Showing posts with label Suffolk County. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suffolk County. Show all posts

Monday, July 13, 2020

Suffolk County has been quietly continuing to fund PFML's controversial "Community Protection Program" from behind closed doors

There were never any public meetings about funding the controversial, costly, and useless "Community Protection Act," a pogrom designed to harass Registered Persons. The pogrom has led to lawsuits and an increase in liability insurance. Yet, we've discovered Suffolk County has quietly been paying PFML to continue the blatantly unconstitutional harassment pogrom.

Click on the link below and go to page 205.

Just remember, the county has been giving PFML over $1.1 MILLION dollars, yet they still filed to obtain between $150,000 and $350,000 from the Payment Protection Program during COVID 19.

https://www.scnylegislature.us/DocumentCenter/View/67791/10112019-Review-of-the-2020-Recommended-Operating-Budget-PDF

001 3120 GHD1 POL Police: General Administration Parents For Megan's Law  $354,349
001 3120 JJB1 POL Police: General Administration Parents For Megan's Law Crime Victims Center  $25,000
001 3120 JQU1 POL Police: General Administration Parents For Megan's Law: Community Protection Act $768,101


Thursday, September 5, 2019

US Second Circuit Court decides that it is OK for PFML to harass registered citizens

This is good news for vigilantes and other terrorist groups but bad news for people who have served their sentences and are trying to reintegrate into society. For now, at least, the enemy gets to gloat.

There are still other ways PFML can be sued for engaging in state-sponsored harassment.

https://www.courthousenews.com/second-circuit-backs-home-checks-for-sex-offenders/

Second Circuit Backs Home Checks for Sex Offenders
September 4, 2019AMANDA OTTAWAY

MANHATTAN (CN) – A Long Island sex offender who faced home visits from a private nonprofit contracted by his county did not endure an unconstitution al search, the Second Circuit affirmed Wednesday.

Writing for a three-judge panel, U.S. Circuit Judge Christopher Droney noted in the ruling that in this case, public-safety interests outweigh the offenders’ rights.

“In sum, the program advances the government’s substantial interest in reducing sex offender recidivism by improving the accuracy of the registry,” the 29-page opinion states. “Thus, the program serves a special need ‘beyond the normal need for law enforcement.’”

A man who served four years in prison on a 1992 rape and sodomy conviction brought the underlying lawsuit under the pseudonym John Jones. Because of his status as a level-one offender — a designation for those deemed to pose a moderate risk of reoffending — Jones faced a 20-year requirement to register annually with the state, visit his local police precinct to get photographed every three years, and tell authorities if he moves.

Because Jones lives in Suffolk County, however, he has also faced additional requirements since 2013 under the Community Protection Act, a local law that established a three-year contract with the nonprofit Parents of Megan’s Law to track and monitor registered sex offenders pursuant to a contract with police.

The group reported a 99% response rate from registrants at the end of the first year and found 13% of home addresses on the registry conflicted with the person’s actual address.

Jones sued after receiving two home visits from the field representative s, saying the threat of embarrassment from such visits made him stop going to his children’s school and athletic activities.

The Fourth Amendment only prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures, but a federal judge ruled against Jones’ case at summary judgment. Affirming that result Wednesday, the Obama-appointed Droney found the visits constitutional under the special needs doctrine.

Pointing to the 1999 ruling Roe v. Marcotte, Droney noted that the same logic allowed the court to upheld a Connecticut law that required incarcerated sex offenders to submit DNA samples to a data bank.

“We held that program served the government’s significant interest in solving past and future crimes, and deterring sex offenders from reoffending in the future,” Droney wrote.

The ruling also says Megan’s Law visits did not significantly affect Jones’ freedom.

“The detention was brief and unobtrusive,” Droney wrote. “The address verification process lasted mere minutes, and the RVRs [Registry Verification Field Representative s] did not request information other than Jones’s address and did not touch him or treat him in a threatening or rude manner.”

Droney added that certain groups of people, such as registered sex offenders, “‘enjoy a diminished expectation of privacy’ in certain information.” Jones had also received advance notice he needed to provide his home address.

Jones was removed from the registry in 2016 after serving the required 20 years.

Link to full decision--

https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/jones-ca2.pdf


Thursday, December 28, 2017

Is Laura Ahearn and PFML operating outside the law? Registrants are reporting PFML goons still conducting compliance checks without a contract

As far as I know, the controversial contract between Parents For Megan's Law and Suffolk County expired at the end of last year, unless they renewed it in a backroom deal. I have seen no evidence anywhere online, be it on the PFML website, the Suffolk Co. Legislature site, or anywhere else, like social media. 

