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Sex Crimes and Sex Offenders: Research and Realities PDF

362 Pages·2016·1.712 MB·English
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Sex Crimes and Sex Offenders Sex Crimes and Sex Offenders: Research and Realities provides an overview of social scientific theory and research on sex crimes and sex offenders. Most other books on the market are focused on a single issue—such as treatment, rape, pedophilia, theory, etc. This book is unique in that it covers the most current theory and research along with individual cases of sex crimes (e.g., Kobe Bryant, Jerry Sandusky, and other case studies), effectively linking theory and research with the realities of sex crimes and sex offenders as well as their victims. Vandiver, Braithwaite, and Stafford are careful to dispel myths and to focus on the heterogeneity of sex crimes and sex offenders, and not on any one issue or population or theory. Instead, they weave a framework using a full range of theoretical concepts and research data to integrate their discus- sions of crimes, offenders, victims, treatments, and policy implications. The result is a valuable resource for students and early-stage researchers investigating sex crimes or offenders. Donna Vandiver, Ph.D., is a Professor in the School of Criminal Justice at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. She co-authored Juvenile sex offenders: What the public needs to know in 2008. She has published on a broad range of topics related to sex crimes and sex offenders, with a focus on female and juvenile sex offenders. She has authored/co-authored 26 refereed articles and book chapters. Jeremy Braithwaite, Ph.D., is an Evaluation Manager at Social Solutions Interna- tional, Inc., in Rockville, Maryland. He has published 12 refereed articles and over 50 technical reports for federal agencies, including Health and Human Services and the U.S. Air Force. He is currently working on a book on rape and domestic violence in rural Alaskan communities. Mark Stafford, Ph.D., is a Professor in the School of Criminal Justice at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. He is the co-author of American delinquency: Its meaning and construction (3rd ed., 4th ed.) and has published more than 30 refereed articles and book chapters. [Sex Crimes and Sex Offenders] will appeal to a broad audience of students who desire employment as social work- ers, law enforcement officers, probation and/or parole officers, case managers, etc. The inclusion of a discussion of crime investigation will make this book very attractive to budding criminal justice professionals. —Lisa Sample, University of Nebraska Omaha Sex Crimes and Sex Offenders Research and Realities Donna Vandiver Jeremy Braithwaite Mark Stafford Please visit the companion website at www.routledge.com/cw/vandiver First published 2017 by Routledge 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017 and by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4RN Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2017 Taylor & Francis The right of Donna Vandiver, Jeremy Braithwaite, and Mark Stafford to be identified as authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Names: Vandiver, Donna M., 1972– author. | Braithwaite, Jeremy, author. | Stafford, Mark C., author. Title: Sex crimes and sex offenders : theory, research, and realities / Donna Vandiver, Jeremy Braithwaite, Mark Stafford. Description: New York, NY : Routledge, 2016. Identifiers: LCCN 2016025162 | ISBN 9781138937093 (hardback) | ISBN 1138937096 (hardback) | ISBN 9781138937109 (pbk.) | ISBN 113893710X (pbk.) Subjects: LCSH: Sex crimes. | Sex offenders. Classification: LCC HV6556 .V36 2016 | DDC 364.15/3—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016025162 ISBN: 978-1-138-93709-3 (hbk) ISBN: 978-1-138-93710-9 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-31567-646-3 (ebk) Typeset in Stone Serif by Apex CoVantage, LLC TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface vi CHAPTER 1 Introduction 1 CHAPTER 2 Theories about Sex Crimes and Sex Offenders 23 CHAPTER 3 Rape 51 CHAPTER 4 Child Sexual Abuse 89 CHAPTER 5 Child Pornography 123 CHAPTER 6 Juvenile Sex Offenders 152 CHAPTER 7 Female Sex Offenders 185 CHAPTER 8 I nstitutional Abuse: Child Molesters and Rapists 211 CHAPTER 9 I nvestigations of Sex Crimes and Sex Offenders 240 CHAPTER 10 Assessment Tools and Treatment of Sex Offenders 271 CHAPTER 11 Registration Laws and Civil Commitment of Sex Offenders 304 CHAPTER 12 Conclusion 329 Notes 340 Index 341 v PREFACE Teaching a course on sex crimes and sex offenders has often required that instructors cobble together resources, from journal articles to newspaper articles, and sections of books written on narrow topics. After repeating this exercise too many times, we opted to write a textbook. We first had to consider the common stereotypes, miscon- ceptions, and other biases about sex crimes and sex offenders. Our students brought them to our attention, as they often asked questions that reflected them (e.g., all sex offenders recidivate, right?), which they had discerned from the media and their own “commonsense” perspectives. This became the foundation of the textbook: identifying common myths and subsequently addressing them with the most recent and best research available. After several semesters of teaching the course, we realized that the core themes must involve discussion of theories about sex crimes and sex offenders and different types of sex crimes (e.g., rape, child molestation, and child pornography), identifica- tion of salient groups of offenders and the contexts in which they commonly commit their crimes (e.g., juveniles, females, and those who offend in the context of an insti- tution), and providing information about the identification, control, and treatment of sex offenders in the criminal justice system. This subsequently became an outline of chapter topics that we believed would provide a comprehensive perspective. This textbook was