Posted on 07/16/2005 9:02:57 AM PDT by tbeatty
COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho - Despite a lengthy record as a violent sexual predator of children, Joseph Edward Duncan III was always able to make friends who paid his bills and lobbied for his early release from prison, The Spokesman-Review reported Friday.
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Duncan, 42, is jailed without bail on charges he beat three people to death in a scheme to kidnap two children for the purposes of sexual gratification.
....
"He is open, honest and eager to move on with his life," one such supporter, David Woelfert of Lynnwood, Wash., wrote to parole officials in 1993. "He is no threat to society whatsoever."
Woelfert loaned Duncan $3,000, paid his initial rent in a halfway house and reportedly became Duncan's lover, according to the documents.
"It is my intention to back him, support him, and help him in any way possible upon his release," Woelfert had written in 1991, shortly after meeting Duncan.
(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
I agree there is a lot more to this story. Heads should roll on this one. And that Lunsford case also.
See, it's items like that that make me thank God my mother found a good man to be my stepfather. The odds were certainly against her (and me and my sister), but my stepfather has been the best daddy a girl could ever want.
(Which is probably why at 36, I'm still my daddy's girl.)
Good golly Miss Molly! What a beauty he/she is----NOT.
I often find Bill O'Reilly insufferable, but he's the only primetime commentator who goes after these stories. My hat's off to him for that and hope he brings the media spotlight to the sick freaks who were Duncan's enablers and (perhaps) accomplices.
This is a much bigger and more important story than the latest speculation from Aruba.
Men make really ugly women.
He [Duncan] was arrested in July 2004 for allegedly molesting two young boys, then released on bail. Wacksman loaned him $6,500 for an attorney, according to the Fargo Forum newspaper. A local businessman, Joe Crary, wrote Duncan a check to cover the $15,000 bail, the newspaper reported. (per the Yahoo story)
p.s. One of Dr. Wacksman's specialties is Pedeatrics.
Where they at now?!?
Come out and explain punks
Unvelievable isn't it?
I hope someone checks out these friends cause 10 to 1 they might be in to the same crap
This individual is beyond rehabilitation. This person has been given completely over to a reprobate mind.
I suggest we deny "him" the 15 minutes of fame his depraved mind craves. Try him. Judge him. Sentence him. Execute him.
The absolute torture reserved for him in hell is an overwhelming reality. He will be denied rest, comfort, peace, and freedom from pain for eternity. He will mourn, not for those whom he destroyed, but for himself, an eternally wretched point of absolute pain, as perfect justice is poured upon him from God.
The hunter will become the hunted.
Don't be deceived, God is a God of justice, and He will not be denied.
http://www.mass.gov/legis/bills/senate/st01/st01030.htm
SENATE, No. 1030
By Mr. O'Leary, a petition (accompanied by bill, Senate, No. 1030) of Robert A. O'Leary, Richard T. Moore, David P. Linsky, Brian P.Lees and other members of the General Court for legislation to establish the interstate compact for adult offender supervision. The Judiciary
No doubt also a pedophile. I wish the Aryan Nations would do something useful like kill Crary and Wacksman.
http://www.mass.gov/legis/bills/senate/st00/st00090.htm
SENATE, No. 90
By Mr. McGee, a petition (accompanied by bill, Senate, No. 90) of Thomas M. McGee and Michael E. Festa for legislation relative to establishing the interstate compact for juveniles. Children and Families
TOO CHEAP TO TRACK FELONS?
Boston Herald, May 26, 2005 by Ann E. Donlan
Massachusetts has become a "dumping ground" for out-of-state cons and sexual predators who have been able to slip quietly across the border because Beacon Hill has failed to cough up $25,000 to track them.
At least 239 felons - including sex offenders - have moved to Massachusetts upon release from out-of-state prisons without any official notification. The Bay State is the only state that has not joined a national effort to manage the state-to-state transfer of prisoners after release on parole or probation.
For just $25,000 a year, the state could join the interstate compact, but a proposed bill to bring Massachusetts on par with the rest of the country has been ignored for two years on Beacon Hill.
"We think it's a public policy no-brainer," said Richard Masters, general counsel for the Interstate Commission for Adult Offender Supervision, which administers the compact around the country. "Essentially (Massachusetts) could be a dumping ground" for inmates leaving out-of-state prisons "without any further procedures, or reporting or monitoring, or even notifying Massachusetts that they're on their way."
The state also could move to block the inmates from moving here if they don't meet certain criteria. A lack of support systems, such as family, or exceptionally dangerous criminal histories and psychological risks are factors that could bar ex-cons.
Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey is pushing for the bill's passage and has secured support from the House Judiciary chairman, Rep. Eugene L. O'Flaherty (D-Chelsea), to hold a hearing June 14.
"Right now, we're in the dark about who is coming to us from certain states," Healey said. "We'll get a lot of information about all types of offenders if we join the compact."
Some of the ex-cons have Bay State roots while others come here because of a job or network of friends, officials said.
Sen. Robert O'Leary (D-Barnstable), the bill's sponsor for two years, said sex offenders, in some cases, are able to avoid registering here because of the lack of notification.
"We need to know about these people coming into our state," O'Leary said. "And if sex offenders are leaving Massachusetts for other states, they need to know."
As a stop-gap measure, Massachusetts has entered into individual contracts with Florida, Maine, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wyoming. More than 100 prisoners, at least eight of whom are sex offenders, have returned from one neighboring state to Massachusetts, according to a source familiar with the issue.
To make matters worse, the commissioner of probation, John O'Brien, was unable to provide the number of out-of-state cons his agency is policing on probation. "I just don't have that information today," Coria Holland, O'Brien's spokeswoman, said yesterday.
Wacksman works in pediatrics????
Oh, my God.
This must be thoroughly investigated.
I'm speechless.
Homosexual Agenda Ping.
More on the (deleted adjective) subhuman scum and those who enabled him. More evidence (not that we need any) that homosexuality is not normal, not natural, and is intertwined with all sorts of perversion. Including child/adult sex.
Here's a link for any who have not looked into the root causes of homosexuality:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1420619/posts
Root Causes, Homosexual Consequences
AND a link to the mother of all archives about homosexuality, organized by subject, with lots and lots of info on the thread:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1026551/posts?page=592#592
Homosexual Agenda: Categorical Index of Links (Revision 1.1)
Freepmail me if you want on/off this pinglist.
Note: THE DEATH PENALTY! PLEASE!!!!
If anyone knows why the links I posted are two different colors, would you let this techno idiot know?
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