Register Now for Webinar: “An Overview of Sex Offender Reentry: Building a Foundation for Professionals”

The challenges associated with reentry after incarceration are intensified for individuals who have been convicted of sex offenses. Research reveals that upon return to the community, sex offenders are more likely to be rearrested for a non-sex crime than a new sex crime, and that supervision violation rates are high. The field struggles with developing effective comprehensive reentry strategies that respond to the myriad general and specialized needs of sex offenders. This webinar is the first in a series designed for professionals working to prepare individuals convicted of a sexual offense to return to the community. More Information

Related posts

Subscribe
Notify of

We welcome a lively discussion with all view points - keeping in mind...

 

  1. Your submission will be reviewed by one of our volunteer moderators. Moderating decisions may be subjective.
  2. Please keep the tone of your comment civil and courteous. This is a public forum.
  3. Swear words should be starred out such as f*k and s*t and a**
  4. Please avoid the use of derogatory labels.  Use person-first language.
  5. Please stay on topic - both in terms of the organization in general and this post in particular.
  6. Please refrain from general political statements in (dis)favor of one of the major parties or their representatives.
  7. Please take personal conversations off this forum.
  8. We will not publish any comments advocating for violent or any illegal action.
  9. We cannot connect participants privately - feel free to leave your contact info here. You may want to create a new / free, readily available email address that are not personally identifiable.
  10. Please refrain from copying and pasting repetitive and lengthy amounts of text.
  11. Please do not post in all Caps.
  12. If you wish to link to a serious and relevant media article, legitimate advocacy group or other pertinent web site / document, please provide the full link. No abbreviated / obfuscated links. Posts that include a URL may take considerably longer to be approved.
  13. We suggest to compose lengthy comments in a desktop text editor and copy and paste them into the comment form
  14. We will not publish any posts containing any names not mentioned in the original article.
  15. Please choose a short user name that does not contain links to other web sites or identify real people.  Do not use your real name.
  16. Please do not solicit funds
  17. No discussions about weapons
  18. If you use any abbreviation such as Failure To Register (FTR), Person Forced to Register (PFR) or any others, the first time you use it in a thread, please expand it for new people to better understand.
  19. All commenters are required to provide a real email address where we can contact them.  It will not be displayed on the site.
  20. Please send any input regarding moderation or other website issues via email to moderator [at] all4consolaws [dot] org
  21. We no longer post articles about arrests or accusations, only selected convictions. If your comment contains a link to an arrest or accusation article we will not approve your comment.
  22. If addressing another commenter, please address them by exactly their full display name, do not modify their name. 
ACSOL, including but not limited to its board members and agents, does not provide legal advice on this website.  In addition, ACSOL warns that those who provide comments on this website may or may not be legal professionals on whose advice one can reasonably rely.  
 

12 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Well one I noticed on the site where this came from you can’t comment on it, because they don’t want you to, the reason so’s get rearrested is because they set the system up so you will fail that way you can’t file in 10 years to be removed, I guess they don’t want you to live in there city but you can’t leave the country so with that being said if you must live a zone (stupid) which means they don’t want you here but they don’t want you to leave the country, sure sounds like punishment to me and they know it.

The first thing that needs to be addressed is the amount of individuals with 288(..) charges who are violated for having contact with their own children. Even a photograph will catch a violation. This is a common occurrence for parolee’s. I can hardly think of a more cruel or unusual punishment than the separation of a family when the children were not the victims, but become the victims of a heartless system.

Let us all attend this webinar, do some educating and learn what this organization and this presenter has to say on this issue. Who knows, we might learn something valuable.

I refuse to attend because it’s basically funded by federal government. If it wasn’t, then it’d be free from bias, or at least, there is hope. Unfortunately any time a program is funded, any amount from a government entity, especially federal government, there are always strings attached. This can also be calling into question anything good that come from this. Any work done to fix any problem must be done so without the funding from the federal government.

Get them jobs…jobs…jobs…they wanna work…give them all the work they can handle but don’t revoke them for not putting a one cent stamp extra on envelope …stupid lap like that……and they need to help with money for apartment …they wanna an address where lives…they need to help pay.for the apartment .

……now that’s in the public interest.

what “they” are doing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zx1Q0l7xrfM