Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Does the Sex Offender Registry do More Harm than Good?

February 6th, 2023

A debate between NCRJ Director Dr, Emily Horowitz and Montclair State University ProfessoA debate between NCRJ Director Dr, Emily Horowitz and Montclair State University Professor Cary Fetterman.

Listen to the debate and cast your vote.r Cary Fetterman.

Listen to the debate and cast your vote.

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Pedophilia and the Media

January 13th, 2023

“These are the facts about the term pedophilia. It is a medical term, not a legal one. There are no laws or statutes criminalizing pedophilia. Depression might cause a person to shoplift, but the criminal act is shoplifting, not having depression. Not everyone who shoplifts has depression, and not all with depression shoplift.

“The same is true with pedophilia. Not everyone who molests a child has pedophilia – in fact, research suggests the percentage is low – and not everyone with pedophilia has engaged in any criminal conduct, including molesting a child. And certainly, not all registrants are pedophiles. Sexual convictions run the gamut from public exposure to violent rape.”

Read the article by Sandy Rozek in The Crime Report.

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Fells Acres: The Injustice Continues

December 19th, 2022

photo: david kamerman/globe staff

Dear Friend of Justice,

On December 13th Jim D’Entremont and I attended the Massachusetts Governor’s Council hearing on Governor Baker’s request for pardons for Cheryl and Gerald Amirault. The experience was most unpleasant. I remain saddened and angry by the way it was conducted.

You may not know what the Governor’s Council is, even if you live in Massachusetts. If you asked a random Massachusetts citizen who their Governor’s Councilor is, most would ask, “What is that?” Perhaps one in twenty could accurately answer the question. Every four years the office appears on the ballot. Except in rare instances, one is only given the choice of voting for the incumbent or writing in a name. (In the future, I will do the latter.)

The Governor’s Council is a holdover from the time the Governor of Massachusetts was appointed by the British Crown and exercised arbitrary and unwelcome authority. The Governor’s Council, which had to authorize things such as appointments and pardons, was created as a concession to the colonists. It is an expensive anachronism that serves no useful purpose. But is capable of achieving great mischief.

At the start of the hearing, I was optimistic. Massachusetts’ Courts had obstinately refused to acknowledge error and provide any relief to the Amirault family. A pardon by the Governor was the sole remaining recourse. Surely reasonable men and women would agree.

My optimism was short lived. It soon became obvious that four members of the eight-member Council had no intention of granting the pardons. Two more were harder to read but seemed definitely leaning towards denial. The two most likely to vote in favor were experienced trial lawyers, well aware of the failings of the Massachusetts Judicial System.

The most annoying Councilor was Marilyn Pettito Devaney. She stated that the mother of one of the accusers was a friend. Councilor Duff later pointed out that if she knew a victim of sexual assault, she would have recused herself.

Four members of the Council behaved professionally, without grandstanding or hostility: Jubinville, Kennedy, Duff, and DePalo,

Facing certain defeat, Governor Baker withdrew the request for the pardons.

James Sultan, the Amiraults’ attorney for many years, has been criticized for emphasizing the Amirault’s innocence at the hearing. I will not be a Monday Morning Quarterback. For one thing, I am not a lawyer, and Mr. Sultan is a very good one, and also a very good human being. Moreover, he was responding to gross misinformation from prosecutor Larry Hardoon. Sultan was soundly criticized by the Council for “retrying the case.” Hardoon was not. He had the Council in his pocket.

The Amiraults are innocent. But as certain Councilors (including Christopher Iannella, who represents me) emphasized ad nauseum, innocent people are ineligible for pardons. And the Amiraults have never expressed remorse for their “crimes.” Innocent people are also ineligible for parole. But these rules are sometimes overlooked for considerations of human decency.

These Councilors also emphasized ad nauseum that the Amiraults were guilty because the courts had upheld the convictions. They may believe that Massachusetts’ courts, by Divine Right, have the power to rewrite reality. Rational people do not.

I have little hope that incoming Governor Maura Healey will do anything to remedy the situation. She is an alumna of the Middlesex District Attorney’s Office, which is responsible for this mess. And a protégé of former Attorney General Martha Coakley, who fanatically defended the convictions.

