Report that Joran van der Sloot committed suicide? If true, very unusual…maybe someone offed him.

UPDATE  

Van der Sloot may have committed suicide!

The news has just been released by BNO News that Joran Van Der Sloot has been accused in Peru, for the murder of a 21 year old female. Van Der Sloot was the prime suspect in the disappearance of Natalie Hollaway, an American student who vanished on May 30, 2005 while on her senior trip to Aruba.

Interpol is said to be on the heels of Juran Van Der Sloot, since all evidence points to him as the suspect in the murder of the daughter of a racer, Ricardo Flores. Sthefany Tatiana Flores Ramirez was found dead this morning in the Miraflores hotel Tac, after vanishing on Friday. Her family named Joran as the last person to see her alive. She reportedly left a casino with Joran and was not seen again until her body was found. Joran is said to have fled the country on May 31, and is suspected of being in Argentina. Interpol is searching for him.

Joran Van Der Sloot has been long suspected of foul play in the disappearance on Natalie Holloway, and has confessed to her death in several different scenarios, but each one just added to the fact that there was too much false evidence and not enough true evidence in the case for a conviction. Since Hollaway’s body was not found, it also made an arrest difficult in the case. Since the body of Ms. Ramirez was found in Peru, perhaps the outcome will not be so good for Joran Van Der Sloot this time, and justice may finally be served.

source: http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/world/breaking-natalie-holloway-suspect-joran-van-der-sloot-accused-of-peru-murder_100374054.html

Natalee Holloway case highlights student safety

Even after five years of enquiry, the mystery behind the disappearance of high school graduate Natalee Holloway refuse to get solved. It was on a senior class trip when the incident happened and had grabbed the headlines for a quite long time, giving inspiration to several books, movies, and heavy media coverage.

The sad fate of her daughter has persuaded Natalee’s mother Beth Holloway to announce the opening of the Natalee Holloway Resource Center, a nonprofit to assist families on missing relatives. The center will be based at the National Museum of Crime & Punishment on Seventh Street NW in Washington DC. The museum features Holloway’s disappearance in its “Cold Case” exhibit.

When the efforts of finding her daughter turned fruitless, Beth Holloway finally decided to start of the non profit oraganisation aimed at preventing as many missing cases, providing the families with support and reducing the setbacks she once experienced. According to a museum statement, the center plans to give family members a plan, contact information, a media liaison and other services. In addition, guidelines for travel safety, including a national network of college volunteers to promote safe travel program to high school and college students are also on the anvil.

source:http://www.headlinerwatch.com/1345/natalee-holloway-case-highlights-student-safety.htm

Body thought to be that of Chelsea King, 17, found in shallow grave near lake


The body of 17-year-old high school student Chelsea King was believed to have been found Tuesday in a shallow grave near a lake not far from her northern San Diego County home, authorities said.

““There is a strong likelihood we have found Chelsea,” said Sheriff Bill Gore at a Tuesday afternoon news conference, confirming the worst fears of the Poway High School senior’s family and friends who had harbored hopes that she might still be alive.

King, a straight-A student and cross-country runner, had been missing since Thursday, when she went out for a run in hilly parkland near Lake Hodges, located near Escondido.
A convicted sex offender, John Albert Gardner III, 30, was arrested Sunday night in connection with King’s disappearance and will be charged Wednesday, according to the San Diego County district attorney’s office.

The whereabouts of Poway High School student Chelsea King remained unknown after four days of intensive searching by thousands of volunteers.

King’s disappearance prompted an outpouring of  support in San Diego and beyond, with hundreds of people joining search efforts and more than 76,000 becoming fans of a Facebook page. Her parents, Brent and Kelly King, appeared on national news broadcasts expressing the belief that she was still alive.
La-me-missing-girl3 Authorities said earlier Tuesday that Gardner had been linked to an attack in December on a 22-year-old woman in the same park where King disappeared. Gardner allegedly tackled the woman and demanded money. She escaped after hitting Gardner in the face, San Diego police said.

