The idea of putting "sex offenders" on the internet is nothing new and it IS already being done in Texas along with other "scarlet lettering" tactics that serve no real function than to stroke the egos of those who get off on badgering and intimidating people accused of "sex offender" crimes. When I was on probation for a trumped up charge of indecent exposure, I was told by the probation officer that if I got a second offence, that I'd have to register on the national sex offender registry on the internet. This same probation officer had posted within the office a large poster with the news headline and article of a judge in Texas who proceeds forward like a Puritan in Plymouth by scarlet lettering convicted offenders in the form of having to post a large sign on their property that reads in big bold letters, "CONVICTED SEX OFFENDER LIVES HERE---REPORT ALL SUSPICIOUS BEHAVIOR TO......(phone number). The article showed a convict holding the sign which he was told had to be posted on his property and clearly visible and to remove it would result in his immediate arrest and revocation of probation as this scarlet lettering is part of his terms of probation. How a judge can get away with such a thing is beyond me but if figures in a place like Texas. Don't get me wrong, I'm all for the proper adjudication of severe felony sex offenders, especially child molester pedophiles but at the same time I'm knowledgable of the fact that they have a problem and need professional help as most of them were molested themselves as children. To just outright throw them in jail without at least trying to properly therapeutically correct them into rightness is neither ethical nor just in any sense of the term. The judicial system, especially that of Texas, seems to want to push the envelope for "therapy" and "reform" in lieu of jail but negate the beneficial effects of "treatment" by such practices as the above described scarlet lettering and of course, polygraph testing. To simply outright just court order branding them in this manner is neither therapeutic nor logical, for that matter, if one is to expect proper reform from criminal child molesting behavior. To make spectacles of them to the rest of sociaty will only negate their reform because the results of such scarlet lettering will only make the rest of society cling to the mindset that they are beyond reform. I'm certain that there are some convicted sex offenders, some repeat offenders, who, for whatever reasons either can't or simply won't rehabilitate and should be taken off the streets and confined in the cases where there are repeat offences. It is at that point obvious that they won't reform. BUT all possibilities of reform are negated by scarlet lettering along with the bull crap of polygraphy added to it. With these things combined, how can anyone possibly expect that the convict would even be capable of reform when, by conformance to all the terms of probation, the rest of society continues to treat them with no respect and no encouragement towards a positive end? Is this real justice or simply the meanderings of an overblown ego armed with a gavel for the sake of politics and re-election? Grant it, we need change and reform in the definitions within the laws of Texas as well as more legitimate and positive therapies for "sex offenders", NOT scarlet lettering at the hands of judges with overblown egos. Since polygraphs are technically no longer legal in court, I fail to understand how it is that a pseudo science like polygraphy is employed by a legal a system that outlawed it in the private sector yet continues to use it in a way for political reasons, knowing all the while that is is a scam and has no real basis in science nor is really reliable. While it remains rare that judges themselves order polygraph testing, the fact that probation system uses it is as apalling as them once having been admissable in court. It seems to be a double standard that the very thing that was outlawed in the private sector is employed by the probation system who are empowered by judges to do as they wish, "it then being admissable in court", all based on the opinions and recommendations of an egotistical probation officer, many of whom have the attitude of, "So the judge didn't send you to jail, well, I'll do everything in my power to get you there, legitimately or otherwise." It is this mentality among probation officers that is more apalling than judges who practice scarlet lettering and negate the potential successes of positive therapy towards successful reform of sex offenders. It is not just sex offenders who are polygraphed. I've learned that in Texas, ALL probationers are subject to the abusiveness of polygraphy at the discretion of probation officers who, based on the criteria and guidelines that vary from county to county in Texas, can and will employ the scam of polygraphy, all the while telling you that it (the polygraph) is admissable in court when what they really mean is that THEIR opinion and recommendations, along with the opinions of the "therapist", based on the meandering results of polygraphy, are what are really admissable in court. Since the courts of Texas usually DO NOT order polygraph exams because of legal structure, it remains a mystery how it is that if the court did not order it as terms of probation, that the probation system, with its own agenda can get away with it legally. In my own case I had to pay for the damn poly exams in addition to my monthly probation fees as well as having to pay a portion to the therapist. This sort of thing varies from county to county in Texas. I had transferred my probation from one county to another with the original county in which probation was rendered as having jurisdiction throughout the entire probation period. Had I remained in the original county and not transferred, I'd have paid the full $60.00 per session therapist fee every week for a year as well as having to pay for two of the three poly exams I had to endure. To address the abusiveness of polygraphy, my first poly