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"....and throw away the key" - (FL. Lunsford case; stiffer penalties for child molesters)
GULF1.COM ^ | APRIL 24, 2005 | DON GAETZ

Posted on 04/24/2005 4:58:41 PM PDT by CHARLITE

Lessons learned from the Jessie Lunsford case

Senator Nancy Argenziano has had some tough trips home in recent weeks.

The central Florida legislator's district includes the family, friends, and neighbors of Jessie Lunsford, one of three children in as many weeks who have been stalked, brutalized, raped and killed by repeat sex offenders.

Restive crowds of Senator Argenziano's constituents, meeting with her on weekend breaks from her duties in Tallahassee, want to know why laws and judges and parole boards failed to protect Jessie and other victims of similar horrific murders. They want to know why the system not only failed but seemed to be set up to fail.

Argenziano and some others in the Florida Legislature are now working overtime to plug the holes that Jessie's murderer and others like him keep sliming through.

The recent molestation-murder cases that have sickened and angered Floridians and all Americans raise two public policy issues:

1. Should the most heinous of pedophilic criminals be let out of prison so soon or even at all?

2. If they are released, should they have the right to blend back into society - their whereabouts tracked only on paper and then only if agencies and bureaucrats find it convenient to exchange information with each other?

The answer the Florida Legislature is coming to, better late than never, is "No."

As the father of a daughter - and as a public official charged with the safety and welfare of students - I say throw away the key on the victimizers of little children.

Mine isn't just an emotional reaction, although I admit to being horrified by the macabre details of Jessie's protracted suffering and that of other girls in Florida, California, and elsewhere. Decades of hard experience and repeated psychological studies make the compelling argument that these creeps will try to do it again as soon as they can. They have no more chance to be "cured" than rattlesnakes have of being housepets.

But parole boards let them out anyway.

Our laws ought to draw a draconian distinction between the rapists of children and almost every other offense against civilized society. It should go harder on them, a lot harder. And the criminal justice system shouldn't go squishy when serial perverts claim to be rehabilitated and repentant.

Raise my taxes - or better yet lease out the Department of Education building for commercial offices - and use the money to build the cells and pay the guards to keep child molesters locked away.

And, if, God forbid, one does every see daylight, then clamp a global tracking mechanism on him like the man in the iron mask for the rest of his sorry life. The technology is available. Ask Martha Stewart.

Either longer sentences or electronic tracking could have saved innocent lives in our own state and elsewhere in recent days. Of course, there are many other cases of molestation that didn't end in murder which may have been preventable, as well.

For years in my community we parents pleaded for a lower speed limit and a lighted crosswalk on one of the county's busiest thoroughfares next to a high school. A state legislator, now mercifully out of office, piped back, "Nobody's died yet." Soon after two students were injured and another was killed going home from school. Of course, then the politicians roused themselves and the always obvious remedy was finally applied.

Thankfully, the Legislature is now fixing the problem of paroling and then losing track of sexual predators. Senator Argenziano will have something solid to deliver to the folks on her next trip back home.

Still, a question hangs heavy in the air: what other areas of judicial discretion should be looked at from the victim's point of view, but this time before legislators are shocked into action after the fact.

Comments: dgaetz@gulf1.com


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: child; enforcing; florida; jessicalunsford; laws; legislation; molesters; new; pedophiles; penalities; policing; rapists; sentencing; sexoffenders

1 posted on 04/24/2005 4:58:56 PM PDT by CHARLITE
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To: CHARLITE

For reasons that escape me, Floida is absolutely filled with paroled child molesters. Why is this? There will be more murders without a doubt.


2 posted on 04/24/2005 5:00:35 PM PDT by FormerACLUmember (Honoring Saint Jude's assistance every day.)
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To: FormerACLUmember
For reasons that escape me, Floida is absolutely filled with paroled child molesters. Why is this? There will be more murders without a doubt.

Florida has a nice year-round climate and the cost of living is cheaper by far than other parts of the country. There's many advantages for homeless child molesters to move move into Florida, become state citizens, and hang around with or without permission.

3 posted on 04/24/2005 5:13:57 PM PDT by xJones
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To: FormerACLUmember

As a former Floridian, I can attest that it is the preferred state for homeless derelicts. "Tent City" used to exist down in Miami, where hundreds of homeless camped under the I-95 ramps. I can't say that they wanted to be there, but a surprising number of them wanted nothing more than that. As for the child-killers, I imagine that mentally they come from such stock: no goals, no urge to improve their lot in life, just a sick need to prey upon those weaker than themselves. If convicted, I think child killers should be summarily executed... no appeals, no legal wrangling. Hang them at high noon the same day, if possible, the next if not. I have grandkids... anyone who hurt one of them had best hope the Law found him first. I'd go to jail, they'd go to Hel*.


4 posted on 04/24/2005 9:38:56 PM PDT by ScorpiusInvincitatus ("It's open-season on idiots, and I am well-armed.")
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