Gardner is registered as a sex offender and lives in Lake Elsinore in Riverside County, but he had been visiting his mother in Rancho Bernardo, just south of Lake Hodges, officials said.
Gardner served five years in connection with a 2000 attack on a 13-year-old girl, officials said. After getting out of prison, he wore a global positioning system tracking device until his parole ended in 2008, Gore said.

— Richard Marosi in San Diego

Photo: Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times; Mugs of Gardner and Chelsea (AP)

Photos: First a jog, then a disappearance

source: http://media.causes.com/ribbon/751377

John Albert Gardner III

Tell Choice Hotels to Prevent Child Prostitution in Their Hotels

Choice Hotels has taken a significant and commendable step in the protection of children by agreeing to enter talks with leading child protection organization ECPAT. We will keep you updated on the results of Choice Hotels and ECPAT’s conversation.

Right now, children are falling prey to sex trafficking in American-owned hotels all over the world, and even right here at home. Just last month, 5-year-old Shaniya Davis was sold for sex at a Comfort Inn in North Carolina. The tragedy of Shaniya Davis and the abhorrence of child prostitution are universally acknowledged.  Companies like Choice Hotels, the parent company of the Comfort Inn where Shaniya was sold, have the power to help prevent it.

Choice Hotels can help prevent child prostitution with one simple action: signing the ECPAT Code of Conduct.  More than 900 companies around the world (very few of them from the U.S.) have been willing to take this simple, effective action.  Without their commitment to eradicating child sex trafficking, American-owned hotels are signally their indifference to the plight of children.

You can take action to prevent child prostitution by sending a letter to Choice Hotels CEO Steve Joyce, telling him to sign the ECPAT Code of Conduct and commit to preventing child sex tourism in Choice Hotel hotels.

source: http://humantrafficking.change.org/actions/view/tell_choice_hotels_to_prevent_child_prostitution_in_their_hotels

30 Days of Justice: KlaasKids

During a slumber party in October of 1993, 12-year-old Polly Klaas was abducted at knifepoint from her California home. For 65 straight days, the hunt persisted for Polly. A mass distribution of 2 billion images of Polly was sent worldwide. She had soon become a symbol of love and lost innocence. Then one December morning, the nation was greeted with the news that Polly Klaas had been murdered. The country was outraged. The public cried out for change in legislation and pro-action in crime prevention. “Polly was faced with a choice few people ever have to make,” said her father, Marc Klaas. “By putting herself in mortal danger to protect her family and friends, Polly has become my greatest teacher.” Marc Klaas immediately dove into a campaign to put children higher on the national priority list. With no prior media, political or public speaking experience, he immediately became savvy in affecting proactive legislation, and sought to advocate children’s issues and speak out on crime prevention.

Within a year the KlaasKids Foundation was formed. KlaasKids exists to help missing and exploited kids across the country. On their informative website, you can find information on how to create and maintain one of the most effective anti-crime and ant-terrorist grass roots programs ever developed, access to Beyond Missing, a revolutionary new Internet destination that provides free poster making and distribution capabilities for missing children, a 27-minute instructional video that educates parents on the steps to take if their children are kidnapped, and so much more. Through KlaasKids, Marc Klaas is helping others not have to experience the loss that he once did.

KlaasKids is also instrumental in ending Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking as well. Did you know there are 300,000 child prostitutes in the U.S.? Working with anti-human trafficking agencies, like the Florida Coalition, and law enforcement, KlaasKids wants to ensure that children are not being exploited in this tragic, yet so prominent, crime. Every day 2300 kids go missing in our country. And 2/3 of them will be lured into sex industry within 48 hours. Those are just a few reasons why organization like KlaasKids is so essential. KlaasKids goes to the streets, armed with information and photos of the missing, to bring these children back to their families safely. With warriors like Marc Klaas, Brad Dennis, and other team members of KlaasKids lives literall are being saved through KlaasKids.

source: http://bindingthebroken.blogspot.com/2010/01/30-days-of-justice-klaaskids.html

Kevin Annett: Canada

Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

Click for Censored News Homepage: http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/

Kevin Annett: Canada’s police involved in sex crimes

Kevin Annett, beaten in Vancouver on Wednesday, releases this new article about Canada’s police and churches involved in sex crimes and sex trafficking, including Native women and children. Annett has exposed the murder of Native children in church-operated residential schools in Canada and is pressing for the identification of the graves of disappeared Native children.

