Help Pass The National Sex Offender Registry Act of 2004

by NewLight2 14 Replies latest watchtower child-abuse

  • tyydyy
    tyydyy

    Do we have a cure for pedophelia? I don't think so. Do we have a cure for killers? Can we rehabilitate rapists? Can we make it so that criminals who rob little old ladies of all they have left in the world won't strike again? Truth is....we don't have a cure for criminal behavior in any form. Can they resist their urges? Yes. Otherwise they would be having sex with every kid they come across on the street. If there is no chance of rehabilitating criminals then we should just go ahead and kill them. Do we need a law saying that police should be able to share information across state lines? If so, then I'm all for it. But if you want to have all that information made public, keep in mind that it's already in the public record. It's part of their criminal record. What are we really talking about? We're talking about trying to identify a group of people that are deemed potentially dangerous. We don't have a problem doing this with an obviously evil person like a pedophile but then who's next? Rapists? Murderers? Sure. No problem. What about terroists? Shouldn't we be able to keep an eye on them? They have shown links between boys who torture animals and serial killers. Why don't we label those also. Those boys are more likely to become killers. Where do you draw the line? Once our society gives up its rights and freedoms to its government it will have to fight to get them back.

    We have to maintain the rights of even the worst criminals in our society otherwise we give our leaders too much power. That might be ok if the current leaders are trustworthy and have similar values to our own but what if we were to "elect" someone who wasn't what we thought he would be. What if he happens to think that blacks or jews, cripples, muslims, mexicans etc...... are a danger to our society. They will have to precedent.

    We must deal with each case through our legal system on an individual basis. Period. Branding a whole group of people with a lifetime "scarlet letter" to give ourselves the illusion that we're safer will only accomplish the opposite.

    TimB

  • ohiocowboy
    ohiocowboy
    We have to maintain the rights of even the worst criminals in our society

    What about the rights of us law-abiding citizens, and our RIGHTS to know if we are living among a criminal? Do the rights of criminals have precedence over the rights of us who could become victims?

    Several months ago, ourselves and all of our neighbors received a flyer from the registry that there is a convicted rapist, and sexual predator living just 8 houses down from us. It is very good to know, as it keeps us on guard, and allows us to keep an eye out for each other. I find it hard to swallow that people feel that the rapists rights are being violated by letting people-(potential victims) know of their background.

    By the way, the guy is now back in prison for assault, and his house is up for sale.

    Edited to add: Think about it, if a person that pursued such criminal activities knew that their name would be on a national database if they did the crime, would they not possibly think twice before committing the crime? Even if a small percentage of those criminals thought twice about it, it would be well worth the lives saved, and the emotional horrors that the victims would have experienced.

  • tyydyy
    tyydyy

    That list only gives you the illusion that you're safe. What would you do differently if you knew where all the previous sex offenders were located at any given time. Would you let your kids outside to play if you thought the pervs were all gone. What about the ones that haven't commited a crime yet. Yeah. We could identify those who have to the potential for pedophelia by giving everyone a psychological test. Since they're incurable we might as well lock them up now. Right?

    Truth is. You should be vigilant at all times. There are sex offenders in every neighborhood. Do you want to rely on a database to tell you that you're in good neighborhood? Don't get lazy. If you're doing a good job as a parent then you will make it your responsiblity to protect your children. There are many more ways for our children to get hurt than by sex offenders. As parents we must keep in mind that there are evil people everywhere. Protect your children. Be smart, not lazy.

    TimB

  • tyydyy
    tyydyy
    Edited to add: Think about it, if a person that pursued such criminal activities knew that their name would be on a national database if they did the crime, would they not possibly think twice before committing the crime? Even if a small percentage of those criminals thought twice about it, it would be well worth the lives saved, and the emotional horrors that the victims would have experienced.

    I don't think that these kind of criminals sit down and plan their criminal activities like a career choice. Yes, it probably would deter some criminals from crossing the line but at what cost? Have we really thought about the dangers of giving up our personal liberties? The number of lives that could be saved from ruin but pedophiles can't compare to the lives lost and families broken when a government controls the people instead of the other way around.

    Make the criminals pay. I don't have a problem with that, but when they are done paying they should be able to assimilate into our society normally or else they will have no choice but to be criminals.

    TimB

  • NewLight2
    NewLight2

    Out from the shadows
    RUBÉN ROSARIO
    Pioneer Press
    http://www.twincities.com/mld/pioneerpress/10347857.htm


    'After years of physical and
    mental abuse, I couldn't help at the time. I would like to help
    now, for those that are still afraid to speak.' Amy Blom,
    ex-wife of Donald Blom

    Out from the shadows

    The woman who stood by one of Minnesota's most notorious
    killers is ready to talk after years of shame and depression.

    The e-mail sent to two Minnesota legislators last week was
    brief but spoke volumes.

