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To Catch a Predator - Settlement over suicide
Posts
I agree with everything Pony said.
Punishments are handed out according to these findings on an individual basis.
I'm not sure this adds much to the conversation beyond saying that its handled on a case by case basis and you probably cant assign the same level of culpability to eveyone that commits the same offense.
The problem is that this sucks. Its such an emotive topic that we hate the idea that someone that would do it "goes free" (the quotes are there because in reality there are a multitude of other institutions they go into). In a way, the most fucked up thing is that we would prefer an all out, knew-what-they-were-doing bad guy, simply so that we could punish them HARD and not feel in any way conflicted about it. Grey areas introduce a degree of ambiguity that nobody is comfortable with.
I wish you people would stop latching onto this. Nobody is saying these people are blameless and shouldn't be punished.
http://www.esquire.com/features/predator0907
Read the article before you decide to make any judgements about this guy. It's just unbelievably sad that he felt so trapped that he felt he had to kill himself.
Seriousy, dude, man the fuck up. You're impatient, intolerant and unsympathetic, but that doesn't require a therapist it just requires having the fucking sense to keep your mouth shut if it might get you into trouble.
It's called sub-vocalisation. If you don't do it, you're probably just a faster reader than your friends.
So you've got a dark sense of humour and no tact - big whup.
You have not got a hero complex, you've got a victim complex. Funny thing is, your therapist would probably say the same things about me but I've got no sympathy for whiny fuckers or their enablers.
How?
Well, a pedophile generally likes pre-pubescent children, so in that sense, it is very inaccurate.
As much as you may think this is relevant, it isn't. He didn't have to meet an actual minor, nor did he have to appear at the house. The chats themselves broke the law.
[citation required] because this wasn't in the article you linked. The cases had venue issues (which are not evidence) and warrant issues (which are debatable, since you can arrest without a warrant if the LEO believes that a felony is in progress or has just been committed).
So, do you think the suicide of a suspect, caused in large part by the actions of a television news show, is a good outcome for a criminal investigation? Because everything else is totally specualitive, considering that he was never actually tried. I have a hard time with these types of operations anyway--the enforcement of these laws is so wacky that it gets me thinking in circles. You're basically prosecuting people for having a sexually explicit conversation with a minor who doesn't even exist. So you have the intent, but no actual act. I guess it's sort of like police setting up a drug buy, but using baking soda. And the buyer is blind. And you can't even be sure if he wanted the drugs in the first place until you told him you were taking your clothes off. Ok, the analogy kind of falls appart. But you have to see the big grey area, there, right?
As an aside, what about child pornography that isn't child pornography at all? What about simulated child pornography that actually uses people who only appear to be minors. Are the people in possession of this sick? Are they criminals? If they know that the pornography is simulated, does that make them more or less culpable? (for the record, I believe that it actually is legal).
You figure that the suicide was largely caused by the actions of the show? How can you determine that? I only ask because you would have to assign blame elsewhere, and I don't think any of us are really in a position to determine that. But is the suicide a good outcome for the criminal investigation? It seems like it didn't really affect it, since the techs went over his machine later and found that he was the one who committed the chats. That was the investigation continuing and coming to a foreseeable ending. Whether or not he was alive had no bearing on it.
So a swat time is standard protocol when picking up someone accused of soliciting sex from a minor over the internet?
Or am I reading the article wrong? It wouldn't be the first time it happened.
If there was indeed a swat team, complete with battering ram, I would say that is a miscarriage of justice as well as a direct impact on his suicide. It is, however, speculation hinging on an unknown.
What could have given him that idea? The sensationalisation of a human tragedy which is gravely serious, and should be treated as such? The idea of turning a crime into a populist narrative? The unethical muddling of the boundaries between justice and pleasure by people after a quick buck?
Ragg, chances are you're right - the show is probably not illegal. That doesn't mean it's above reproach.
Page 11 7th paragraph
On June 1, 2007, seven months after the end of the sting operation, three months after Dateline airs the relevant episode of “To Catch a Predator,” the Collin County District Attorney’s office will announce that it has decided not to pursue indictments for any of the suspects Murphy police arrested outside the decoy house.
Legally, perhaps it's not relevant. Morally and ethically, there's a big difference.
And even legally, there's a distinction between "soliciting a minor online" and "having sex with a minor". They're both illegal, but they're not the same.
