Archive for the ‘Sex Panic’ Category

The Wrongful Conviction of Bruce Perkins

Saturday, September 21st, 2019

eric hexheimer/houston chronicle

“Swept up in a wave of extraordinary child sex abuse claims in the 1980s and early 1990s, prosecutors across the country charged dozens of parents and caregivers with appalling-sounding acts despite scant physical evidence. Suggestive, leading questioning by untrained police and counselors produced outlandish accusations, including claims of bizarre satanic rituals. Yet an unshakable belief that even young children always tell the truth yielded lengthy prison sentences.”

Read the article by Eric Dexheimer in the Houston Chronicle.

Editorial: Firing the judge in Brock Turner sex assault case was a step toward mob rule

Sunday, September 15th, 2019

(Anda Chu / TNS)

“That’s a chilling sort of mentality. It’s the kind of thinking that led the good people of California to create a criminal justice system that made eternal pariahs of former offenders and made irredeemable ‘predators’ of troubled juveniles. It’s the thinking that promoted judges and prosecutors who exercised their discretion not for fairness but for unremitting punishment. It’s the mentality that we now are trying hard to correct, after recognizing that not every mistake is a permanent character flaw and not every punishment should last forever.”

Read the editorial by the Editorial Board of the Los Angeles Times.

Recollections of a Clinical & Forensic Psychologist Evaluating and Treating Sexual Offenders

Thursday, September 5th, 2019

Please join us for an evening of learning and discussion about one of the most controversial issues in America today!

Thirty-two Years in the Trenches: Recollections of a Clinical & Forensic Psychologist Evaluating and Treating Sexual Offenders (and the courtroom battles that followed)

with Dr. Joseph J. Plaud, Ph.D.

Executive Director, Applied Behavioral Consultants, LLC

Monday, September 16 @ 6:30 pm

Cambridge Friends Center

5 Longfellow Park, Cambridge, MA

Dr. Joe Plaud first began working with sexual offenders as a first year graduate student in 1987 at the University of Maine. His focus of clinical training was on the evaluation and treatment of sexual offenders within a behavioral psychology orientation. In this talk Dr. Plaud will share his personal and professional observances and recollections of how public and societal view have changed during the past thirty-plus years, taking into consideration criminal, civil commitment and registration issues. Dr. Plaud will also discuss his work in the courtroom which has been devoted to the accurate dissemination of empirical data concerning sexual offender recidivism. Finally, Dr. Plaud will also offer his own observances about the future of psycho-legal issues involving sexual offenders. Dr. Plaud hopes for didactic audience participation as he charts out his own professional life course in working with this clinical population in a number of different contexts.

Following the talk the floor will be open for questions, answers and comments.

For more information call (617) 623-5288

About Dr. Plaud:

Dr. Joseph J. Plaud, born and raised in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, is a clinical and forensic psychologist whose graduate training was primarily focused on behavioral assessment and therapy, with specific emphasis on working with forensic clinical populations. He received his Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree in psychology in 1987 from Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, with High Honors in Psychology. His undergraduate minors were in philosophy and American history. Dr. Plaud then enrolled as a graduate student at the University of Maine, in Orono, Maine, where he received his Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in clinical psychology in 1993, after completing his clinical internship at the University of Mississippi and Jackson Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Centers in Jackson, Mississippi, serving as Chief Psychology Resident. Dr. Plaud then joined the clinical psychology faculty at the University of North Dakota in 1993, where he was actively involved in the training of clinical and experimental psychology graduate students in their Ph.D. programs, as well as pursuing his teaching and research activities in psychology, including behavior analysis, behavior modification and therapy, behavioral assessment, and sexual behavior.

Returning to his native Massachusetts in early 1998, Dr. Plaud served as the Director of Research for the Cambridge Center for Behavioral Studies, and was also appointed a Visiting Scholar of Human Development at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. In 2001 he founded Applied Behavioral Consultants, LLC, and serves as its Executive Director. Dr. Plaud provides clinical and forensic psychological services within the United States and internationally involving clinical and forensic cases, lecturing widely in these areas of psychology and the law. Dr. Plaud is also a Fellow of the American Psychological Association.

Additionally, Dr. Plaud has studied, written and lectured in the philosophical and historical foundations of psychology, with particular interests in the theoretical underpinnings of behaviorism, behavior analysis, and behavior therapy, and the accurate dissemination of behavior analysis in public forums. Dr. Plaud has published and lectured widely in the assessment and treatment of sexual offenders, and his opinion is frequently sought in forensic cases in state and federal courts across the United States.

Dr. Plaud was honorably discharged from the United States Naval Reserve with the rank of Lieutenant Commander in the Medical Service Corps. He further served as a Trustee of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum. Between 2002 and 2008 Dr. Plaud founded and administered an American history museum in Worcester, Massachusetts dedicated to the lives and legacies of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt and the New Deal. Among Dr. Plaud’s many other personal, professional, and educational interests, he is currently pursuing graduate studies in sacred theology at Saint Joseph’s College in Standish, Maine.

