place. His motives were unclear, police said.

"(Breivik) doesn't deserve to go to prison," said Camilla Bjerke, 27, who tends bar in Horten, the town on the other side of the water from Bastoy. "He deserves to be hanged outside the courthouse. ... He's just going to go into prison and watch TV and download movies."

Then there's this sentiment: If Breivik were ever released into the public, someone would kill him, several Norwegians said. Inmates at Bastoy echoed those sentiments, saying he would have to be quarantined or he wouldn't be safe on the island.

Others are trying to fight that anger.

Bjorn Ihler, a 20-year-old who narrowly escaped Breivik's shooting spree by diving into the ocean with two children while bullets flew at them, said, "it's very important that we don't let this terrorist change the way we are and the way things work."

"The prison system in Norway is based around the principle of getting criminals back into society, really, and away from their criminal life -- and to get them normal jobs and stuff like that," he said.

He doesn't know how he would feel if Breivik were to be released, but he would like the system to function as usual. "So prisons must be very much focused on getting people to a place where they are able to live normal, non-criminal lives. And that's the best way of preserving society from crime, I think."

Looking to the future

All of these efforts aim to help a person like Vala, the gentle giant who strangled his girlfriend, to get ready for release back into society at the end of his 10-year sentence.

After he helped a toddling calf come into the world, Vala said, he leaned on a rail next to the cow's pen and thought about his life and the murder that landed him here. The symbolism that he had used his hands to end one life and help begin another was not lost on him. "I stayed for six hours," he said. "It was very beautiful."

The night he killed his girlfriend, Vala says, he blacked out and then came to with his hands around her neck, after she was dead.

"We never fight," he said. "We never do. So I don't know what happened."

He felt helpless and out of control when he came to.

But now he's trying to pull it together. He decided to quit drinking for good. And when he's working with animals, he said, feels a new calm wash over him.

It's a change the prison guards have noted, too. Sigurd Vedvik said he met Vala while he was serving out the earlier part of his sentence in a high-security prison. Vedvik was screening him for entry into Bastoy. Vala barely could communicate. He seemed broken.

"When he first came here, he was very afraid of many people," said Vedvik, who sees himself as more of a teacher or social worker than a person who enforces security.

Now, Vala is making friends. Talking more. Taking responsibility for the cattle he's tasked with caring for. He strokes the cows' necks so gently, it seems as if he's worried they will shatter.

When Vala leaves Bastoy, he plans to go into the construction business and hopes to find some way to spend time on a farm.

"I'm trying to think to my future."

That's something he couldn't do after the murder.

And it took a posh prison -- one with cattle and horses -- to get him into that state of mind.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Porn Stars Explain How They Ended Up in Picture With Bill Clinton: He Had the Secret Service Call Us Over

Original Article

My question is, why are porn stars at a gala for Mr. Clinton in the first place?

05/25/2012

By Jonathon M. Seidl

On Thursday, a picture of Bill Clinton posing with three porn stars started circulating the Internet. It was apparently taken outside a gala event called “Nights in Monaco” at the Casino in Monte Carlo.

That’s Clinton with, from left, Jennifer Taule, Tasha Reign, and Brooklyn Lee. And for most of Thursday, details about the picture (and the story behind it) were hazy. That is until Reign and Lee called into TMZ and explained what happened.

According to the women, they were seated at the table next to the former president at the gala, and he had looked over at them numerous times. Eventually the girls — who said they think the president is “cute” and are big fans — tried to get a picture with him, but a Secret Service agent shooed them away. But Clinton wasn’t having any of the that.

So we ended up wandering by and we were going to approach him to take a picture and his Secret Service sort of brushed us away,” Lee explained.

As we were walking away, Bill actually had the Secret Service guy call us back and take a picture,” she said.

It’s unclear if Clinton knew what the women did for a living, but the girls thought he did. “I kind of feel like he knows,” Lee said.

So there you have it. The story behind the picture is actually (according to the girls) that it was Clinton’s doing. And that’s how a former president of the most powerful country in the world — who was once embroiled in a sex scandal — ended up in a picture with three porn stars.

Let the jokes — like Bill being “over the Hill” and the irony of Lee wearing a blue dress — begin.

By the way, if you’re interested in hearing the entire interview, you can watch it here (CONTENT WARNING: there are some “adult” themes discussed and some salty language). If you do watch, you’ll be treated to Reign saying, “I hope it doesn’t, you know, hurt his reelection, or whatever he’s trying to run for.”

Big fans.

Shereen El-Feki: How to fight an epidemic of bad laws

This is a video about HIV, but replace "HIV" with "sex offender" and the same can be said for ex-sex offenders.

Video Description:
There is an epidemic of HIV, and with it an epidemic of bad laws -- laws that effectively criminalize being HIV positive. At the TEDxSummit in Doha, TED Fellow Shereen El-Feki gives a forceful argument that these laws, based in stigma, are actually helping the disease spread.

Shereen El Feki is a TEDGlobal Fellow who writes on health and social welfare issues in the Arab world.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

UK - Vandals torch sex offender's mum's £15,000 car

Original Article

This is yet more proof that the registry or accusations alone are punishment and that they do affect the entire family due to vigilante idiots who should be rounded up and thrown in prison.

05/24/2012

By Matt Wilson

The mother of a 20-year-old Quinton man sent to jail for sexual activity with under-age girls had her car torched in the village the day before her son was sentenced.