I have a few general comments about the case:

  1. The current overwhelming consensus in the scientific and legal community is that no abuse occurred during the famous daycare cases of the 80’s. Because of the way the accusations were obtained, the testimony of the children was unreliable This was the case for McMartin, Little Rascals, Kelley Michaels, Bernard Baran, and several others. No convictions were obtained in McMartin; the other convictions were overturned. The Amiraults were not so fortunate. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that “finality” trumps the U.S. and Massachusetts’ Constitutions.
  2. The Amiraults had no opportunity to do these despicable acts. Fells Acres was an open daycare center. Parents visited unannounced all the time. They knew they were welcome to do so. Several of these parents had themselves attended Fells Acres as children.
  3. The Amiraults had no motive. If you put the bizarre accusations aside, there is zero evidence that any of them has ever had the slightest sexual interest in children. (This was true for the other cases as well.) These people are not pedophiles.Because of my work with the National Center for Reason and Justice over the past 20 years, I have learned something about pedophilia and how real pedophiles behave. Many, maybe even most, never act on their impulses. Among those who do, the usual behavior is fondling.Some years ago, there was a case in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. The caregiver was a very young man, perhaps still a teenager.One day one of the children in his care asked a parent to (and I paraphrase) “Tickle my butt the way “Tommy” [not his real name] does.” The upset parents reported the incident. After he was confronted, I believe the boy fairly quickly admitted the behavior.While it certainly is not acceptable for a childcare worker to tickle or caress the butt or genitals of a child, this is a far cry from what the Amiraults were accused of doing. “Tommy” did not dress up as a clown. He did not insert anything into the boy’s anus. And he certainly did not threaten to kill the boy’s parents if he told.

    Another theory of their motives is even more bizarre: The Amiraults are not pedophiles. But they engaged in this behavior in order to produce and sell child pornography so that Gerald could buy drugs.

    It’s hard to know where to begin with this one. Gerald has long acknowledged that he once had a substance abuse problem. I am a recovering alcoholic myself. (I have not had a drink or a drug for over 40 years.) I have had discussions with Gerald about our problem. He was nearly a year clean and sober when he was arrested. He was not buying any drugs during the time he allegedly committed these acts.

    Pedophiles, by definition, are sexually attracted to prepubescent children. Very few have any interest in children as young as the ones at Fells Acres. Of these, few would be interested in photos of the children being tortured. And of these, few would be wealthy enough to pay huge amounts of money for the pornography.Almost any other way of raising money would be easier and safer. And Gerald’s mother and sister would never have aided Gerald in supporting a drug habit.

    Finally, no such images of any of the Fells Acres children have ever been found.

  4. The accusers are not liars. A liar intentionally tells falsehoods in order to deceive. But the alleged victims and their parents obviously believe that these horrific events actually happened. That is tragic. They are indeed victims – not of the Amiraults but of a criminal-justice system that failed them miserably.
  5. This fight is not over. The Governor’s Council was given the chance to bring about a measure of closure to this nightmare. They chose not to. The Amirault family and those who support them, including the National Center for Reason and Justice, are not giving up.

Finally, I would like to express my appreciation and deep respect for the unsung heroine of this tragedy: Patti McGonagle Amirault.

When Gerald was arrested, he and Patti had two young daughters. A few days later, their son P.J. was born. While she about to be wheeled into the delivery room, she saw a television account of Gerald’s arrest. A friend of mine asked her what she was feeling at that moment. She replied “Pain. I was in labor.”

Gerald was sent to prison in 1986 and remained there until he was paroled in 2004. For eighteen years, she had three young children to raise as a single parent. Many would have felt utterly defeated by the situation. But Patti has great strength and courage.

She was determined that the children would have a relationship with their father and that Gerald would have an active role in raising those children. When they were old enough, she brought them with when she visited her husband. They spoke frequently by telephone. She made sure events such as birthday parties and First Communions were captured on film, and that the photos were sent to Gerald.

To support this family, Patti worked as a fourth-grade teacher within the Malden public schools. She was loved, respected, and ultimately promoted as an administrator.

And she continued to fight for justice for her family.

In January of 1997, I met Patti at an event about the Amirault case and others like it, that took place in Salem, Massachusetts. At that time, we were hopeful that the latest appeals in the case would be successful. But on March 24th of that year, the Supreme Judicial Court turned them down. I was devastated and helped organize a rally in support.

I here quote from something I wrote at that time:

I got the Amiraults’ telephone numbers from the attendees list at the Salem conference. I helped organize a support rally for the Amiraults, which took place 6 April 1997 at the Unitarian Church, Harvard Square, Cambridge. I phoned Patti the night before Easter. One of the daughters answered and told me that Patti was out buying things for Easter baskets. I was an emotional wreck and Patti — at the eye of this storm for 13 years — was tending to the ordinary things necessary to being alive and part of a family. Patti is a fourth-grade teacher, a softball coach, and a devoted hockey mother. She fed and entertained a mob of teenagers after her eldest daughter’s prom. She has fought this battle long and hard without stinting her duties as a mom. In a lifetime, one meets few true heroes or heroines. Patti is a true heroine.