Maddie: "I am not!"
Riley: "You're a marsupial!"
Maddie: "I am a placental mammal!"
Yes, and I'd really like to see diversion programs and treatment for people who express these urges but who have not actually done anything to hurt a kid.
And pedophiles who have traumatized or molested or raped a child need to be treated and punished.
Sexual preference is not chosen by the individual. What turns you on is not your own choice. Gay, straight, into feet, latex or whatever....it just happens. Sexual preferences and the actions resulting from them that harm no one (consenting adult blah blah) are fine. When you have a sexual preference for kids...I don't think it's your fault...unfortunately you are fucked, because you can never act on your urges because it harms another being. So the action should be punished.
I do not think you should be punished for talking to an adult who is pretending to be a kid. This show is creating the crime.
Of course it's not above reproach. I know a ton of people who don't like the show, and I'm sure the majority on this board don't either. I do like it, though. And if there is blame to go around, I'd like to see it go on the proper parties.
Morality differs from person to person, and there's a reason we don't want legal things (such as this wrongful death suit) based on it. Ethics are really situational.
What he said is that the cases weren't brought due to flimsy evidence. That's what I was addressing there. I need a citation for that because it's not in the article, nor anywhere else I've seen.
You're absolutely correct, but I'm sure they would have charged the prosecutor with the former. Not the same, like you said, but still illegal.
But do you think that there is a treatment that would really work for this? For instance, I like a certain type of woman. No matter who I'm dating, I still have a physical attraction to a certain type of woman. If it were outlawed tomorrow, the attraction would not change. I may never act on it, but I would always be attracted to that. I don't see how it could be treated away.
So how do you feel about an adult talking to someone pretending to be a hitman, but isn't? Or an adult pretending to talk to someone pretending to be a prostitute, but isn't? Should you not be punished for those either?
I would argue that there is a fundamental categorical difference between being attracted to children and being attracted to a certain type of woman. Pedophilia is not merely a "preference," all signs point to it being a form of mental illness.
Now, if we're talking about ephebophilia rather then pedophilia, that's a slightly different situation and much closer to a "preference." Still, people who feel compelled to indulge in sexual urges to such a degree that they're willing to skirt the law to do so aren't exactly "normal." Wanting to bang Mena Suvari and actually going next door to do it are two different things, and I'd argue that somebody who went through with it is having difficulties with either impulse control or decision making, both of which can be dealt with through therapy.
Uhm, yes. Treatment programs do help some of these people. Some are probably beyond help, many are not.
Is the hit target a completely imaginary person?
can, like, a person go to an undercover cop and be arrested for hiring him to kill Sir Brandyworht Buttershiresmitherson III, Esq. King of New Mesopotamia and all the Realms? Because, and correct me if I'm wrong here, if you're going to an undercover cop and asking him to kill a real person, you're still conspiring to commit murder against a real person which is the crime in that situation
and, in the case of someone pretending to be a prostitute, you're still offering to pay a real, existing person, for sex.
But the desire is what I'm interested in. Can that be treated?
again I raise the question: Is the crime talking to the hitman, or is it the conspiracy to murder a living, breathing human being?
See I would say actually going to the hitman is like if this guy actually went to the girl's house. If he talked to someone online and told them he wanted to kill someone, I don't think he should be arrested for that.
but this "girl" is still just as real as my "Sir Brandyworht Buttershiresmitherson III, Esq. King of New Mesopotamia and all the Realms"
It's the latter. However flirting on the interwebs is not conspiracy. Hell I flirt with chicks in real life, in person, that I have no intention of doing anything with....let alone online. You never know, the people online could even assume that the pretender they are talking to is really an adult (this is the innerwebs we are talking about) but just keep chatting for fun.
also a good point
No, it appears that it can't be totally eliminated. All the known therapeutic techniques have low success rates, and the least-bad methods involve dealing with exactly the text that you bolded above - teaching the offender recognize that they have these feelings without acting on them.
Primarily because in our culture we glorify youth and a female body image that is closer to a teenager than an older adult. As a culture sexualize young women - as long as those women are old enough to have undergone puberty - but we do not sexualize children. So I'd argue that somebody who is attracted to pubescent teenagers is simply following the zeitgeist. (There's also a relatively plausible evo-psych explanation: pubescent teenagers are fertile and ready for reproduction, children are not, so there's no evolutionary reason to be sexually attracted to children. But, in general, I try to stay away from the evo-psych explanations.)