The Disappeared of Canada :


How and Why the Killings Have Never Stopped


A Sequel to last issue’s article “Child trafficking in Beautiful British Columbia ” in The Agora newspaper


By Kevin D. Annett

Hidden From History website:
http://www.hiddenfromhistory.org/
Kevin Annett Assaulted
http://bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2010/01/kevin-annett-assaulted.html
“Ten of the last dozen women to be taken to the killing site at Piggy’s Palace were accompanied by Mounties or regular cops. You think it was just Willie Picton who was killing them?”

Marion, sex trade worker, downtown eastside of Vancouver , May 10, 2006

In October of 1992, when I was still a United Church clergyman, I was approached by a colleague at my first Presbytery meeting in Nanaimo . The topic of child abuse came up, and after a few moments, the other man, a retired minister, smiled and gave me a sort of insider’s look. He lowered his voice and said to me,

“It’s easy to get a child in this town.”

I must have looked shocked, for his smile faded.

“What do you mean?” I said.

“Nothing” he replied. “Some people are, you know, interested in that sort of thing.”

It all felt like an offer, masked but real, like a sort of masonic handshake: something known to insiders only.

The same man had worked in the United Church ’s Alberni Indian residential school for years, and piloted one of the “mission boats” that visited coastal Indian villages. One of my native parishioners later accused him of raping her as a child, but the RCMP threatened her not to press charges.

Later, after I was fired from the church for asking too many questions, I learned of the well-protected child trafficking network that linked the coastal residential schools with wealthy men and clubs in Vancouver . Just how many children disappeared into those clubs and never emerged is unknown; but they are among the more than 50,000 residential school children who cannot be accounted for.

“No crime ever disappears; it just adapts” a journalist once told me. And in British Columbia, the crime of abducting people is rampant, on the rise, and very lucrative, since it is part of a deadly international network in human trafficking.

George Brown is a retired aboriginal RCMP officer who was part of a community-based “Missing Persons’ Task Force” in Vancouver . His group documented hundreds of missing people until their work began to identify the complicity of local police, politicians and businessmen in the disappearances. At that point, George’s group disbanded.

“We didn’t want to get killed” George told me during a videotaped interview in the summer of 2005.

“I was called up by a senior officer in the force and told, ‘George, the number of disappeared women is nine, and it’s going to stay at nine. Stop sticking your nose where it doesn’t belong or you may lose it.’ The fact is I personally know two fellow Mounties who were linked with Picton and making money by bringing girls out to his place. None of the girls ever came back. Everybody knows about it.”

I asked George who “everybody” was. The world-weary man shook his head sadly.

“The Mayor. The Chief of Police. All the senior press people. Hell, you can’t get into those positions without making a deal with the drug lords who run this town. The days of organized crime as a separate thing are over. It’s all business run and legit now. It’s organized corporate crime now – the drug importers from Asia and the real estate developers and the off shore investors, they’re all part of the same gang. The cops all work for them. And body snatching pays well.”

George Brown’s group documented a link between the disappeared women of the downtown eastside and the trans-pacific organ trafficking network based in China . According to sources within the network, at least a dozen women and men are abducted and murdered every month in Vancouver , their bodies disposed of in protected grave sites on the north shore, and their organs shipped overseas.

Most of the disappeared are homeless men, transient youth or sex trade workers.

A year after I interviewed George Brown, I was given more confirmation of his groups’ claims. I received a message to meet a woman named Annie Parker at Oppenheimer Park in Vancouver ’s downtown eastside. Annie was a short, timid woman with haunted eyes and scars along her neck and arms.