written with students in mind, as it considers what is often thought about sex crimes and sex offenders by people who have not studied the topic closely. It is appropriate for use in any undergraduate or graduate-level course that is geared specifically towards sex crimes and sex offenders. Also, it can be used in a course that is more broadly oriented toward criminal behavior and/or deviant sexual behavior. It should be useful for instructors not just in criminal justice, but also public policy, social work, and sociology. This textbook differs from competing textbooks in several ways. First, it focuses on sex crimes and sex offenders in a comprehensive way. There are many trade books on narrow aspects of the topic, such as juvenile sex offenders, investigation of sex crimes, and treatment of sex offenders. There are also many textbooks about crime and criminals in general, but this textbook provides an in-depth discussion of sex crimes and sex offenders in particular. Second, this book incorporates several broad themes related to criminology (why people commit crimes), policy-related issues (e.g., sex-crime and sex-offender-based laws), and the assessment and treat- ment of sex offenders—yet this is done with sex crimes and sex offenders in mind. Thus, this textbook integrates many core themes from psychology, sociology, crim- inology, and law. vi PREFACE vii On the Alice in Wonderland art on the cover: Rev. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll, was a nineteenth- century, English mathematician, logician, and cleric, who wrote Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and its sequels. Many people around the world know of Alice’s fan- tastical experiences with Mad Hatter, Queen of Hearts, Cheshire Cat, White Rabbit, March Hare, and Jabberwock, but few know of the controversy surrounding Car- roll’s interest in little girls. Carroll was besotted with little girls and often photo- graphed them in various states of undress. His most famous model was Alice Riddell who was the inspiration for his famous book and to whom Carroll first told the story of wonderland. He once photographed Alice as a young beggar, barely covered by a tattered dress with the hint of a nipple peeping from under it. Alfred Tennyson described it as the most beautiful photograph he had ever seen. However, Vladimir Nabokov, himself controversial because of his book Lolita about a middle-aged man, Humbert Humbert, who was obsessed with a 12-year-old girl with whom he eventu- ally had sex, said this about Carroll and his photographs: He has a pathetic affinity with H.H. [Humbert Humbert], but some odd scruple pre- vented me from alluding in Lolita to his perversion and to those ambiguous pho- tographs he took in dim rooms. He got away with it, as so many other Victorians got away with pederasty and nympholepsy. His were sad scrawny little nymphets, bedraggled and half-undressed, or rather semi-undraped, as if participating in some dusty and dreadful charade (Appel & Nabokov, 1967, pp. 142–143). Carroll’s photographs were taken with the consent of his models and their parents. While many of the photographs would be considered child pornography today, they would not have disturbed 19th-century Victorians who viewed naked children as cherubs void of sexuality. Moreover, even if Carroll’s interest in little girls was at least partly pedophilic rather than entirely artistic, there was no evidence he had sex with any of them, though he was known to have bounced them on his knee and kissed them. Carroll’s interest in little girls and his photographs can be viewed through two looking glasses—one innocent and the other dark. The view in this textbook is not so equivocal; it is the darkness of sex offenders and the sex crimes they commit. Appel, A. Jr., & Nabokov, V. (1967). An Interview with Vladimir Nabokov. Wisconsin Stud- ies in Contemporary Literature, 8(2): 127–152. CHAPTER 1 Introduction CHAPTER OBJECTIVES • Discuss the moral panic towards sex crimes and sex offenders. • Define a sex crime. • Identify sources and current numbers of sex crimes/sex offenders. • Identify the historical roots of conducting sex research. • Identify paraphilias identified in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (fifth edition) (DSM-5). • Assess sexual recidivism rates of known sex offenders. • Provide an overview of myths about sex crimes and sex offenders. What we know about sex crimes and sex offenders has changed substantially over the past several decades. For example, Robert Longo, now the director of a psychi- atric hospital in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, “remembers appearing on ‘Dona- hue’ and ‘Oprah’ in the 1980s, making pronouncements like ‘sex offenders can’t be cured,’ and ‘victims are damaged for life.’ Neither statement was based on good research, he now says. ‘We were desperately trying to bring attention to the issue,’ Longo says of himself and other sex-abuse experts, ‘and we went way overboard’ ” (Jones, 2007, n.p.). Bring up sex offenders to any group of people, and most, if not all, will agree they are morally reprehensible—monsters. They inflict harm on victims and engage in disgusting behaviors. Differences of opinion among community members and experts in the field, however, begin to emerge when you ask questions such as: should sex offenders be treated or locked up in prison for life? Are sex offenders treatable? Do they all recidivate? The goal of this textbook is to identify many of the myths that exist regarding sex offenders and to identify what the research reveals. In some instances, the research may be definitive. Yet, in other instances, the research is murky. We will highlight not only what the research says, but also where gaps exist. In order to identify the myths and, subsequently, the research and realities of sex crimes and sex offenders, several overarching themes are examined. For exam- ple, a great deal of moral panic has been generated towards sex crimes and sex 1

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