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Getting the offender to pay Donald Findlater Director of Research and Development The Lucy Faithfull Foundation. Outline. Overview of Lucy Faithfull Foundation (LFF) and Stop It Now! UK & Ireland Information on our experience of working with Internet offenders and their families
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Getting the offender to pay Donald Findlater Director of Research and Development The Lucy Faithfull Foundation
Outline • Overview of Lucy Faithfull Foundation (LFF) and Stop It Now! UK & Ireland • Information on our experience of working with Internet offenders and their families • Services developed for Internet offenders and their families by Stop It Now! and LFF
LFF Public Protection Services • High Risk Male Sex Offenders – case consultancy etc* • Female Sex Offenders – assessment, co-work, support* • SOPO applications • “Putting the Public in Public Protection” • Circles of Support and Accountability* • Stop it Now! UK & Ireland – campaign/helpline* • Internet offenders and Families – Inform and Inform+ also www.croga.org • Monitoring software for home computers plus related services • * Provided by funding from Ministry of Justice
The Stop It Now! Helpline • The Stop it Now! Helpline began operation in June 2002 • We have had a total of 16,240 calls to the helpline (up until December 2009) and 7,866 new callers
Stop It Now! ` Targets: – • Adult abusers and potential abusers: to encourage them to recognise their behaviour as abusive and seek help to change. • Family and friends: to encourage them to recognise the signs of abusive behaviour in those close to them and to seek advice about what action to take. • Parents of young people with sexually worrying behaviour : to encourage them to recognise signs of abusive behaviour in their children and seek advice about what to do.
Common problems for internet offenders and their families • Bail timings (a few months to 2 years) – uncertainty and instability arising from this • Offender being asked to leave the family home • Offender losing job - financial implications • Losing the family home • Custody – partner left to manage family and disclose to others? • Media interest (impact on family, especially children) • Disclosure to children and extended family • Acknowledging and dealing with ongoing risk
What is SECURUS? PC monitoring product that allows schools to • Identify: • Bullying or threatening behaviour • Visits to inappropriate internet sites • Cyber-slacking • Predator grooming • Signs of depression or suicide • Control PC use • Applications • Times • Users • groups • Web logs • Block individual sites • AUP display/acceptance
How does it work? • Plug in and play appliance • Monitors PCs for set key words/phrases (not key logging) • Saves a screen capture every time a violation occurs
How does it work? • Monitors PCs for key words and phrases relating to: • Bullying • Racism • Pornography • Predator Grooming • Drugs • Weapons • Hacking/Downloads • Gambling • Inappropriate Language/SMS • [Bespoke Words & Phrases]
Offender Monitoring using Securus • Pilots completed with Surrey and Hampshire Police • Surrey Police monitoring 30 RSOs, including 15 on SOPOs • Cumbria & Hertfordshire Police purchased hardware/software • LFF monitoring 23 RSOs for Hampshire & Sussex Police plus 4 for Probation/YOT • LFF monitoring 33 individuals following arrest, benefits – individual, partner/family, police and promotes accountability • Monthly charge £16 - £35
Experience & Developments • Surrey Pilot – 3 “concerns” of 12 • Hants Pilot – 2 re-offences of 15 • Surrey/LFF anecdotal evidence • Pilot with West Mercia Police and RIPA?? • Hostels pilots • Prisons/YOIs • Libraries
INFORM + • “Education Programme” • For those admitting accessing indecent images of children on-line – must be arrested or convicted (police aware) • Pre-programme interview • 10 X weekly sessions (2.5 hours each) • Up to 9 participants • Individuals pay to attend - £700/£150
Aims of Inform + • To provide information to aid understanding of internet offending and accessing indecent images of children • To encourage participants to explore their personal involvement with internet offending, in a supportive group setting • To consider practical and realistic methods of self-management/control
Inform+ programme content Session 1 – Introduction/outline/contracting Models of offending behaviour Session 2 – Offending models cont’d Session 3 – Fantasy in offending Session 4/5 – Addiction/compulsion/habits & collecting behaviours Session 6/7 –Relationships and social skills Disclosure ……..
Inform+ content • Session 8 – Victim empathy • What is it, when do we feel it and what stops us feeling it? • How do I see children in the images • Victim empathy materials • Homework
Inform + content • Session 9 –Relapse prevention and lifestyle change • What is Relapse prevention? • Risky behaviours/strategies for coping • Purpose and needs of internet use • Facing anxiety • Homework
Inform + content • Session 10 – Relapse prevention and lifestyle change • Meeting needs • The person you would like to be • Future contact • Feedback • Evaluation
Common themes arising from INFORM + participants Dominant theme: “If only I’d known the consequences…” Regret – family impact, career, stigma Self-control – experience of viewing as ‘addictive’ Fears – disclosures, reprisals, the future Anger – self, the authorities, the Internet itself, ISPs, sense of disproportionality Self-esteem – stigma, labels
Frequently asked questions include: • What kind of thing has my partner been looking at? • Was he ‘lured’ in? • Is he a paedophile? • Does my husband / partner represent a danger to our own children? • Will police / children’s services take my children away from me? • Who needs to know? • How do I tell my children? • What is my legal position if I suspected/knew he offended and I did not tell the police? • Is this my fault? How did I not know? • Why did he look at these images? • What is going to happen to him and our family? • Is it ok if I still love them? • Why am I being punished for something I did not do? • What should I do?!
Aims of INFORM • To provide factual information about child pornography and the Internet • To provide the means by which participants can better understand the process of Internet offending • To examine risk associated with this behaviour • To look at practical strategies for establishing and maintaining a culture of safer Internet use in future • To provide a safe place for participants to discuss the impact on themselves and their families and make plans for their futures
INFORM group content Session 1 – Introductions; facts & myths; the legal process; FAQs Session 2 – The Internet and models to understand offending behaviour Session 3 – Introduction to issues of risk; issues & concerns arising for group members following models of offending input; the continuum of denial; disclosure to others
INFORM group content Session 4 – Family impact issues; risk management; moving forward; tools for safer Internet use in the future After 2 week break: Session 5 – Review of issues discussed on the programme; discussion of any outstanding issues; reflections on the course; endings and identification of future support
Themes arising within INFORM Dominant theme: Why did he do it? What to do about the relationship? View of relationship viability tends to fluctuate markedly during the life of the programme and beyond Practicalities – impact issues for partner’s job; impact of Social Services involvement for children & wider family, financial, travel, etc… Disclosure – Fears of reprisals, ‘guilty by association’, impact upon social contacts
Inform and Inform + story so far…. • Started 2004, • 324 Inform + participants • 97 Inform participants • Surrey, Bristol, Birmingham….Sheffield • …..Scotland January 2011, via Stop! Scotland
Thanks for your attention Leaflets! Donald Findlater Tel: 01372 847160 E-mail: dfindlater@lucyfaithfull.org.uk