“I got these by threatening to go to the press with what I knew” she said matter of factly, pointing to the scars.

“Who did it to you?” I asked.

She told me the man’s name, a senior RCMP officer, and then said,

“Who doesn’t matter. They’re all doing it. It’s called the ‘hooker game’. The Vancouver cops will pick up girls off the street, drug them with scopolamine and film them as they fuck them, in a cop club downtown on Georgia street . Then sometimes they kill the girls and film that too, and sell it for $25,000 as a snuff film.”

I asked her what happens to the bodies.

“That was one of Steve Picton’s specialties. I met all the Pictons. Steve runs a snuff film operation in Coquitlam and then he dumps the bodies at a hunting camp about ten miles up from Horseshoe Bay , near the Sea to Sky highway. There’s a special grave site there with sealed containers in a metal cistern. I was taken there, I seen it. It’s watched over by the Mounties.”

Les Guerin is an aboriginal man who lives and works as a maintenance man on the Musequam Indian reserve near the University of B.C. He claims that the reserve holds at least two body dumping sites from which he personally has excavated human remains, and had them forensically examined.

“As far back as 1989 I saw a man who I later identified as Willie Picton drive onto the Musqueam reserve and bury several large bags. Later when I saw his face on the news, I dug up the bags and had them examined at a lab at SFU. The report says they contain human and pig bones remains, including the humerus, pelvis and skull pieces of a young woman in her twenties.

“The weird thing is I told the Vancouver Police, the press, everybody about this, and nothing was ever done. I sent the police the forensic report, me and my buddy Jim Kew, I told the CBC and even the lawyers for the families of Picton’s victims. Nothing. The cops roped off the site in 2006 and that was that.”

A signed letter from Musqueam Band Housing Officer Glenn Guerin dated October 29, 2004 indicates that Dave Picton was employed by the Museum Indian band for a three month contract during 1990 to provide land fill for local street construction.

Frustrated by the lack of police response, in December of 2005, Les Guerin mailed the bone fragments he obtained from the Picton deposit, along with the forensic report, to Amnesty International’s head office in London , England. The package was returned unopened the following month.

Next month, the eyes of the world will be on British Columbia and its Olympics. But will those eyes perceive the missing men, women and children whose remains lie scattered in hidden graves – and the authorities who put them there? Will the visiting world media record the truth of those who continue to disappear?

Most important, will the killings be stopped?

That depends on us.

………………………………………………………………………………………….

Rev. Kevin Annett is a community minister, educator and award-winning film maker who lives and works in Vancouver ’s downtown eastside. He is a member of the revived Community Task Force into Missing Persons. For more information on this Group, and for a copy of their recent report on which this article is based, contact Kevin at: hiddenfromhistory@yahoo.ca or 1-888-265-1007 (messages).

His website is: http://www.hiddenfromhistory.org/

Read and Hear the truth of Genocide in Canada, past and present, at this website: http://www.hiddenfromhistory.org , and watch Kevin’s award-winning documentary film UNREPENTANT on the same website.

UNREPENTANT: Kevin Annett and Canada’s Genocide
– Winner, Best Foreign Documentary Film, Los Angeles Independent Film Festival, March 2007
– Winner, Best Canadian Film, Creation Aboriginal Film Festival, Edmonton, 2009

Soon to be released feature film, THE DIARY, based on Kevin Annett’s epic struggle to bring to light genocide in Canada – see the trailer at:
www.thediarymovie.com/trailer

source: http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread534553/pg1

Sex offender indicted in Foxwell kidnapping

Thomas James Leggs, 30, was indicted by a grand jury on Monday on charges related to the abduction of 11-year-old Sarah Haley Foxwell.

A grand jury indicted a 30-year-old dual-state registered sex offender charged in the kidnapping of an 11-year-old girl that was found Christmas day.

Thomas James Leggs, a registered sex offender in Maryland and Delaware, was indicted on burglary and kidnapping charges on Monday according to court records.