[name withheld] sent a 13-year-old girl graphic sexual texts while he was on bail after being charged for raping a 15-year-old girl in May 2010.

He was jailed for 18 months last week after pleading guilty at Warwick Crown Court to a charge of sexual activity with a child and three of inciting a child to engage in sexual activity.

The night before his sentencing vandals torched the £15,000 Ford Mondeo belonging to his mother, [mother name withheld], outside her home on Goose Lane, in Lower Quinton, where [name withheld] lived.

However, Mrs [mother name withheld] believes the arson attack was “for no apparent reason” and does not think the family is being targeted. She said that the act of arson was just one of many in the area by a gang of youths.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Interpol targets 55 suspects using social network sites for child sex abuse images

Original Article

05/22/2012

(CNN) - An Interpol investigation into social networking groups exchanging child abuse material has targeted 55 key suspects in 20 countries, including the United States, and 12 children have been identified and removed from harm, the agency said Tuesday.

An unspecified number of the suspects have been arrested, said Interpol, the world's largest international police organization.

The international operation, which targeted child sexual abusers trading online images, identified suspects in 19 other countries: Australia, Bosnia, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, England, Finland, France, Germany, Indonesia, Italy, Mexico, Norway, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, The Netherlands, Tunisia, Turkey, and Venezuela, Interpol said.

The covert online investigation began in October 2010 in New Zealand, where authorities alerted Interpol's crimes against children team after discovering Facebook, Socialgo and grou.ps were being used to exchange significant amounts of "abusive and exploitative pictures," Interpol said in a statement.

Working with U.S. authorities, the Interpol inquiry found about 80 groups "engaged in the display or distribution of previously seen and unseen child sexual abuse images," Interpol said.

Facebook officials assisted the investigation after authorities identified key targets and their associated groups, Interpol said.

Maarten Quivooy, general manager of New Zealand's Regulatory Compliance Operations, said the Internet destroys jurisdictional boundaries and that protecting children is now a global responsibility.

"Trading in or viewing these images is ... offending because it involves real children often being abused both in real time and over time, and when these images of children being sexually abused are released onto the Internet, they live on forever," Quivooy said in a statement.

"Terms such as kiddiporn and child pornography make the physical sexual abuse of a child appear consenting. No child is capable of consenting to sexual activity — therefore all sexual depiction of children is abuse," he said.

Mick Moran, the head of Interpol's crimes against children unit, said the operation highlighted international cooperation.

"While disrupting these networks is a significant part of the investigation, what is more important is that innocent children and in some cases babies have been rescued from physical abuse," Moran said in a statement.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director John Morton said his agency will "work tirelessly with our international law enforcement partners to protect children wherever they live and to bring justice to criminals wherever they operate."

The 55 suspects allegedly created groups that posted images of children under age 13 being abused, Interpol said.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Chelsea Schilling violates Facebook TOS to pretend to be a pedophile

This just shows that vigilantes are probably the ones creating all the "pedophile" web sites and profiles. Pretending to be someone and using an alias is against Facebook's TOS. If pedophiles are truly doing this, then people like this lady are hampering police investigations by potentially scaring off people, so they are not preventing child abuse but helping it.

Government of Yukon Insurance Management entertainment Recovery Living Educational Toy Game Vardenafil 20mg Wedding Dresses socially Auto Care Association Expression Online Marketing WELLNESS CHAPMAN INSTITUTE Canadian Critical Care Timeshare Association IRDES Manners International Association Website Shopping Cart THE OFFICIAL BUSINESS MASSAGE IN BEIJING Contracts Online Business News Compass Scandi TV Fashion Protect Hairstyle Sports Education Quotes Cursoscyt2 Xceedid Corporation Technologie Systemy a Management Body and Fitness Design Buddies Homes I-Praca Education EDUCATION Training Primary School About Us Secondary School Technology Care Real Estate Lyndon State College PERSONAL WEBSITE Insurance or Credit Report IL Punto Web Design Auto Repair Service Business Plan design voice network LOANS MONTHLY PAYMENTS CREDIT kyweb Resources and Information Aca Allertor Industry The Story of Digital Health Cy-bocs Test Website Celebrity Bride Guide ARE WE EATING FISHY FOODS Health Website Fashion Foods Loans Monthly Website Shopping THE IACP Insurance Management Entertainment Recovery Living Technology buy viagra online real estate design network EDUCATION compass offices global kredit un vrai repas Amset IT Solutions mobile shopping summit Veolia Waste to Energy Plants Dexma Energy Management Results Online Hart Scientific website Preserve Giving Football Games 888 33travel Travel Time From International Payment Global Life Insurance quilpie shire council Travel Gate Tours Fashion Show Mall Stores FCRA Online Services Precision Strategy Perfect Plays Forex Trading Strategy Entertainment Music News Phoenix Publishing Fashion and Shopping Herbal Medicine Health Celebrations Fashion Designer Red Tree Custom Homes South Suburban Adoption Business Transformation Trading Craigconnects Voters Laws Information Technology Software Games Play Education Francesca's North The Real Housewives of New Jersey Cooking Food Grill Holmes School Design Fleisher's Meat AFR Heads for Sale Enyo JavaScript Application Framework Test fineart2buy.com as-canada.com cybergalleriet.com Homes Interior Design Fresh Wok Dedford
Fashion Fashion