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REFORM SEX OFFENDER LAWS NOW!

THIS is the statement of a group of concerned Americans, including educators, health workers, and community activists, based on a similar Call issued in Boston in 1999. We urge others to join in this campaign.

Click HERE to see the list of signatories.
Click HERE to sign this statement.

As part of the effort to support the happiness, well-being and freedom of children, we are committed to protect society and its children from the dangers of sexual harm. We are also committed to preserve civil liberty and genuine criminal justice. We believe many aspects of the current approach to sex offenders seriously undermine justice and make our society less compatible with the welfare of young people. These include state and national sex offender registries as currently structured, life-time civil commitment statutes for sex offenders after completing prison sentences, and the public shaming of anyone accused of illegal sexual activity. We support carefully limited laws that target harmful acts, not whole classes of people, and which rehabilitate rather than vindictively punish and shame offenders. We assert that only by supporting justice for all people can we maintain a safe society.

We speak out against the mounting panic which vaguely defines sexual dangers, and ostracizes and scapegoats a wide range of people who have been labeled "sex offenders."

There are now Sex Offender Registries in every state and at the Federal level. Most people convicted of any illegal sexual act, or owning, making or selling illegal erotic material, are required to submit to state and Federal Registries for classification. Those classified as "predators," as dangerous offenders, or offenders against children, must register frequently, often for life with police or registry officials, and must submit personal information including a photograph, residential address, employment, telephone and email. This information is then made public; that is, posted on the internet, published in newspapers, or noted on billboards or flyers distributed in the neighborhood. Often, such public notification includes persons whose alleged crimes are labeled violent, but where no force or violence occurred.1 In some jurisdictions, public notification includes those accused of possessing a single photograph of a naked child, accused of public urination,2 or accused of "unwanted affection" involving persons under eighteen.

There are now about two million persons3 --adults and children-- who are identified as sex offenders, either in prison, on parole, registered or being sought as unregistered.

In many states, and nationally, registration and classification is required of persons under eighteen - including children as young as six years old,4 and including minors convicted of consensual sex with other minors.5 They, too, are sometimes subject to public posting of their photographs, addresses and other personal information.6

Many places severely limit the residence, travel and work of sex offenders and place them under constant surveillance.

Most states and municipalities forbid sex offenders to live in certain areas near schools or day care centers,7 and otherwise limit the travel of sex offenders within states and across state lines.8 Registered sex offenders are often required to wear ankle bracelets with global positioning units that trace their every move.9 Mandatory chips for similar surveillance may be implanted in the bodies of offenders in some jurisdictions.10 In some states, the residential limits are so severe that sex offenders have great difficulty finding housing. Some towns and cities make it virtually impossible for registered sex offenders to live there.11

"Sex offender" now refers to a class of people virtually without rights, and whom it is difficult to defend as citizens deserving respect.

Almost all notion of rehabilitation and reintegration into society has been discarded for sex offenders. The term "sex offender" includes an extremely wide range of people who have been judged guilty of behaviors from bad taste to serious abuse,12 yet public hysteria has reached the point that all persons so labeled are demonized, whatever the specific circumstances. In the public mind (and sometimes in the statements of public officials), every sex offender is a person considered to have committed heinous crimes.

Confused concepts of pedophilia, and the dangers posed by strangers causes exaggerated alarm.

Perhaps the key to this panic about sex offenders is that they are often assumed to have raped children. That is, "sex offender" is often equated with a violent "pedophile." The term pedophile itself has become a stereotype of a person who violently rapes young children. In fact, the vast majority of persons attracted to children are not violent.13 Though a pedophile is defined medically as a person primarily attracted to children under puberty (about 12),14 it is confounded with anyone ever attracted, however minimally, to any "minor," or person under the age of consent - which has been set in Federal sex laws at eighteen.15 (This would seem to include virtually all Americans.) Although only a small percentage of sex offenders were convicted of crimes against minors16 (and an even smaller percentage against young children), hysteria about defending children from pedophiles has broadened to a wider hysteria about all sex offenders, which is fanned by sensationalist media. Repeated research studies firmly establish that most sexual violation of children is by family members, not strangers.17 Recidivism rates for sex offenders with children have also been shown in these studies to be quite low.18

Sexual harm to children must be combatted, but we must also fight other severe forms of harm to children.