Leggs was charged with abducting 11-year-old Sarah Haley Foxwell on Dec. 23 after her family reported her missing that morning.

Police launched a search for the missing Wicomico Middle School student and enlisted the help of more than 3,000 volunteers on Dec. 25. That evening, law enforcement announced that Foxwell’s body had been found by a team of investigators.

Leggs is the sole murder suspect, and the Wicomico County States Attorney’s Office expects to additional charges to be filed within 30 to 45 days.

He is currently being held without bond at the Wicomico County Detention Center. He has been isolated from other inmates at the jail, according to police.

source: http://www.delmarvanow.com/article/20100111/NEWS01/100111028/-1/newsfront2

Binational Film Fest: Indie films grace El Paso, Juarez


In film, �independent� technically refers to a film produced outside of a major studio. More loosely, however, an independent film is one that�s unconventional, eccentric, avant-garde and sometimes groundbreaking.

Many of the most notable films of the last decade were created without major studio financing. �The Passion of the Christ,� �Crash,� �Juno� and �Slumdog Millionaire� were influential and significant to the movie industry as a whole � not just the indie scene. Organizers of the 10th annual Binational Independent Film Festival hope that the movies they have selected to screen this year will have a strong showing as well.

�The films we are going to show are different from anything you have seen,� says Cesar Alejandro, film festival organizer and president of Alexandria Films. �They are brand new on the indie scene and do not follow your typical Hollywood formula.�

The film fest attracted more than 5,000 attendees last year alone. Organizers hope for 6,500 this year. Screenings will take place in El Paso at the UTEP Union Cinema and in Juarez at the Centro Cultural Paso del Norte.

�A film festival is something that occurs seldom in El Paso,� Alejandro says. �After each feature, the audience will have a chance to engage with and put questions forth to directors, actors and producers. We have a wide variety of films this year from drama to comedy and even animation.�

Films slated to compete for honors like Best Feature and Best Screenplay hail from a variety of locations, including the U.S., Mexico, Canada and even South Africa.

One of this year�s most buzzed-about films, the Canadian thriller �Sweet Karma,� sheds sinister light on human sex trafficking. The film follows a young mute Russian woman, Karma, who finds that her sister was sold into sexual slavery and found dead outside Toronto. Karma sets out for revenge. After the showing on Tuesday will be a talk with producer James Fler and director Andrew Thomas Hunt.

For lighter fare, the following night will showcase the U.S. premiere of the Mexican film �Conozca la Cabeza de Juan P�rez.� The comedic debut feature of writer/director Emilio Portes is a tale told by the severed head of Juan Perez about how he reached his fate. The story playfully juxtaposes its grim story line with humor and wit to produce a unique approach to guillotine-related film. Following the film will be a talk with Silverio Palacios, the actor who plays the film�s title character.

Another film, �The Last Survivor,� has critics buzzing about its potential during awards show season.

�I really think it may be nominated for an Oscar� Alejandro says.

The U.S. documentary, which will be shown on Thursday, Jan. 14, interviews survivors of genocide conflicts and the after effects of their struggle. The feature follows their stories as they try to spread understanding about mass tragedies and to promote peace through educational awareness and civic engagement.

Another highlight of the festival is a presentation on Friday of a lifetime achievement award for American playwright, writer and film director Luiz Valdez. His impressive credentials include writing and directing both �Zoot Suit� and �La Bamba.� Valdez, often referred to as the father of Chicano theater, marched with Cesar Chavez and is revered by many as an idol.

�He really is an icon of the Chicano movement,� Alejandro says. �We are so proud to be able to celebrate his life and accomplishments at the 10th anniversary of our film festival.�

El Paso Showings

Binational Independent
Film Festival
January 8-16

El Paso showings
(all at the UTEP Union Cinema)

Friday, Jan. 8
7 p.m. feature: �Zoot Suit� (U.S.)