However, I've heard from a couple of people that they received visits from folks who might be from PFML, and one supposedly got a message on his cell phone notifying him that his caller info was being monitored. Could it be that PFML is indeed conducting these compliance checks? There isn't any definitive proof yet (merely the claims of a couple of readers), but if you are a resident of Suffolk County and you've had a visit from PFML this year, contact Derek Logue at 513-238-2873 or email iamthefallen1@yahoo.com

We'd like to have definitive proof, and we hope that a major media outlet picks up on this. 

Sunday, March 6, 2016

PFML claims their harassment campaign is working. I beg to differ

There are TWO lies in this very brief article. 

  1. Because there have been no arrests in Suffolk County for two years of a registrant committing a sex crime, their program "must" be working. 
  2. Registrants who fail to register are more likely to commit sex offenses than those who do not. 
Regarding the first lie-- Ahearn makes a claim in her questionable work, "Sex Offender Registration and Notification, a Common Sense Approach" (on page 15) "Since program inception there have been no arrests of registered sex offenders for contact sex crimes in Suffolk County, New York. In comparison, from 2009 to program start date, May 1, 2013, there were 12 arrests of registered sex offenders for contact sex crimes within Suffolk. So in five years, there were 12 arrests (about 2 arrests per year), but no arrests in about one year (since she wrote this article in 2014). 

That is not really statistically significant, considering there is a yearly average of two arrests in any given year. The number goes up, the number goes down. Within the past few months, that number went up because there were a few recent arrests of registered folks accused or sex crimes (see HERE an HERE). Because the case of the former is a Level 1, Ahearn is conveniently using this case to push her agenda of extending registration of Level 1s, even if she can't claim success of her program. Apparently, the program doesn't deter sex crimes at all. (Nor did it stop the Suffolk Co Police chief from beating a man for stealing his sex toys. Is this a sex crime?)




Concerning the second lie, Ahearn . That is easily dispelled by a number of studies, which found FTR is NOT a predictor of recidivism:


Levenson, J. S., Letourneau, E., Armstrong, K., & Zgoba, K. (2010). Failure to register as a sex
offender: Is it associated with recidivism? Justice Quarterly, 27, 305-331.

Criminal Justice and Behavior, 37, 520-536.

The Big Bad Wolf or a Red Herring? Sex Abuse August 2012 vol. 24 no. 4 328-349

"Failure to register was not a significant predictor of sexual recidivism, casting doubt on the belief that sex offenders who are noncompliant with registration are especially sexually dangerous. Few differences between groups were detected, but FTR offenders were more likely to have sexually assaulted a stranger and to have adult female victims, further challenging the stereotype of the child predator who absconds to evade detection."



As a bonus mention, I'd like to point out that Ahearn is still claiming there are 100,000 missing RSOs. In retort, I refer to the article "BEATING THE PROVERBIAL DEAD HORSE: Addressing the 100,000 Missing Sex Offenders myth once and for all" by Derek W. Logue. An analysis of various studies on "missing" or absconded registrants were compared and found that even today, nowhere near 100,000 registrants were missing. See also Jill S. Levenson and Andrew J. Harris. 100,000 Sex Offenders Missing . . . or Are They? Deconstruction of an Urban Legend. Criminal Justice Policy Review, 2011. DOI: 10.1177/0887403411415398 (Page numbers are  from an advance unpublished copy); See also Garrine P. Laney. CRS Report to Congress, Sex Offender Registration and Notification Law: Recent Legislation and Issues. CRS, April 18, 2007. http://lieberman.senate.gov/assets/pdf/crs/sexoffender.pdf, Retrieved July 31, 2011, pgs. CRS-19 to CRS-20, where it was also noted that PFML’s study was never published and  some of the numbers are disputed.



The bottom line is that Laura Ahearn and PFML lied not just once, but TWICE, in a very brief news story. But all in all, she's one time, two times, three times a liar!

http://longisland.news12.com/news/lawmakers-tout-success-of-sex-offender-monitoring-program-1.9986459

Suffolk touts success of sex offender monitoring
February 27, 2015 3:28 PM

Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone, lawmakers and members of Parents for Megan's Law on Friday spoke about the success of the county's Community Protection Act. Since the program was implemented, officials say that no registered sex offenders have committed new offenses. (2/27/15)

WOODBURY - A plan that was implemented to monitor sex offenders in Suffolk is working, according to the county executive.

