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Video:Ohio Sex Offender

ohio sex offender

this is a picture of a registered sex offender from ohio. he has some kind of a genetic birth defect, that causes portions of his face to grow at an extreme rate.

Video:A Convicted Sex Offender in Ohio

a convicted sex offender in ohio

i wonder what syndrome he is diagnosed with? this ohio rapist looks like a cartoon character.

Video:Monkey Sex Offender

monkey sex offender

monkey with his wanker out.

Video:Kid Catches Sex Offender At Disney World

kid catches sex offender at disney world

an excellent example of the need to educate kids and develop their situational awareness.

Video:Homeless Sex Offenders Directed to Woods

homeless sex offenders directed to woods

marietta, ga. — a small group of homeless sex offenders have set up camp in a densely wooded area behind a suburban atlanta office park, directed there by probation officers who say it's a place of last resort for those with nowhere else to go.

nine sex offenders live in tents surrounding a makeshift fire pit in the trees behind a towering "no trespassing" sign, waiting out their probation sentences as they face numerous living restrictions under one of the nation's toughest sex offender policies.

"it's kind of like a mind-game, it's like 'survivor,"' said william hawkins, a 34-year-old who said he was directed to the campsite two weeks ago after being released from prison for violating probation by failing to register as a sex offender in georgia.

the muddy camp on the outskirts of prosperous cobb county is an unintended consequence of georgia law, which bans the state's 16,000 sex offenders from living, working or loitering within 1,000 feet of schools, churches, parks and other spots where children gather.

it's not the only place in cobb county where offenders can live — there are hundreds of other sex offenders throughout the county living in compliance with the law. but ahmed holt, manager of the state's sex offender administration unit, calls the camp a "last resort" for homeless offenders who can't find another place to live that complies with the law.

he said probation officers direct them to the outpost if other options fail, such as transferring to another county or state or sending them to a relative's place that meets the requirements. homeless shelters and halfway houses are often not an option, he said, because of the restrictions that bar them from being near children.

critics say it's an example of how laws designed to keep georgia's children out of harm's way create a hazard where penniless sex offenders live largely unsupervised at the government's urging.

"the state needs to find a responsible way to deal with this problem," said sarah geraghty, an attorney with the atlanta-based southern center for human rights who represents another man living in the camp. "requiring people to live like animals in the woods is both inhumane and a terrible idea for public safety."

on monday, after the associated press' story was published, state officials told the sex offenders they had 24 hours to leave the property, according to cobb county sheriff neil warren. the sheriff said the decision was made by the georgia department of transportation, which owns the property, and warren was uncertain where the offenders would go.

"it's not up to us to tell them where to live or not to live unless they are in violation of the ordinance," he said. "it's not my job or my responsibility or obligation to tell them where to live."

the outpost illustrates the unique dilemma the law creates for homeless sex offenders, who unlike other homeless people, cannot take shelter in a church or curl up in a park because they are barred from both.

geraghty, the attorney, said she has found only one homeless shelter in the state that meets the residency requirements for homeless sex offenders. the shelter, she said, is in the northwest georgia city of rome and has only two beds, which are often unavailable.

the tent city is similar to one in south florida, where dozens of sex offenders moved under a remote bridge because it was among the few places that complied with local ordinances. florida officials say the sex offenders found the bridge on their own, while some residents of the camp dispute that.

in georgia, however, holt said state probation officers have directed homeless offenders into the woods.

"while having an offender located in a camp area is not ideal, the greater threat lies in homeless offenders that are not a specified location and eventually absconding supervision with their whereabouts unknown," he said.

several of the sex offenders in the camp said they did a double-take when their probation officers told them about the outpost.

"even the probation officer, he looked at me and said there's nothing he can do," said levertice johnson, a 52-year-old who moved to the woods after he couldn't find a job and couldn't afford $60 a week for rent at an atlanta shelter. "he knows it's wrong."

holt said the sex offenders at the camp were monitored closely by their probation officials, adding public safety is a chief concern. he said sex offenders at the site are required to report once a week and the office sends a field agent to the camp at least twice a week.

he added two of the sex offenders at the camp have landed jobs and are now moving toward more permanent housing, which he said is the department's "goal for all the offenders residing at this location."

some of the homeless sex offenders living in the woods say the rugged conditions make life seem hopeless.