Talk with director/writer Luiz Valdez and singer/actor Little Joe

Sat., Jan. 9
4 p.m. short: �A Day Without a Mexican�

7 p.m. feature: �Last Lullaby� (U.S.)

Both films followed by talks with writer/director/producer Sergio Arau

Sunday, Jan. 10
4 p.m. doc: �Intimidades� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Norteado� (Mexico)

Monday, Jan. 11
4 p.m. doc: �Siete Instantes� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Naco es Chido� (Mexico)

Talk with director Jeff Scheftel

Tuesday, Jan. 12
4 p.m. doc: �Rehje� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Sweet Karma� (Canada)

Talk with producer James Fler and director Andrew Thomas Hunt

Wed., Jan. 13
4 p.m. doc: �Dance with the Devil� (U.S.)

Talk with director Zalman King

7 p.m. feature: �Conozca la Cabeza de Juan Perez� (Mexico)

Talk with actor Silverio Palacios

Thur., Jan. 14
4 p.m. doc: �The Last Survivor� (U.S.)

Talk with director/writer/producer Jeff Scheftel

7 p.m. feature �Finding Lenny� (South Africa)

Talk with Arturo Chavez

Fri., Jan. 15
4 p.m. �Abrir para Cerrar Celdas� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Espiral� (Mexico)

Sat., Jan. 16
4 p.m. doc: �Tijuaneados An�nimos� (Mexico)

Talk with actor Rafael Incl�n

7 p.m. feature: �Dixie Dynamite� (U.S.)

Talk with producer/director Bob Clark

All 4 p.m. showings free

All 7 p.m. features $4

Juarez Showings
Binational Film Independent Film Festival
January 8-16

Juarez showings
(all at the Centro Cultural Paso del Norte)

Saturday, Jan. 9
4 p.m. doc: �Rehje� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Naco es Chido� (Mexico)

Sunday, Jan. 10
4 p.m. �A Day Without a Mexican� (Mexico)

7 p.m. �Vaho� (Mexico)

Monday, Jan. 11
4 p.m. doc: �Flores para el Soldado� (Mexico)

7 p.m.: �Finding Lenny� (South Africa)

Tuesday, Jan. 12
4 p.m. doc: �Tijuaneados An�nimos� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Nesio� (Mexico)

Wednesday, Jan. 13
4 p.m. doc: �El Viaje del Cometa� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Sweet Karma� (Canada)

Thursday, Jan. 14
4 p.m. feature: Talk on �Conozca la Cabeza de Juan Perez� (Mexico) by actor Silverio Palacios

7 p.m. feature: �Conozca la Cabeza de Juan Perez� (Mexico)

Friday, Jan. 15
4 p.m. doc: �Siete Instantes� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Espiral� (Mexico)

Saturday, Jan. 16
4 p.m. doc: �Abrir Aulas para Cerrar Celdas� (Mexico)

7 p.m. feature: �Intimidades� (Mexico)

source: http://www.whatsuppub.com/showArticle.asp?articleId=8455

Published in: on January 8, 2010 at 8:10 am  Leave a Comment  
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Death on the Shore


Sarah Haley Foxwell


Thomas James Leggs Jr Sex Offender

Our view: The kidnapping and murder of an 11-year-old Salisbury girl raises questions about how best to prevent such horrific crimes from happening.

Sex offenders cannot be rehabilitated.

What happened to Sarah Haley Foxwell, the 11-year-old Eastern Shore girl kidnapped from her home and found dead on Christmas Day, is every parent’s worst nightmare. In custody in Wicomico County on charges stemming from the case is Thomas James Leggs Jr., a 30-year-old convicted sex offender.

An innocent young girl and a man with a history of sex offenses in two states. That’s about as heinous as it gets, and it’s no surprise that many on the Shore – and perhaps elsewhere in Maryland – are not only saddened but outraged at this terrible crime.