Focusing on "saving" children from sexual molestation by strangers distracts us from far more serious forms of violence against children and young people. Most child abuse has nothing to do with sex.19 It is important to speak out against sexual harm, which has often remained hidden and denied within families and communities. However, non-sexual violence against children is at least as pervasive as sexual violence.20 Poverty, malnutrition, ethnic discrimination, poor education, and inadequate health care are all forms of abuse that today threaten millions of young people in our affluent nation. Yet there is little national commitment to halt these deadly and more pervasive forms of harm to children. Instead, our attention is riveted by any case involving sex. The hysteria in the United States has thus broadened from an already misguided panic about sex with children, to embrace an almost totalitarian approach to all sex offenders.

Even as we speak of older and older youth as children in need of protection, younger and younger children are treated as adults when accused of sex offenses.

If convicted, they are often forced to comply with the same public registries and life-time commitment as adults.21 If considered a "victim," the child's identity is protected. If a "perpetrator," the same child will be publicly exposed. Teens and children may now be criminalized and forced to register for activities considered experimentation or play since the dawn of history and in most cultures.22

Demonizing any class of people as devoid of humanity and beyond redemption is wrong.

Any law is wrong that permanently takes away the rights or liberty of offenders, whether by life-time incarceration by civil commitment after sentences, or by public registry, shaming and limitation of residence. Demonization is destructive even when applied to truly violent offenders. Those who commit sexually violent crimes do not come out of a vacuum. They come out of our communities and families. To view dangerous offenders as totally 'other' than us prevents us from getting at the roots of such crimes. Permanent stigmatization not only makes impossible re-integration into society of those who are rehabilitated, it signals a breakdown in civil society.23

Demonizing sex offenders has many other negative effects on society. As used to be the case for homosexuals, sex offenders can now be called "perverts," "deviants" and "perps" by the news media. This breaks down civil discourse and poisons it with pejorative speech. Reporting laws now turn doctors, social workers and therapists into agents of the state, as they are required to report anyone mentioning past, present or possible "abuse" in previously confidential settings.24 This discourages people in need of counseling for sexual problems from seeking out professional help.25

Extreme measures now include abolition of statutes of limitation, retroactive registration, life-time incarceration without parole, and even the death penalty.

Most states, and the Federal government, have abolished or are considering abolishing statutes of limitation.26 Retroactive registries seem to violate the Constitutional rubric against ex post facto laws.27 Several courts have ruled this not to be the case because registration is not viewed as a punishment. Yet public registration including shaming humiliates and endangers those who are labeled and whose photographs and addresses are made public. This is a severe form of further punishment for offenders who have completed their sentences. Four states have mandated the death penalty for some sex offenses [not involving death], and other states are considering the death penalty for a second sex offense.28 Mainstream legal scholars are debating whether pedophiles should receive death or life-time incarceration in camps.29 One wonders why all this doesn't raise red flags at least among human rights advocates,30 since this is so similar in nature to previous panics aimed at other groups.

These assaults on civil liberties have befallen us because few have been willing to risk being seen as 'soft on child molesters,' or on sex offenders generally.

It is now the case, that almost no politician - liberal or conservative - dares oppose any measure against sex offenders, however extreme.31 We hold that civil liberties are indivisible. As soon as one class of people is scapegoated and separated from "decent citizens" in terms of rights, other classes of offenders - such as drug dealers and users, political dissidents, or "dead-beat dads" - may be similarly deprived of all rights. However much we oppose specific perceived wrong-doings, or even threats to society such as terrorist attacks, in a free society we cannot allow such deterioration of due process. We argue that these trends in sex offender laws have breached our legal system in an extremely serious way. Repressive state powers cannot be neatly applied only to 'bad' people. They threaten us all.