I will close by quoting something I wrote while I was attending the new-trial hearings:

Before the hearing one day, I also heard one of Gerald and Patti’s daughters telling a friend all about Titanic, which she’d seen three times. Another typical teenager in love with Leonardo DiCaprio, I thought. And then I thought about how typical, how ordinary these people are. I remember the reception following Violet’s funeral. It was a beautiful September day (Massachusetts may have terrible justice but it has excellent fall weather), and the uncles and aunts cousins and neighbors and friends were all gathered. Just like my family, I thought. Just like almost any family. Such ordinary people. And yet how extraordinary they all are. History has thrust an unbearable burden upon them, and they bear it with strength, courage, and dignity. If the Amiraults are expendable, then we all are expendable.

What happened to the Amiraults could happen to any one of us.

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Parole Board should heed Baker’s call to pardon the Amirault siblings

December 12th, 2022

photo: Tom Landers/Globe Staff

“Its [The Governor’s Council] approval would remove a stain on the Massachusetts criminal justice system and help restore the Amiraults’ reputation.”

Actually, the stain is indelible. But the pardons would lighten it.

Read the op-ed at the Boston Globe by Harvey Silverglate and John Swomley.

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Rest in Peace, Sally Crum

December 11th, 2022

I received extremely sad news today. Sally Crum died of cancer on December 2nd.

As most of you know, I have long supported the cause of my good friend, Shane Crum. Shane was falsely accused and wrongfully convicted in 1997 of sex crimes against his own daughter. Through his 25 years of wrongful imprisonment, his main support has always been his mother. Now, sadly, that support is gone. Making it more important than ever that others support him.

Most prisoners are allowed to remotely attend family funerals. In Ohio, at least, those convicted of sex offenses are not.

Please send Shane a card or a note of support and encouragement. here is his contact information:

Shane Crum A334-540
M.C.I.
POB 57
Marion OH 43301

Correspond with Shane by email through Jpay.com. Just do an inmate search on state (Ohio) and inmate ID (A334-540).

This fight will continue.

-Bob Chatelle

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Please send a holiday card to a prisoner

December 4th, 2022

Anyone who knows a prisoner knows how important it is to them to receive mail, especially at this time of year. Many prisoners receive no outside support at all.

I don’t care if you send a Christmas card, a holiday card, or whatever. Neither will they.

Here is a list of prisoners who’d be delighted to get a card.

Unfortunately, New Hampshire prisoners are not allowed to receive greeting cards of any sort, picture postcards, or any typewritten or printed material. Only handwritten letters on stock paper are permitted.

Paul Litchfield is not on the list this year, because he has been released. His sister asked me to include his mailing address:

Paul Litchfield
POB 444
Hinsdale MA 01235

My work on behalf of prisoners is made possible by the National Center for Reason and Justice. To enable me to continue my work, please consider a holiday donation to this important organization.

Thank you for your support of justice!

-Bob Chatelle

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Governor’s Council to Decide Amirault Pardons

November 28th, 2022

Getty Images. This April 2000 file photo shows Gerald “Tookie” Amirault while being interviewed by the press at the Bay State Correctional Center.

As most of you know, the NCRJ has been supporting the Amirault family in their quest for justice since our founding. You may have read our recent post about Governor Baker finally seeking pardons. There is one more step in the process.

In colonial times, the Governor of Massachusetts Bay colony was appointed by the English Crown. The colonists resented his power, and a concession was made allowing the colonists to create a Governor’s Council to approve certain of the Governor’s decisions, including appointments and pardons. This archaic institution is still with us.

On December 13th at 1 p.m. they will meet to vote on approving pardons for Gerald and Cheryl Amirault. If you live in Massachusetts, it is vital that you telephone or otherwise contact your Governor’s Councilor to urge their support for the pardons.

If you don’t know how to contact your Councilor:

1. Go to this website and enter your address. When you get the results, scroll all the way down to find your Governor’s Council District.
2. Go to this website to find the contact information for your Councilor.

Please, help us bring this 38-year-old nightmare to an end.

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Breaking: The Amiraults to receive pardons!

November 19th, 2022

This April 2000 file photo shows Gerald “Tookie” Amirault while being interviewed by the press at the Bay State Correctional Center.

Members of the The National Center for Reason and Justice were actively fighting to rectify this dreadful miscarriage of justice before we were even incorporated. Indeed, it was because of this case, and others like it, that we decided our organization was necessary.

We did more than publicize the case and support efforts to overturn the wrongful convictions. We kept in close personal touch with the family. We frequently visited Gerald in prison. When a family member was lost, we attended wakes and funerals.

One of our Advisors, Harvey Silverglate, was part of the legal team. We sometimes thought that victory was ours. But the Supreme Judicial Court, to their disgrace, always torpedoed our efforts.

Because Massachusetts courts dug in their heels and refused to budge, our remaining hope was the Governor. And eight years ago, Wen Charlie Baker was elected, we were hopeful that the case was at an end.