But whether this particular horror should give rise to any significant changes in Maryland sex offender laws is, at best, unclear. At the moment, focus needs to be placed on fully investigating the crime and prosecuting the guilty party. It should be noted that although he is in custody for her kidnapping, Mr. Leggs has not been charged with Sarah’s murder – at least not as of our deadline for publication.

One thing that the youngster’s death has proven, however, is the goodness of so many of the victim’s neighbors. An estimated 3,000 people from this rural area volunteered to search for the Wicomico Middle School sixth-grader on Christmas morning.

That’s more than 3 percent of the county’s population. The equivalent act in Baltimore County would require 25,000 people to assemble on this sacred Christian holiday and instead of opening gifts or listening to church hymns, spend it out in the cold, trudging through snow-covered fields. In addition, anonymous Eastern Shore donors have already offered to pay for the girl’s funeral.

The recent pronouncement by Wicomico County’s sheriff and state’s attorney that the incident “screams for the death penalty” is unfortunate, however, particularly given that it appears the evidence to support such a verdict has not yet been collected.

The pronouncement may also suggest a troubling desire for revenge is in the air. While understandable under the circumstances, that could prove unhelpful to both the furtherance of justice and to any potential reforms of child abuse laws that might actually be justified.

Clearly, some update of Maryland law pertaining to child abuse cases in necessary. To comply with the federal Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act, the state will need to change its sex offender registry between now and July in a manner that better assesses the seriousness of their crimes and potentially tracks them longer.

But on a more basic level, lawmakers need to investigate what actions might be taken to reduce the number of sex offenses that take place in this state. Mandatory minimum sentences, restrictions on plea bargaining and suspending good time credits for convicted pedophiles may sound good but, in reality, can be counterproductive.

Instead, policymakers need to think creatively about how best to prevent such violent acts from taking place at all. Requiring those convicted of sex crimes to wear GPS monitoring equipment upon their release from prison might prove more helpful.

Another option: hiring more social workers to intervene in cases of potential child sexual abuse or investing more taxpayer dollars in mental health services for victims to help prevent another generation of abused kids growing up to become abusers.

That’s not to suggest that lawmakers should not consider whether sentencing guidelines are adequate or even whether this is the one exceptional crime for which mandatory minimum sentences are justified. Perhaps it is. But this is a complex matter that needs to be examined in a careful, thoughtful way, and not hampered by the distracting din of hang-’em-high posturing by the usual back-benchers.