Over the past two years, retired law enforcement officials have been knocking on the doors of registered sex offenders in Suffolk. They have been verifying that the registry information is current.

Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone, lawmakers and members of Parents for Megan's Law on Friday spoke about the success of the county's Community Protection Act. Since the program was implemented, officials say that no registered sex offenders have committed new offenses.

"What research has indicated across the country is that when an offender is compliant with their registration requirements, their recidivism rate is lower," said Laura Ahearn, of Parents for Megan's Law. "So offenders who are not complaint are offending more often."

The Community Protection Act, which was enacted earlier in 2013, allows for stricter monitoring of sex offenders. Nassau does not have a Community Protection Act, but Ahearn says it appears to be in the works.

Video version: http://longisland.news12.com/multimedia/video-sex-offender-monitoring-news-conference-1.9988671

Looking back at Suffolk Co's first 'arrests"

I stumbled upon this as I was trying to locate more info on Suffolk County's contract with Parents For Megan's Law. This was on the Suffolk Co. website. Interestingly, none of the arrests were anything other than probation violations or a traffic warrant. Half were arrested for "failing to have a picture taken." That's the job of the police!

These arrests were nothing more than a publicity stunt to justify that outrageous contract between Suffol Co. and PFML.

http://www.suffolkcountyny.gov/Departments/CountyExecutive/tabid/101/ctl/details/itemid/1304/mid/876/bellone-announces-eight-arrests-made-under-community-protection-act.aspx

Bellone Announces Eight Arrests Made Under Community Protection Act

Department: County Executive | Posted: 5/23/2013 | Views: 4142
First arrests made under the comprehensive sex offender monitoring and verification program called “toughest in the nation”

(May 23, 2013 – Yaphank, NY) Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone was joined today by Suffolk County Chief of Detectives William Madigan, Parents for Megan’s Law Executive Director Laura Ahearn, Director of Probation Patrice Dlhopolsky and members of the Suffolk County Legislature to announce that initial arrests have been made under the Suffolk County Community Protection Act, sex offender legislation that provides for the toughest monitoring and enforcement program in the nation.

The Community Protection Act, which was enacted earlier this year, includes a partnership with Parents for Megan’s Law (PFML), the most respected organization dedicated to the prevention of sexual abuse in the region. It provides law enforcement and PFML with the resources they need to verify that registered sex offenders are in compliance with all elements of sex offender law and provides for heightened monitoring of the over 1,000 registered sex offenders who reside in Suffolk County.

Today, Bellone announced the arrest of eight registered sex offenders who were found to be in violation of sex offender laws as a result of the Community Protection Act. They are:

Brian R. (Level 3)
Arrested for failing to report for his 90 day appearance

Robert W. (Level 3)
Arrested by 3rd Precinct Patrol for VTL warrant

Lawrence G. (Level 2)
Arrested for failing to register a change of address

Kevin G.(Level 2)
Arrested for failing to have photo taken

Lawrence L. (Level 2)
Arrested for failing to have photo taken

Terrance C. (Level )
Arrested for participating in computer activity involving sexually stimulating material

Christopher P. (Level 1)
Arrested for failing to have photo taken

Kevin S. (Level 1 Sex Offender)
Arrested for failing to have photo taken

“Because of the adoption of the Suffolk County Community Protection Act and through the efforts of the Suffolk County Police Department, Parents for Megan’s Law and Suffolk County Probation, we now have the ability to monitor registered sex offenders in Suffolk County like never before,” said County Executive Bellone. “These arrests prove that with a comprehensive plan to strengthen verification efforts, we have the tools needed to keep our communities safe.”

“Parents rely on up to date sex offender registry information to keep their children safe,” said Parents for Megan’s Law Executive Director Laura Ahearn. “As a tool, the registry is only effective if it is accurate. This program will not only ensure accuracy, but send a message to registrants that they must comply with the law. We are proud to be part of a team dedicated to protecting our most vulnerable in Suffolk County, brought together through the leadership and support of County Executive Steve Bellone and the Legislature.“

“Protecting children from sex offenders is a high priority for the Suffolk County Police Department,” said Police Commissioner Edward Webber.  “Special Victims Section detectives will continue to work closely with other county agencies to enforce the Community Protection Act, a proactive approach to ensure that sex offenders are complying with laws.“

“I want to thank the members of our Police and Probation Departments for taking swift action to protect our most vulnerable residents,” stated Deputy Presiding Officer Wayne R. Horsley. “I am confident they will continue to be vigilant in working with Parents for Megan’s Law for the safety of our children.”

Look at all these schmucks pretending to actually do something.