Appreciation to commenters on this opinion piece discrediting Lauren Book

Jean Zeeb, a Florida Treatment Provider and ATSA member wrote a strong opinion piece admonishing Lauren Book (now a State Senator) for misleading the public about the dangers of sex offenders.

Lauren’s charity, Lauren’s Kids, receives MILLIONS in funding from the State, so it’s no wonder that she wants to keep the gravy train moving and she knows she can do it by perpetuating fear.

Kudos to Jean Zeeb and to the commenters. We need to do our part to post comments to these types of pieces to support the writers and the news outlets that publish them.

A copy of the article follows.

 

In Lauren Book’s Dec. 11 column, she wrote about the dangers that sexual predators pose to children and admonishes parents to be suspicious of staff at youth-serving organizations. We all want to protect children, so how could such a column be objectionable? Because it is alarmist, misleading and mostly false.

I have been a sex offender therapist for over 20 years, treating well over 1,000 juvenile and adult sex offenders. For longer than that, I have worked with adults who were sexually victimized as children.

Book states that we must be vigilant for sexual predators who work in youth-serving capacities. She wrote that “the average sexual predator will offend against 117 children in his or her lifetime.” This is an old trope, discredited decades ago.

Among sex offenders, there are those with child victims and those with adult victims. Those with child victims are further divided into two categories: child molesters and pedophiles.

Child molesters generally have one or two victims (verified by polygraphs), and these are children with whom they have close contact (e.g., as stepparents, babysitters, etc.). Child molesters are generally heterosexual, and are primarily interested in adult partners, but at one time or another victimized a child.

Pedophiles, on the other hand, are primarily (and often exclusively) attracted to children. While there are pedophiles who fit Book’s description of “117 victims,” such pedophiles are rare. Most are introverts and isolated from society. Though some act on their sexual desires, others do not.

“Sexual predator” is not a clinical term, but a legal one based primarily on statute. In Florida, the difference between being labeled a “sex offender” or “sexual predator” has little to do with the actual crime, and more to do with when the crime was committed and the presiding judge’s whims. Any adult convicted of a sex crime against a child after Oct. 1, 1993, if the judge so deems, can be labeled a sexual predator.

In Florida, the definition of “adult” and “child” is a moving target. In terms of victims, anyone under the age of 18 is considered to be a child. Unlike 40 other states where the age of consent is lower, Florida’s age of consent is 18.

When it comes to offenders, children as young as 14 who may have “experimented” with neighborhood kids, can, and regularly are, convicted of sexual offenses as adults. Since their victims are almost always younger, they are considered especially dangerous, as they have “targeted” such young victims and are thus labeled “sexual predators.”

Here are a few other examples from my caseload: An 18-year-old high school student has sex with a 16 year old from school. He is convicted of a sex crime against a child, must drop out as he cannot now be around “children,” and his hopes of joining the military after graduation are dashed. Instead he is labeled a sexual predator for his entire life. Had he done this in Georgia, where the age of consent is 16, no crime would have been committed.

A 22-year-old man meets someone in a chat room who claims to be 20 and posts a stock photo of a woman roughly that age. The conversation turns sexual and they exchange photos of their genitals. Her parents discover the photos and call the police. He is arrested and convicted of sending material harmful to a child and labeled a child sexual predator. She was 14 years old, though he had no way of knowing this.

A 23-year-old man goes to a dance club and picks up a woman at the bar. She goes home with him and they have sex. Three weeks later, he is arrested on a child sexual battery charge. The “woman” was 17 and used a fake ID to get into the bar. When she bragged about her sexual encounter with her school friends she was overheard by a teacher, who was mandated by the state to report the crime. The man is now convicted and labeled a sexual predator.

I do not mean to imply that there are not true child victims, children sexually exploited by unscrupulous men. Nor do I want to minimize the harm done to children by a trusted adult, such as a stepfather. Children are profoundly harmed by such activity. The countless heartbreaking stories that Book is likely privy to, and that I myself have heard in my offices, point to the devastation wreaked upon their lives.

But it is important to look with a more critical eye than Book is using. By using alarmist terms and discredited statistics, the complexity of the problem is obscured. When the term “sexual predator” applies alike to young men with “consenting” partners as it does for pedophiles, the term is, in effect, meaningless.

Book casts suspicion on the vast majority of well-intended adults who work with children. Most adults working with youth are altruistic men and women deserving of our appreciation.

– Jean Zeeb is a licensed mental health counselor and a clinical member of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers. She works with sex offenders and victims of sexual abuse in North Central Florida.

 

SOURCE

 

6 thoughts on “Appreciation to commenters on this opinion piece discrediting Lauren Book

  • January 10, 2017 at 9:44 pm
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    How encouraging to find a therapist with the courage to publish the truth! If our legislators would read such articles, perhaps fairer legislation might result.

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  • January 11, 2017 at 6:22 am
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    Another example of how sex offender registries is unjust is when police departments hire &create special units to search and stalk others on the worldwide web acting as minors in chat rooms, personal ads, social media and the list goes on in order to “catch sex deviants” who are what they deem as high risk of commiting a sex crime and they arrest them. When in a hand full of cases I have heard the person did not go to meet the so called minor who isnt even a minor but an undercover cop who is of consenting age. And yet they were still arrested and labled a sex offender for having sexual conversations with an adult who claimed to be a minor. It’s NOT fair!! They need to redue registries and break it down into levels in which all other crimes are already broken down and categorized into. Why isnt people who commit murder, child abuse or home invasion on a registry? People convicted of sex crimes no matter how serve or piety the crime maybe Are ALL still viewed and labeled as monsters and we as a society cast them away as leopards. Who no matter how long jail/prison/probation sentenced they served and all the obsticales money and hoops they had to pay and do in order to be “free” and to be able to join the rest of society . sex offenders who “commit sexcrimes”are the only ones labeled for all the public to know and see all their personal information and criminal history. They are also discriminated against the most in today’s workforce, living situations, conditions after serving their sentences and as to where they can and cant live and who they can live with. Its unjust, unfair and discrimination. No one should be treated as leopards after serving their time for yheir crimes. What kind of message does that send from us as a society who is so against discrimination, racisim, unjustice and for fighting in order to make sure we all have fair and equal rights and opportunities as everyone else does to be our best and succeed in life and live the best. Life we possibly can. And yet we are still in ancient times when it comes to this issue and the criminal system and those WHO HAVE BEEN AND ARE REFORMED RIGHTS??

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  • January 11, 2017 at 8:45 am
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    Kudos to Jean Zeeb for finally speaking out against Ms.Book who has had a personal vendetta against any one convicted of any sexual offense, She has used her personal experience to create a living hell for sex-offenders regardless of the severity of their crimes and made it nearly impossible for many offenders to turn their lives around and become productive citizens due to her constant drive to further punish all sex-offenders.

    Ms. Book should consider getting a bit of therapy herslf to help uunburden herself of the anger which she is showing toward thousands who don’t deserve to be the target of her witchhunts..

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  • January 11, 2017 at 11:23 am
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    this is the same way they got the international megans law passed a politician used false statistics shouted from his soapbox surrounded by soccer moms who have nothing better to do than scream about something they don’t know anything about and believed by the feeble minded

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  • January 16, 2017 at 6:10 pm
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    Lauren and Ron know their Time Is Up.

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  • January 24, 2017 at 3:26 pm
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    What an awesome letter. It is encouraging to read something like this from someone who knows the truth. It’s too bad that the Florida legislature won’t listen to someone like her, and instead listens to people using scare tactics for their own personal gain.

    Reply

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