was a "come clean" sort of exam in which the polygrapher, arrogant smart assed, inappropriate tone of voice asshole that he was, went over a copy of the original trumped up police report conducive to my case to devise his questions. I had already paid the $200.00 and recieved the receipt, he devised his questions and basically badgered me into signing a written confession of "what happened" but only so long as it was in accordance and conformity to the cops version of the occurence. He never even hooked the damn polygraph up to my body and basically just ripped me off!!! Then I'm certain that he never told the probation officer what really happened. If only I could have been armed with a recording device and tiney video camera!!! I later learned that this examiner was dismissed and no longer employed by Richard Wood & Associates of Arlington, Texas, the polygraph firm that most north Texas counties utilize. As far as employing countermeasures to "pass", it remains to be seen that they are really effective and are only so effective ONLY if one can recognize the control questions. Now that they have made that difficult, the best countermeasures I've learned is simply to take the polygrapher's instructions one step further when they tell you, sit back relax, breathe normally, and sit very still through the process. Just control your breathing by having taken a couple deep breaths before the actual test begins. Since you'll already know what the questions are and your responses to them, don't think about the questions as they are presented in the test and simply keep a firm image of something relaxing and tranquil in your mind as you answr the questions. Hear the questions but don't think about them as "thinking" will render a physiological response whereby which the polygrapher can say that you're lieing. This kind of control renders the graph even an consistent on every question giving the polygrapher nothing to compare to and thus your results will be inconclusive. While such is neigher pass nor fail, wether you pass of fail really dosen't matter as the probation officer's mind is usually made up one way or the other near the end of one's probation. While they will lead you to believe that it is admissable in court, it is really their recommendations along with any other arrests during the probation period that determine wether or not the judge will extend it. As long as one has adherred to all the terms of probation as specified in the probationer's pink copy of the court documents and their are no arrests during the period and all probation fees are paid, then usually they will not extend one's probation. On the other hand, if one gets the probation officer from hell like I had, you'd better do whatever it takes to keep these people happy because apparently the courts and judges have no better sense of legal competency than to render judicial decisions based on their own moods of the moment along with the moods and egotistical motives of probation officers, some of whom's sole mission in the business is to cause you to go to jail simply because the judge didn't put you there from the start. This is especially true in the case of "sex offenders" and in Texas, a whole host of "offences" are grouped together under one heading, the chargings of which will stick based solely on the meanderings of perverted law enforcement officers who, like many probation officers, get off on doling out misery and INJUSTICE, knowing all the while that their own actions in the process are outright wrong but will get away with it because of the flaws in the laws, coupled witht the fact that "the system" will take their sides every time, regardless of the fact that entrapment tactics were used but such is never reflected in the trumped up reports they submit to make a case against anyone. This is where the legal and judicial structures of Texas are badly in need of an overhaul because to simply group a list of "offences" under one heading without proper definition then leaves a wide open margin for not only law enforcement, but the system as a whole to get away with ruining decent individuals all for the sake of ego stroking, politics, and re-election of judges who, unlike in the old days, apparently can't render a proper judicial decision without it all having been pre-decided by individuals with overblown egos and an incessant drive for doling out misery to make themselves feel good. This seems to be the case in Texas too much so and if it is to ever change, people must make an effort to contact their legislators and congressmen with petitions and sample bills towards getting the laws changed as well as proper definition and catagorization of "sex offences", NOT grouping it all together under one heading without consideration of mitigating cricumstances, as in the case of "Worried Mom" here in this forum and her son who obviously is the victim of the real crime that, because of the flaws in the law and the system, is now the real victim while the real criminal goes unpunished as a result of screwey loosely defined laws. All I can say at this point is STAND UP, SPEAK OUT WITH ACTIVISM AND MAKE AN EFFORT TO GET OUR LAWMAKERS TO CHANGE WHAT MUST BE CHANGED in a way that is going to truly make a difference and STOP all this madness. BUT we live in a society that embraces a judicial system that the common man is led to believe is far better than any other, forgetting that it is they who helped create it along with its flaws because it is an imperfect system devised and implemented by humans and human fallabilities, the epitome of which can be corrected by due process of law and adherence to that which is legitimate, NOT PSEUDO-SCIENCE, NOT SCARLET LETTERING OF THE OFFENDER and to embrace such things as "justice" is the greatest injustice of all. The rights of the individual WILL be protected, only so long as they don't conflict with the political agendas of the state and nothing is more dangerous to any society that professes to embrace "DEMOCRACY".
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