It is possible to make society and our children safe without eroding due process and civil liberties.

Canada and some other countries have registration requirements for genuinely violent sex criminals after their release from prison - but they do not allow public notification or publishing of offenders' photographs and personal information. They also severely limit civil commitment after sentences to persons judged to be a real and extreme threat to society, and they assure that such commitment is temporary and regularly reviewed.

Therefore, we call for the immediate reform of America's sex offender laws32 - especially the state and Federal sex offender registries and the life-time civil commitment laws. We support the following immediate actions:

  1. Abolish all provisions of state and Federal sex offender registries that publicly shame offenders. There should be no internet or other public posting of the identity, photograph, address, workplace or personal information of any offender, nor should this information be available to the public at police stations or registry offices. In cases of genuinely violent sex crimes, especially against young children, and with a specific finding of a likelihood to re-offend, registration may be required, but information will be shared only among police officials, or if a court rules it appropriate, with institutions serving children or others who might be vulnerable to abuse. Strong penalties should be levied against police or others privy to the registration information who violate the privacy of the offenders.
  2. Abolish all life-time civil commitment for sex offenders33 who have completed prison sentences and/or parole and probation. In cases of violent offenses and specific findings of a likelihood to re-offend, carefully constructed court hearings, with medical advice and full due process, should determine if the person may be further incarcerated, and then only for a short time and with regular review. The ultimate goal of all measures aimed at sex offenders should be their return to the community when they are not likely to re-offend.
  3. Stop public vilification and demonization of sex offenders. Oppose the use in the media or by public officials of obviously pejorative language with regard to offenders. Label only actually violent acts as violent crimes - define violence simply and logically as a physical attack or threat that causes real harm.34 Use of the term "pedophile" should be extremely limited and accurate.35 Children should be defined as persons under the age of puberty.
  4. De-criminalize all consensual sexual activities among teenagers.36 Stop all required sex offender registration for minors.37
  5. Abolish all laws that provide the death penalty38 or life in prison without parole for sex offenders.
  6. Support broad sex education for children, and empower them to make their own decisions and stand up for their rights.
  7. Provide accurate information and support valid research about sex offender characteristics39 and recidivism rates.40
  8. Help sex offenders re-enter society by abolishing measures which make it difficult for them to find a place to live41 and a decent job.42 Encourage support groups for sex offenders, including help with finding housing, employment, and effective treatment, before their release and afterward.