Baker chose not to run for a third term, and a new Governor was elected. Baker finally acted and has requested pardons for Gerald Amirault  and Cheryl Amirault LeFave.

Here is one news story. Many more will follow.

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Virginia Supreme Court Ruling Vindicates Activist

October 24th, 2022

 

The decision in Baughman v. Virginia ends the state’s efforts to civilly commit activist Galen Baughman as a ‘sexually violent predator’

In mid-September 2022 the Supreme Court of Virginia reversed a trial court decision and dismissed the Commonwealth’s petition to have Galen Baughman declared a sexually violent predator and confined in civil commitment.

Baughman is a gay man who was incarcerated for nine years for a sex offense conviction as a teenager. After his release, he became an advocate and was awarded a Soros Justice Fellowship in 2015 to campaign against the indefinite civil commitment of youth who are deemed to be “sexually violent predators.”

Virginia is one of 20 states that can indefinitely civilly commit people convicted of a sex-related crime after they have served their sentences, provided a court finds sufficient evidence to declare them a sexually violent predator. An SVP is defined as a person suffering from a psychological “abnormality” that predisposes him to commit a sexually violent offense. This is a “disorder” invented by legislators; it is not recognized by professional psychological associations. Civil commitment is preventive detention: incarceration for an offense that might happen in the future. It’s a violation of law going back to the Magna Carta, not to mention of fundamental human rights. SVP programs are touted as residential therapy. But they operate as prisons, except that the inmates have no release dates.

After Baughman’s incarceration, Virginia sought to civilly commit him as an SVP, but a jury determined he was not one, and he was released on supervised probation.

In 2016, because of a technical violation of his probation—exchanging non-sexual text messages with a teenage boy he met at a funeral—the Commonwealth of Virginia jailed Baughman and tried again to confine him indefinitely in civil commitment. A state-appointed psychologist examined him and found that he was not a sexually violent predator and was not at risk of reoffending. Unsatisfied by this report, the prosecution found an expert who would testify against Baughman. This “expert” did not interview Baughman. The state’s only evidence offered at trial, besides the prosecution’s “expert” testimony, referred to the offenses Baughman committed in 2003. Meanwhile, the judge did not allow the defense to mention the previous state-appointed expert’s assessment, to present its own expert testimony, or to hear the earlier jury’s determination that Baughman was not a sexually violent predator. This time the jury found him to be an SVP.

On appeal, the Virginia Supreme Court ruled that the state had improperly engaged in expert shopping and vacated and reversed the lower court’s decision. Having spent years in jail on a technical violation, Baughman was finally exonerated.

The case is important in several ways. First, the Virginia Supreme Court made a clear and strong statement against the practice of expert shopping.  Second, the case revealed the deep homophobic bias embedded in the Orwellian civil commitment assessment process and in the drive to confine Baughman as a dangerous predator in the absence of credible evidence. In an amicus brief filed on behalf of LGBTQ+/HIV rights advocates and organizations in support of Baughman’s petition for appeal, the Center for HIV Law and Policy eloquently made this argument.

“This decision validates the main argument in our brief, that the lower court made errors due to the bias baked into the process of determining a person’s ‘future dangerousness’ in civil commitment proceedings,” said attorney Anne Kelsey, who was the lead author of the brief for CHLP. “Galen’s conduct was legal and the court agreed it was the persecution by the state of Virginia that crossed a line.”

Third, Baughman’s supporters brought Virginia’s unjust, punitive civil commitment program to the attention of state legislators, many of whom knew little about it. In 2021, two Virginia lawmakers introduced legislation to repeal the state’s civil commitment laws.

NCRJ joined CHLP’s brief, along with legal organizations including GLBTQ Legal Advocates and Defenders (GLAD), Health Professionals Advancing LGBTQ Equality (GLMA), the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), and Brad Sears, J.D. The National Association of Criminal Defense Attorneys (NACDL) also filed an amicus brief in support of Galen’s appeal. A third amicus brief was filed by a group of law professors and issue-area experts.

Thanks to our friends at the Center for HIV Law and Policy for their work in support of Galen Baughman and also for their press release on his case, from which this article is adapted.

Friends of Justice is a personal blog. Here I speak only for myself.

Justice Delayed for Father MacRae

October 12th, 2022

Photo: Jim Cole/ASSOCIATED PRESS

All this happened because “believe the children” became a nationwide mantra. Society has a duty to protect young children—but also to assess accusations rationally and fairly, especially when they’re improbable, spectacular and horrifying. Journalists, too, must maintain a level of skepticism when cases as improbable as these arise. Any reporter who covers the legal system should have recognized the high probability that these accusations were false.

Read the article by NCRJ Advisor Harvey Silverglate in the Wall Street Journal. Rebublished with their permission in Father MacRae’s blog, Beyond These Stone Walls.