Dr. Plaud and his wife Eve Plaud reside in the Dorchester Neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts in an historic area known as the Polish Triangle. Their home is located where three Neighborhoods of Boston converge: Dorchester, South Boston, and Boston’s South End.

Should Galen Baughman Spend His Life in Prison?

Saturday, August 24th, 2019

“SVPA laws and practices refer to “mental abnormalities,” which sounds scientific. But the American Psychiatric Association has opposed such laws, citing their abuse of civil liberties and the use of unscientific ‘disorders’ as the basis for punishment. In practice, designation as a sexually violent predator (SVP) is not based on substantial scientific research, and the therapy received by detainees in ‘treatment facilities’ is based more on passing fads than on careful scholarship.”

Read the article by civil rights attorney Philip Fornaci and NCRJ Dircetor Roger Lancaster in the Washington Post.

Sex Offender Registries Don’t Keep Kids Safe, But Politicians Keep Expanding Them Anyway

Saturday, July 20th, 2019

Despite child sexual abuse declining by 60% between 1992 and 2010, states continue to legislate as if lenient sex offender laws are a national emergency. And, like so many other corners of the criminal justice system, the crackdown hasn’t affected all Americans equally. State registries are disproportionately black and overwhelmingly poor. As demonstrated by the recent case of Jeffrey Epstein, the billionaire long accused of molesting underage girls, local prosecutors and judges have wide discretion to overlook wealthy offenders while imposing impossible restrictions on poorer ones.

Sex offender registries continue to enjoy enthusiastic bipartisan support and meager media scrutiny despite any evidence that they achieve their stated goals.

“These laws are passed with good intentions,” Levenson said, “but they’re based on myths about sex offenses and they don’t keep people from reoffending. Community safety is important, but we need evidence-based policies that allow offenders to reintegrate into society. All we’re doing now is putting people in a position where they have nothing to lose.”

Read the article by Michael Hobbes in the Huffington Post.

Punished Enough?

Monday, June 10th, 2019

“Laws punishing sex offenses are still becoming harsher and more exacting, even though reported sex crimes are declining—and in fact were already declining well before these laws were passed. In consequence, the numbers keep climbing: people convicted of sex offenses are a rapidly growing segment of the prison population—up to 30% in some states—while beyond the walls of the prison, additional punishments, provisions, and ‘collateral consequences’ have been added on, virtually all of them based on flawed diagnostics and unsound prognostication.”

Read the article by National Center for Reason and Justice Director Roger Lancaster in Just Future Project.

“A shorter version of this essay was included in the program for the London run by the National Theater of the production of “Downstate” by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Bruce Norris. This is the original form of the essay, published for the first time here at Just Future Project with permission of the author.”

Wrongfully Convicted Anna Vasquez Named to Houston Forensic Lab Board

Friday, June 7th, 2019

“In 2006, advocates with the National Center for Reason and Justice got involved. The case was one of several they argued were involved with national hysteria around satanic ritual abuse.”

The NCRJ is proud that we could play a part in correcting this injustice.

Read the article by Paul Flahive from Texas Public Radio.

More from my Friend Gunther

Wednesday, April 10th, 2019

More information about his prison transfer:

 

Life Unhindered: Uprooted and Plunked – Part II

Come Hear Super Lawyer John Swomley

Monday, April 8th, 2019

Please join us for an evening of learning and discussion about one of the most controversial issues in America today!

Sex Panic and the Law:

Reflections of an attorney on the front lines

with Attorney John Swomley,

of Swomley & Tennen, LLP

Monday, April 22 @ 6:30 pm

Cambridge Friends Center

5 Longfellow Park, Cambridge, MA

(off Brattle Street coming out of Harvard Square, Cambridge)

John G. Swomley is well-respected as one of the best trial attorneys in Massachusetts. In 2000, he was awarded the Paul Liacos Mental Health Advocacy Award by the Committee for Public Counsel Services for zealous advocacy on behalf of indigent defendants.

Since 2005, Attorney Swomley has repeatedly been recognized as a “Super Lawyer” as published in Boston Magazine. He is a member of the murder panel, a group of lawyers qualified by the Committee for Public Counsel Services to represent indigent defendants in murder prosecutions throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

What are the laws that govern sexual offenses in Massachusetts? What are the social roots of those laws and what are their impact on those harmed by sexual offenses and those accused of such offenses. Do our present sexual offense laws serve the goals of healing and justice.

Sponsored by the:Sex Offender Policy Reform Initiative of the Criminal Justice Policy Coalition, National Center for Reason and Justice, and Boston Release Network.

For more information call (617) 623-5288 or go to www.sopri-ma.org

A New Prison Post from my Friend Gunther Fiek

Sunday, March 31st, 2019

In this post, Gunther begins the story of his sudden transfer to a private prison.

https://guntherfiek.net/2019/03/31/life-unhindered-uprooted-and-plunked-part-i/