Current Signatories

Paul Shannon (teacher & peace educator)
Howard Zinn (historian & writer)
Dr. Richard Pillard (psychiatrist)
Dr. Jerome Miller (clinical social worker, professor of social work & writer)
Roswitha M. Winsor (clinical social worker)
Ernest Winsor (lawyer)
Marie Kennedy (urban planning professor)
Chris Tilly (economics professor)
Dr. Susan Weissman (professor, writer, radio host)
Tim Poxson (retired police officer)
Dr. Martin Kafka (psychiatarist, psychiatry professor)
Michael Steven Smith (lawyer)
Robert Prentky (professor of psychology)
Joellen W. Hawkins (women´s health prof., nurse practitioner)
Roy A. Dudley (LICSW, clinician)
Thomas Waugh (film studies & sexuality professor, writer)
Nancy Stanton (health information director,privacy officer)
French Wall (editor)
Monty Neil (environmentalist)
Jim D'Entremont (writer & activist)
Bob Chatelle (criminal-justice advocate)
Dan Tsang (librarian)
Rev. Edward Hougen (minister)
Rev. Margaret Hougen (minister)
Eric Entemann (mathematics professor)
Taylor Stoehr (literature professor & criminal-justice advocate/activist)
Carol Thomas (peace & justice activist)
Billy S. Thomas (physics professor)
Yasmin Nair (academic, activist & writer)
Jeffrey St. Clair (writer)
James Dubro (writer)
Jacqueline Sperling (writer, criminal-justice activist, professor)
Rebecca M. Young (lawyer)
Brandon Campbell (lawyer)
Larni Levy (lawyer)
Martha Vicinus (sexuality studies professor)
Dr. John V. Walsh (physiology professor)
Rev.Dr. C. David Hess (pastor)
John Swomley (lawyer for arrested or convicted sex offenders)
Brad Werner (geophysics professor)
Sidney Peck (retired sociology professor)
Louise Peck (retired clinical social worker)
Fredrick Baumgarten (writer)
Debra Beard-Bader (civil commitment defense lawyer)
Michael Hardesty (writer, credit manager)
David Collesano (social worker)
Dennis Ingham (parent)
John Stepling (playwright, teacher)
Jon T. Swift (municipal government employee)
Nicholas A. Perry (software developer)
Leslie Monarch (wife of sex offender, mother of victim, instructor)
Elizabeth Armstrong (parent)
Dr. Jack Tobin (retired educator)
Dr. Andrew S. Nicholson (physician)
Lynda May (dental hygenist)
Alyce Wenger (Vietnam vet, professor,mother of sex offender)
Barbara Stamford (veterinary technician)
Heather Ware (mother)
Robin Craig (medical technician)
David Kelly (internet journalist)
Anne Silver (mother)
Jean Williams (sales administrator, wife of sex offender)
Linda Tauer (avionics technician, mother of sex offender)
Michelle Johnson (mother)
Stacy Boles (wife of sex offender)
Donna DiMarino (social worker, child advocate)
Angela Unruh (housewife)
John Kloswick (retired librarian)
Betty Price (activist and wife of sex offender)
David Peterson (writer, researcher)
Jacqueline L. Horst (mother of sex offender)
Betty Schneider (writer, activist)
Lee W. Smith (grocery merchandiser & Christian activist)
Linda Pehrson (retired nursery school teacher, wife of sex offender)
Margaret R. Jenkins (former teacher, mother of sex offender)
Victor A. Gallis (retired teacher)
Buffy Fletcher (wife of sex offender)
Laurie Peterson (activist and student)
Cheryl Sartain (real estate broker, wife of sex offender)
LaWanda Johnson (mother and fiancee of sex offenders)
Thomas W. Robinson (writer)
Linda Hardesty (computer database consultant)
Kevin Kinh (artist)
George Thompson (systems administrator)
Ivan Laborio (lawyer & writer)
Robert Lindsay (journalist)
Rick Skaggs (master homebuilder)
Nathan Backlund (security guard)
Jan Kruska (writer)
Lee Lee Lawless (former juvenile assessment specialist)
Amanda Rogers (writer and activist)
Soania Shirley Wilson (teacher and rancher)
Gert Hekma (lecturer in sexual and gender studies)
Linda Ratzlaff (mother of sex offender)
Joseph Dailey (pastor)
Philip Taylor (licensed sex offender treatment provider)
Debra Howard (business owner)
Hedy Helsell (civil rights activist)
Roger Wonderly (journalist)
Michelle Fox (lawyer)
Mark Keil (residential designer)
Laurie Bauck (mother of sex offender)
Deborah Farrell (registered nurse)
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Swartz (parents)
Ann Garrison (writer)
Catherine Goldstein (registered nurse, mother)
Linda Broadley (registered nurse)
Lainie Saylor (student, wife of falsely accused sex offender)
Mary Birdsall (mother of sex offender)
Virginia Young (girlfriend of sex offender)