"i'm living like an animal. it's just bad," said johnson, who was convicted in 2002 of child molestation. "you can't clean up, you can't clean yourself, you can't do nothing. i'd rather be dead. i'm serious. i'd rather be dead."

for hawkins, it feels like an extension of his prison time.

the former truck driver has been on the registry since he was convicted of attempted sexual battery of a 12-year-old in 1991 when he was 15. he said after he emerged from his latest stint behind bars without a place to live, he was directed to the forest despite pleas from his wife to allow him to live at the couple's home in swords creek, va.

"i don't understand how the state gets away with it," mindy hawkins said from her home in virginia. "this is ridiculous — especially when he has a family, a home, a support system here. it's inhumane."

her husband had tried to make the meager outpost feel as much like home as possible as he waits for his probation to end early next year. now he is scrambling to find another place to pitch his tent in the next 24 hours.

"i don't know where i'm going to go," hawkins said. "and if i don't have anywhere to go, they will re-arrest me."

source

Video:Sex Offender Sets Self On Fire

sex offender sets self on fire

a convicted sex offender burned to death when he set himself on fire as authorities served a warrant at his rural tulsa county home thursday.

tulsa county sheriff's deputies and state pardon and parole board officers were sent to a house in the 14100 block of east apache street to contact johnnie joe hobbs, 47, capt. john bowman said.

after finding the house empty, the squad peered into a cargo van that sat in the cluttered yard about 3 p.m. hobbs, who was in the van, reached out and slammed the door shut, bowman said.

he then doused the van with gasoline and ignited it, bowman said. medics pronounced him dead at the scene.

bowman said hobbs had spent time in prison and had indicated that he would do anything to avoid capture.

"there are a lot of people that will do a lot of things to keep from going back to jail," he said. "to use a flammable liquid to ignite where they are, i have not seen that before."

investigators from the tulsa fire department searched through the charred van into the evening, working around piles of garbage that were scattered about the property on the northeastern edge of tulsa county.

bowman said that because of the volatile nature of the incident, firefighters didn't immediately enter the van to douse the flames. there were concerns that hobbs might have been armed, but no weapons were found after a preliminary search.

about 30 minutes after hobbs set the vehicle ablaze, authorities entered it and discovered his body in the cab, bowman said.

the deputies had intended to serve three protective orders on hobbs, and the parole officers were sent to revoke his suspended sentence for a muskogee county conviction, bowman said.

a relative of hobbs' gave officials a key to the house, and two of his siblings were in the area as the van burned, bowman said.

hobbs was the subject of protective orders in both tulsa and rogers counties, court records indicate.

he also had been convicted of showing obscene material to a child, lewd molestation and making lewd proposals to a child.

source

Video:Gov. Pulls Plug on Big-screen TVs for Sex Offenders

gov. pulls plug on big-screen tvs for sex offenders

minnesota -- officials at the moose lake sex offenders program began unbolting the two dozen 50-inch plasma television sets at the center on tuesday, just hours after gov. tim pawlenty called the purchase "boneheaded" and ordered a search to find out who made the decision.

the tvs, costing $1,576 apiece with $706 mounting brackets, were ordered last october and installed at the new $45 million treatment center when it opened in july.

state officials said the televisions, which were mounted in common areas, made it easier to supervise patients at the 400-bed facility.

but when pawlenty learned of the purchase in a star tribune story on tuesday, he ordered the televisions removed immediately and sold if possible.

"clearly somebody just made a boneheaded decision, and i'm going to reverse it," he said.

later, pawlenty spokesman brian mcclung said that pawlenty wanted to go even further. "the governor believes those involved should be reprimanded, at a minimum," mcclung said. a spokesperson for the state sex offender program said a review is underway.

but dflers say the episode points a finger at top officials in the pawlenty administration -- not a low-level bureaucrat -- who have repeatedly exercised poor oversight of the state's many agencies and commissions.

"it's part of a pattern in this administration of agencies doing things without any kind of leadership or guidance from the top," said rep. ryan winkler, dfl-golden valley, vice chairman of the house state government finance division committee. he said that pawlenty "doesn't get involved in the management of his agencies until he gets embarrassed."

pawlenty's pledge to find out who had authorized the purchase, winkler said, was an attempt to divert attention from high-ranking officials, and showed that "the buck stops nowhere."

source


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Entry Dates: 9/8/2007-9/14/2009

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