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Sex Offender Placement in Our Communities

This presentation discusses the process of sex offender placement in our communities and the challenges faced by Monroe County Probation in meeting state mandates. It covers topics such as presentence investigations, probation supervision, sex offender housing, and the local challenges faced in implementing these mandates.

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Sex Offender Placement in Our Communities

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  1. Sex Offender Placement in Our Communities Monroe County Probation NYSAC February 10, 2009

  2. Sex Offender PSI • Presentence Investigations (PSI) • Assist Judge in making sentencing decision • State Mandated (but only 15% funded) • Enhanced Sex Offender PSI (in jeopardy per State Aid cuts) • One (1) Probation Officer (2008 = 136 enhanced PSI) • Detailed interview regarding sexual history • Investigate computer use, pornography history etc • Home/neighborhood visit (children? items used to attract children? Day Care or schools in neighborhood? vehicles used by defendant etc)

  3. Enhanced PSI (cont.) • Extended Victim Impact process • More sensitive letter to victim & multiple attempts at victim contact • Where plea bargain, explain probation conditions, restrictions, treatment, GPS etc. • Addendum for Sex Offender Registration Act determination (assist Judge with Risk Assessment) • Check Email, MySpace, Facebook etc. names & info

  4. SORA Risk Assessment

  5. Probation Supervision • Seven (7) Probation Officer Sex Offender Specialists (in jeopardy due to State Aid cuts) • Enhanced Conditions of Probation • Specialized treatment (limited to 2 agencies) • No contact <17 • Disclosure to landlord, employer, school administration, those with whom intimate etc • No pornography, no social networking, no internet w/o Probation Officer approval. • No cell phone w/camera, no camcorder, no 900 calls • No children’s clothing, toys etc; • No law enforcement clothing • No post office box • Polygraph examinations • Regular Police Collaboration

  6. Supervision (cont.) • GPS/Sex Offender Pilot (state $ in jeopardy) • Global Position System (GPS) on all sex offenders until stable; all SORA 3 • Exclusion zones • Real-time monitoring - Probation & 911 Center; ‘Crime Scene Inquiry’ • Probation Officer teams: nights/weekends, immediate response to alerts, surveillance, home visits, victim safety checks, Order of Protection checks etc

  7. Sex Offender Housing – State Mandates • 2006: Penal Law 65.10(4a) – Mandated Probation Condition • Where victim is <18, refrain from knowingly entering area 1,000 from school ground etc. (with some exceptions) • 9/17/07: Supreme Court ruling permits ‘…innocent transit in a moving vehicle within 1,000 foot public area around school grounds…’

  8. Sex Offender Housing – State Mandates (cont.) • 2008: Executive Law 243(4) -- Requires State Probation Director to establish rules for local Probation regarding SORA Level 2 or 3 housing (‘instruct local probation’) • Draft Probation Rule 365 -- Where SORA 2 or 3 sentenced to Probation, an investigation shall consider: • Concentration of sex offenders in certain area or municipality • The number of sex offenders at a specific property. • Proximity of vulnerable populations • Accessibility to family, friends, sex offender treatment etc • Availability of permanent housing

  9. Sex Offender Housing – State Mandates (cont.) • Draft Rule 365 – Local Probation should consider… • Victim address, age, relationship • Known Orders of Protection • Known presence of persons <18 in residence • Local Probation should summarize findings and make recommendation to Court as to appropriateness of residence • Same rules apply when probationers seek change of address

  10. State Mandates – Local Challenges • Lawmaker intent genuine & understandable – protect children • But, not developed by practitioners (police, probation, DA, sex offender treatment specialists) • Judges didn’t ask for this additional guidance or task • Not evidence-based, as State agencies now demand of local government when applying for grant funding • SORA imperfect… • Complicated & confusing to public • Level 1, 2, 3; Sexually Violent Offender; Predicate Sex Offender; Sexual Predator • Plea bargains • SORA Level 2 & 3 misleading – many lower level sex offenders at higher risk • Recent AP article – not a deterrent

  11. State Mandates – Local Challenges (cont.) • 1,091 Registered Day Care Providers in Monroe County (OCFS) • Unknown thousands of unregistered day care providers • 22 School Districts in Monroe County • 120 individual schools just in the City of Rochester

  12. State Mandates – Local Challenges (cont.) • 316+ sex offenders on probation in Monroe County • Most sex offenders reside in City of Rochester • Residency restrictions promote relocation to suburban/rural – less concentration of offenders and ‘vulnerable populations’

  13. Sex Offender ProbationersFebruary 3, 2009

  14. State Mandates – Local Challenges (cont.) • Sex Offender residence restriction – unreasonable task for local Probation • Most probationers already residing at, or returning to, their own residence upon sentencing, not looking for housing…decisions relate to removing the probationer from his home • Most victims are family members or associated, but… • Other offenders are best monitored if they can remain in their family • Sex Offender treatment programs are near schools & day care centers • Probation offices are near schools & day care centers • Court is near schools and day care centers (Day Care inside some Courthouses)

  15. State Mandates – Local Challenges (cont.) • Examples of Concentration (1) Registered centers only (2) Probationers only, not including parolees or Registered Sex Offenders not under supervision

  16. State Mandates – Local Challenges (cont.) • How many sex offenders = ‘too many’? • Rare cooperative landlord, resulting in several sex offenders residing in same building • Vulnerable entity definition -- no common agreement • Penal Law 220 (drug free school zones) • Original DPCA definition (colleges, nursing homes, places of worship etc)

  17. State Mandates – Local Challenges (cont.) • Local Probation agencies in peril – State Aid reduced from 46.5% to current 15% while state mandates expand • Vacant Probation Officer positions, mandated overtime, high caseloads, Probation Officers perform data entry & prepare court reports • New Law/Rule creates: • Need for home visit where none was required before • Additional interview items for Investigating Probation Officer • Additional report to the Court

  18. Case Example • Bi-polar male, convicted in Texas of attack on 14-year old neighbor while residing alone and while ‘off meds’ • Transfer to Monroe County to reside with parents in affluent suburb; classified SORA Level 3; stable when in treatment, on meds, with full time job and supervised by Probation and his parents; no problems since his move to Monroe County • Private day care opens in residence just behind probationer’s family home; neighbors demand ouster & contact media • Relocated to a series of motels, moving each time other motel tenants complained or where children moved in…continues to reside alone in motel room; stable, but risk is higher due to lack of permanent housing

  19. Monroe County Reentry Task Force • Sex Offenders released from prison – greater challenge • Same 2008 sex offender housing law to State Parole (impact on County Social Services Commissioners also) • Lack of housing prompts extensive use of emergency housing facilities ($42/day public cost) • Risk remains high due to unstable housing & residing in proximity of other sex offenders

  20. Solutions? • Stabilize State Aid to Probation – allow local Probation to adhere effectively to state mandates and reduce sex offender caseloads to allow intensive intervention; or, implement a moratorium on all new mandates • Restore GPS/Sex Offender funding for pilot counties (Monroe, Onondaga, Rensselaer, Westchester…) • State Parole, Probation, Reentry take the lead in identifying safe, secure, stable permanent housing for sex offenders.

  21. Questions? Bob Burns, Probation Administrator Monroe County Office of Probation – Community Corrections 33 N. Fitzhugh St, Suite 2000 Rochester, NY 14614-1233 585 753-3765 rburns@monroecounty.gov

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