• Sex Offenders Make Up Large Share of Homeless Population, New Report Sh

    From Leroy N. Soetoro@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 22 02:57:19 2025
    XPost: alt.law-enforcement, sac.politics, talk.politics.misc
    XPost: alt.abuse.offender, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    https://www.city-journal.org/article/homeless-population-sex-offenders-sh elters

    Most Americans understand the link between homelessness and crime. But activists and academics reject the connection, insisting that the
    homeless pose no elevated crime threat. A new report from the Cicero
    Institute complicates their argument, revealing that a large share of
    the nation’s homeless population is composed of registered sex
    offenders.

    The report, covering 41 states, compared counts of sex offenders listed
    as “homeless” or “address unknown” on state registries with the federal Point-in-Time Count database to determine what proportion of a state’s
    homeless population appears on its sex-offender registry.

    The results are alarming. Sex offenders account for more than 20 percent
    of the unsheltered homeless population in 20 states, and more than 10
    percent in 32 states. In eight states—Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Nebraska, Rhode Island, and
    Wisconsin—more than 50 percent of the unsheltered homeless population is
    on the sex-offender registry.

    The median state’s share of sex offenders among its unsheltered
    population was 20 percent—higher than the proportions of families (5
    percent), elderly (5 percent), veterans (5 percent), and transgender- or gender-nonconforming-identifying (1 percent) and HIV-positive persons (1 percent) combined.

    Many sex offenders struggle to find work and therefore to afford
    housing. But that’s not the only reason that they are overrepresented on
    the streets: such offenders also have higher rates of cognitive
    impairments, substance abuse, and severe mental illness, each associated
    with higher rates of homelessness. And many shelters refuse to admit sex offenders, making them even more likely than other homeless subgroups to
    be unsheltered and living on the streets.

    Many other misconceptions exist about sex offenders and the registry.
    For example, reform advocates assert that individuals often get
    registered for relatively low-level crimes, like public urination.
    Lourdes Portillo, a researcher at the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and
    Housing Initiative, suggested that the lack of public bathrooms could
    land some homeless people on the registry.

    This is misleading. Prosecution and registration for indecent exposure,
    the category within which public urination is classified, is
    comparatively rare as an isolated offense without a criminal sexual
    motivation. Most states’ registries consist primarily of people who have committed serious offenses like rape or the sexual abuse of a child.

    Sociologists often claim that sex offenders are not especially
    dangerous. That claim is also misleading—and even less relevant when it
    comes to homeless sex offenders, who have a heightened risk of
    recidivism. It’s true that, according to the Bureau of Justice
    Statistics, sex offenders have the second-lowest recidivism rate by
    offense type, after murderers. But there are strong reasons to be
    skeptical of these figures: incidents of sexual violence are grossly underreported. Moreover, sex offenders commit new sex crimes after their release at two to four times the rate of other offenders, suggesting a
    distinct pattern of specialization.

    Homeless individuals are generally more likely to commit crimes than non-homeless people. The San Diego District Attorney’s office found that homeless individuals were hundreds of times more likely than the general population to commit crimes like robbery, arson, and assault. A large
    study of homelessness by UCSF’s Benioff Initiative found that nearly
    eight in ten homeless people reported going to jail, and more than three
    in ten had been in prison. The literature on recidivism indicates that
    homeless offenders are much more likely than non-homeless offenders to
    commit new crimes.

    Despite these risks, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
    Development allows publicly funded programs to include sex offenders in facilities and services that help women, children, and other vulnerable populations. This misguided policy may be one reason why homeless people
    have such high rates of sexual victimization—they are forced to live
    around sexual victimizers.

    More research is needed to determine which policy interventions can best mitigate sex-offender homelessness. While many criminologists point to residence restrictions and community-notification policies as potential
    drivers of homelessness, the scholarly literature is inconclusive,
    partly because these policies are not consistently enforced.

    Meantime, policymakers should use available tools of social control to
    reduce the public-safety risks posed by large numbers of sex offenders
    living on the street. They can enforce prohibitions against street
    camping and failing to register or provide an address; restrict the
    parole of sex offenders lacking a housing plan; and expand the use of sex-offender civil-commitment laws.

    The prevalence of unhoused sex offenders should motivate municipalities
    to adopt a more assertive approach to street homelessness. Failure to
    act leaves communities—including vulnerable homeless individuals—less
    safe.


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  • From Mitchell Holman@21:1/5 to Leroy N. Soetoro on Thu May 22 13:25:49 2025
    XPost: alt.law-enforcement, sac.politics, talk.politics.misc
    XPost: alt.abuse.offender, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    "Leroy N. Soetoro" <leroysoetoro@americans-first.com> wrote in news:lnsB2E6CAFDF1D146F089P2473@0.0.0.1:

    https://www.city-journal.org/article/homeless-population-sex-offenders-sh elters


    Meantime, policymakers should use available tools of social control to
    reduce the public-safety risks posed by large numbers of sex offenders
    living on the street. They can enforce prohibitions against street
    camping and failing to register or provide an address; restrict the
    parole of sex offenders lacking a housing plan; and expand the use of sex-offender civil-commitment laws.


    Homeless people need to have an address.

    Such as......?


    The prevalence of unhoused sex offenders should motivate municipalities
    to adopt a more assertive approach to street homelessness.


    "Assertive approach" - like what?

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