Madeline Kockler (registered nurse, mother of sex offender)
Frank Kockler (retired naval officer, father of sex offender)
Naomi Guzman (fiancé of sex offender)
Richard C. Pirrello (brother of sex offender, Vietnam veteran)
Tommy Arnold (unemployed)
Dale Ryan (libertarian)
Shirley Parrott (relative of falsely accused sex offender)
Tonya Helles (rape victim, mother)
Gretchen Swift (mother of sex offender)
Lloyd Fillion (carpenter, criminal justice activist)
William T. Habern (lawyer)
Frankie Schockley (mother of sex offender, retiree)
Robert C. David (re-entry facilitator (for prisoners))
Joan Covici (criminal justice activist)
Cynthia McDonald (accountant,, wife of sex offender)
David Kennerly (journalist, film maker)
Diane Jacoel (business manager, mother of sex offender)
Diana Richards (volunteer chaplain, wife of sex offender)
John Leonardson (executive director, mentoring ministry)
Gregory Hanifan (realtor)
Krystle Bailey (wife of sex offender)
Fiona Hess (student, friend of sex offender)
Brenda Stoddard (teacher, friend of imprisoned sex offender)
Jerry Ingram (father of sex offender)
Pamela M. Green (mother of sex offender)
Janet Rancourt (admin.asst. to medical dir., wife of sex offender)
Lora Armstrong (mother of juvenile sex offender)
Jennifer Gagnon (accountant, wife of sex offender)
Cindy Boyd (Manufacturer, wife of sex offender)
Geoffrey D. Birky (mathematics educator)
Cheryl Nugent (mother of sex offender)
Betsy Boone Huner (wife of sex offender)
Shelley Andrews (receptionist, sister of sex offender)
Barbara Knight (grandmother of accused sex offender)
Mara Pentlarge (social worker)
Lois Paul (mother of sex offenders)
Melissa Boucher (mother of sex offender)
Edward Radek (humanist)
Linda Walker (wife of former sex offender)
Tiffany Fournier (girlfriend of sex offender)
Doretta Johnson (college student & victim of sex offense)
Andrea Zax (costume designer)
Teresa Hodgkiss (friend of sex offender)
Betty Butters (wife of sex offender)
Amanda Meeker (girlfriend of sex offender)
Kathy Manley (lawyer)
Doug Ireland (journalist)
Susan McHolland (writer,wife of rso,aunt of juvenile offender)
Misty Martin (girlfriend of sex offender)
Rev. Larry Burton (pastor,clinical social worker,father of sex offender)
Diane Burton (mother of sex offender)
Dr. Clyde Hapgood, Jr. (surgeon,retired USAF colonel)
Molly Dibble (teacher)
Faith Wicks (wife of sex offender)
Alicia Cloud (sister of sex offender)
Kyle Payne (feminist anti-porn activist)
David Hagood (certified packaging lab professional)
Magnum Godfrey (real estate broker, wife of sex offender)
Teresa M. Hull (mother of sex offender)
Glenda Haggard (wife of sex offender)
Will C. Wohler (enterpreneur)
Alan Michelson (computer data manager)
Steven Raymond (hotel manager, civil libertarian)
Erik Hopper (carpenter)
John Keating (law student)
Adrienne Lauby (sister of sex offender)
Shannon Shook (wife of sex offender)
Amanda Smith (wife of sex offender)
Roberta Dzeima (friend of sex offender)
Sara Aroyo (wife of sex offender)
Cassondra Phillips (daughter of sex offender)
David Tally Plume (educator, father of sex offender)
Laura Proctor (mother of sexually abused young offender)
Helen Johnson (Domestic relations attorney)
Donna Kistler (wife of registered sex offender & mother)

Please keep in mind signatories have signed onto the Reform Sex Offender Laws Now! statement, and do not necessarily endorse all the contents on the website.

Join the Call!

We call on those who agree with us to sign our Call publicly, with full disclosure of real identity. For signatories as well as those not able publicly to sign, we encourage formation of discussion groups at the state and local level and in professional groups about sex offender law reform. At a future date, we hope to call a national conference about reforming America's sex offender laws.

You may sign onto this statement publicly, or you may add your email address confidentially to our contact list. Please click here for more information and a convenient web-form to send your signature to us. If you prefer, you may sign up by calling Paul Shannon at 617-497-5273, by emailing him at pshannon @ ReformSexOffenderLaws.Org, or by emailing Alex Marbury at alex @ ReformSexOffenderLaws.Org.



Notes and Documentation: Cover page | Topical Index
This page is part of a proposal to ReformSexOffenderLaws.org. This is not an official part of that website yet.