Let Sarah Haley Foxwell be remembered not as a cry for vengeance but as the precious gift that she was, for the love her family, friends and neighbors have shown her in life and in death, and perhaps for motivating reforms that might genuinely prevent harm to others. Readers respond There truly is nothing more horrific than a crime against a child. My instincts say to put Thomas Leggs in the local prison in Snow Hill and let him fend for himself. Where is the aunt’s accountability? I can’t imagine the grief she is experiencing right now, but as the child’s legal guardian she had a responsibility to protect that little girl and she failed miserably. There is no quick fix, I’ve been a long outspoken liberal all of my adult life, but crimes like this reach deep into my primal senses and make me question the very core of my belief system. Sex offenders cannot be rehabilitated. They just can’t. Lynn Canade Execution is the proper course for this individual if found guilty in a court of law. The rights of our children need to be placed first, before the rights of sex offenders. No early parole for sex offenders would be a good start. jay It is not true that most who are labeled sex offenders are recidivists. A New York study found that 8% of registered sex offenders were arrested for a second sex offense within 8 years of their date of initial registration. In New York (and probably in other states), 95% of those arrested for sex crimes are first time offenders who are not listed on any registry. We should not paint sex offenders with too broad a brush. They are not all the same, just as everyone convicted of a drunk driving offense is not an alcoholic. Once out of jail, former offenders should be given a chance. They must be permitted to find employment and housing and to rebuild their lives. Hopelessness is a risk factor too. David Hess The issue is not so much that a child sex offender must serve time beyond his sentence. The issue remains that the system failed this child. The man was convicted in MD of a sex crime. He served time in DE for a sex crime against a minor in 2001. He was recently charged with another crime in MD. How much does it take to develop a pattern? Like the bomber in Detroit, why weren’t the red flags notices and acted upon? From news reports, the guy did everything but leave a note as to his intentions. And some fault needs to be laid at the feet of the aunt/guardian. She was entrusted to care for another’s child – and approved by the courts. She knew that Leggs was a sex offender yet exposed the child to him. As a single parent, she needs to be responsible for the kids first and foremost. I am a single dad and my kids will never meet a date until she has morphed into a “significant other,” and that for sure is not happening in less than a month. John Frenaye Many people say sex offenders cannot be rehabilitated. However, the Texas State Auditor in 2007 released a report showing that sex offenders who completed the Texas Sex Offender Treatment Program (SOTP) were 61% LESS LIKELY to commit a new crime. That seems to show promise. After all, in 2002, the U.S. Dept. of Justice reported that only 5% of sex offenders released in 1994 returned to prison for a new sex crime. Yet we spend millions on registration of more than 650,000 sex offenders in the U.S. based on information available in the early 1990s, when research on sex offenders was poorly funded – if it was even considered. Treatment works. The research shows this. (See “An Audit Report on Selected Rehabilitation Programs at the Department of Criminal Justice,” Texas State Auditor, March 2007, Report No. 07-026. Retrieved Oct. 20, 2009. http://www.sao.state.tx.us/reports/main/07-026.html , and “US Dept of Justice Report on Sex Offender Recidivism,” http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/rsorp94.pdf ) Sam Caldwell Rarely do sex offenders get caught the first time they commit a crime. When they do get caught and sent to prison, they learn how to be more efficient criminals to not get caught in the future. That means there are many cases never reported or prosecuted. This leads me to wonder, whose safety and rights are we more concerned with? It just doesn’t make sense to risk children’s futures or lives by releasing these offenders. Shelly Faust All sex offenders should spend the rest of their lives in prison, or, upon causing a death, the death sentence should be applied. They may not kill but still ruin many lives after the fact. Lock them up forever; no matter what you say, they cannot be rehabilitated. charlot

source: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/eastern-shore/bal-ed.sarah30dec30,0,2606778.story

Published in: on December 30, 2009 at 11:53 am  Comments (3)  
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When Will The United States Tighten Up Its Sex Offender Registry?

In 2001, James Leggs was convicted of the rape of a minor and deemed a “high risk” sex offender by the state of Delaware. Eight years later, he’s now suspected of kidnapping and killing 11-year-old Sarah Foxwell just last week.

Foxwell disappeared from her home on Tuesday night, and was last seen with Leggs, who has since been arrested and charged with her kidnapping. Though no additional charges have been filed just yet, Foxwell’s body was discovered in a wooded area on Christmas day, and according to the Baltimore Sun, police “call the girl’s death murder” and are still collecting evidence and leads while Leggs remains in prison without bail.

It is an incredibly frustrating story in that we’ve heard it many times before: a child disappears, turns up dead, and a registered sex offender is to blame. And while Leggs was designated as “high risk” in the state in which he committed his 2001 rape, as Jill Rosen of the Sun points out, the “high risk” designation is nowhere to be found on the Maryland sex offender registry, raising questions as to how an offender can be considered “high risk” in one state but not in another.

There is another story circulating the internet this weekend, a somewhat happier yet still horrifying story, wherein a 5-year-old girl was retrieved from a would-be kidnapper after a wild police chase in Phoenix. Police are calling it a “Christmas Miracle,” as the girl was recovered from the sex offender (she was molested by the kidnapper) against the odds. Yet it’s still a terrible sad and disturbing story, especially when one considers the flaws in the system, and how easy it is for something like this to happen again and again, without a happy ending.

Md. Girl’s Death Sharpens Criticism Of Sex Offender Laws [WashingtonPost]
PD: Kidnapped Girl Rescued After West Valley Pursuit [ABC15]

Send an email to Hortense, the author of this post, at commenters@jezebel.com.