It's also theoretically possible for somebody who finds that sort of body image attractive to find adult women who, through luck or genetics or plastic surgery, look somewhat like teenagers. Somebody looking for that probably isn't going to have a whole lot of successful long term relationships, but it's still within the realm of reason that they'd be able to express their urges in a safe and relatively harmless manner. However, somebody who finds children attractive isn't going to have such an outlet. Any expression of their urges (outside of masturbatory fantasies) are going to involve victimization of some sort or another.
Yes, but why do you like it?
I've been thinking about this all day. It's sort of a tricky issue.
What if someone kills a man, believing him to be a police officer. It turns out he wasn't, but it's still murder. Should he be charged with killing a police officer?
Is someone guilty of theft if they think that they are stealing something but really aren't? (perhaps they don't see the sign that says "Free! Take some!")
I think it's less complicated than that.
We have definitions for certain crimes, and definitions for trying to commit certain crimes. For instance, killing someone is murder. Trying to kill someone but backing out of it at the last minute is still conspiracy to commit murder. To my knowledge, there is no crime called, "Conspiracy to kill a police officer", but I gotta tell you, that shit wouldn't help at trial.
Of course, this is all second-hand knowledge. I'm sure there's someone here who has access to the latest medical opinions.
That said - the reason To Catch a Predator is so off-putting for me has nothing to do with the nature of paedophilia itself as a crime and/or psychological condition, and everything to do with our response to it. As a society, we should endeavour to greet every challenge with dignity and rationality. To catch a predator is about fear, and the satisfaction we feel in indulging in that fear.
There's still a categorical difference. The crime isn't talking to a hitman, it's conspiracy to murder-- the person you want to kill exists. The crime isn't talking to a prostitute, it's solicitation-- the woman exists. The crime in this case is solicitation of a minor-- but the minor doesn't exist.
It's the fact that these statutes must, of necessity, be written as "soliciting someone you think is a minor" that lead to accusations of thought crime.
Yay Feral
You put it very well I feel. The reasons for why these people are attracted to children do show something significantly wrong with their psyche.
The problem is that people look at that and go: "Oh, well it's just a fetish, so what? A lot of people have them. My friend thinks high school girls are hot, that's practically the same thing, but HE has the decency to control his drives. So burn in hell for not controlling yours."
It's not just about the desire. Essentially, if you're screwed up to be lusting after children, there's a very high likelihood that you're screwed up in a lot of other ways. Self control, impulse control, decision making, planning, moral judgment, foresight, etc. Have you seen some of the people on the show? They're whimpering pathetic little men, with no idea what they're doing there or why. Hell, half of them claim they were sure it was a sting and still can't help but come.
When Chris Hansen sits there questioning them and you can just look at them and see how messed up they are, to me it just looks like he's pulling people out of the state mental hospital and making fun of them.
Now, put aside the very real fact that this was not a victimless crime, and that the children involved were obviously abused. There's also no indication that this guy ever acted on his tendencies. Absolutely none. Even law enforcement was convinced of this, given his proximity to a large number of children and his position of trust in the community. So, as far as case studies go for pedophiles who have a mental illness that they never act on, you can't really get a better case than this.
One of the really interesting things, is that many in the community stood behind this guy (it's debatable whether they would have if they had actually seen the materials he had). So, they kind of debunked the whole argument that society cannot tolerate such tendencies. Most people seemed able to make the distinction behind the underlying mental disease and the fact that he had never actually abused anyone.
My mom used to teach classes at the Massachusetts Treatment Center, a facility where "Sexually Dangerous Persons" were held. Her students ranged from serial rapists and abusers, to kids who were on the wrong side of a stuatory rape charge and got stuck with crappy lawyers. Many of these people are held under Massachusetts' term-to-life laws, which allow sexually dangerous persons to be held indefinitely after the completion of their sentence. Most people held under that provision will never be released. Despite the fact that many of these people are, literally, depraved monsters, they were also respectful, enthusiastic, and very loyal to my mom (to the point of threatening people who WEREN'T respectful with very bad things). It was the most rewarding teaching experience she had. No point to all of that except to say that it's not black and white. Even the most depraved person is not without a measure of humanity.
Article on the Arlington VA case:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/03/08/AR2007030802115.html
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/01/AR2007060101882.html