    "I was married to Donald Blom, a six-time sex offender who
    was released from prison and killed Katie Poirier,'' the e-mail
    from Amy Blom begins. "After years of physical and mental
    abuse, I couldn't help at the time. I would like to help now, for
    those that are still afraid to speak."

    For seven years, Amy Blom, 38, says she endured black eyes,
    punches, bruises and constant verbal put-downs at the hands of
    her ex-husband, one of the most reviled criminals in recent
    memory. The mention of her husband's name, as well as that of
    Dru Sjodin's suspected killer, evoke images of cold-blooded
    killers and repeat sexual predators who should have been kept
    locked up.

    Now, the woman who stood by and lied for a 55-year-old
    convicted sex predator and killer is slowly but finally emerging
    from the shadows of the "guilt, shame and depression'' she says
    she feels surrounding the Poirier case.

    "I have looked back so many times and know in my state of
    mind and the control he had over me I would not have been
    capable of doing different,'' Blom said last week as she sat in
    the kitchen of her immaculately clean Richfield home.

    "I have never spoken to the Poirier family or know if they
    would ever want to hear from me, but I would like to ask for
    forgiveness,'' added Blom, who has been treated for
    post-traumatic stress disorder and battered woman's syndrome.
    "I don't want to make the situation worse, as much pain as they
    are in.''

    On the night of May 26, 1999, a grainy surveillance video
    caught a man resembling Blom, whose legal name is Donald
    Michael Pince, with his hands to the back of Poirier's neck,
    leading her out of the Moose Lake, Minn., convenience store
    where she worked.

    She was never seen alive again. Human bone fragments and a
    tooth identified as Poirier's were found in a fire pit on Donald
    Blom's nearby vacation property. Blom, with a string of
    abductions and sexual assaults of young females in his past,
    confessed to the abduction and murder of the 19-year-old
    Poirier. But he later recanted and went to trial.

    He was convicted and sentenced to life without parole. For
    safety reasons, he was moved out of Minnesota and is serving
    time in Waynesburg, Pa. He could not be reached for comment
    last week.

    Earlier this year, concerned her husband could win an appeal to
    overturn the conviction, Amy Blom contacted authorities and
    admitted that Donald Blom was not home the night of Poirier's
    abduction, as she had told investigators at the time. The appeal
    ultimately failed.

    "I don't believe that I could have prevented it (Poirier's
    murder),'' said Blom, who was not aware of her husband's
    criminal history or previous marriages until his arrest in the
    case. "I was so under his power, in fear of him, but at the same
    time connected to him. When they accused him, it was like
    they were accusing me and my children. I know now that I was
    in many ways his hostage, paralyzed to speak up.''

    Susan Neis, executive director of Cornerstone, a domestic
    violence program in Bloomington where Blom and some of her
    children have sought counseling, says Blom's experiences are
    common among victims of spousal abuse.

    "There is no more horrific pain I can imagine than someone
    losing their daughter like that,'' Neis said of Poirier's parents.
    "But I think what the public doesn't realize in Amy Blom's case
    is that she and her children were also victims of this man."

    Amy Blom, a former nursing home assistant, married Pince, a
    maintenance worker, in 1992. Amy Blom's two sons from a
    previous marriage ? then 6 and 1 ? considered their mother's
    husband as their father. The marriage also produced two
    daughters, now ages 10 and 11.

    Blom thought it strange but flattering that her husband took her
    last name, unaware he had done the same twice before with
    ex-wives she did not know about. Authorities believe he did
    that to conceal his criminal record from employers, cops and
    others.

    Donald Blom's demeanor toward his wife changed drastically
    six months into the marriage, she said. Angry disputes turned
    physical.

    "He is bipolar and there were two sides to him,'' Amy Blom
    said. "He would be happy, a jokester fixing stuff around the
    house and he was a great cook. He would make these great
    five- or six-course dinners. But then something would happen,
    something would trigger in him, and then I knew the change
    was coming.''

    His two sons witnessed some of the assaults.

    "He yelled at her constantly,'' recalled Chris Blom, now 19 and
    a laborer working to complete his high school GED. "I saw him
    hit her. She would have black eyes and stuff. He scared the hell
    out of me.''

    Blom's other son, now 14, also has been treated for
    post-traumatic stress and oppositional defiant disorders, and
    has been in and out of heath care facilities for three years, his
    mother said.

    Wallflower timid, Amy Blom said she felt constantly on edge,
    wanting to make her husband happy and not do anything that
    would provoke an episode.

    The disbelief over the arrest, the taunts endured by her sons at
    school and a relentless news media that camped outside the
    home for weeks drove her to become more supportive and
    protective of her husband and family.

    "He said he didn't do it, and it felt like when they accused him,
    they were accusing me also,'' she recalled.

    She tried desperately to believe her husband's proclamation of
    innocence. But deep down, she had doubts. She recalled a
    conversation while he was being held for trial after authorities
    discovered the human remains in the fire pit.

    "Don, but what about those human bones they found?'' she
    recalled asking him over the phone.

    "You're not f - - - - - - stupid, are you?'' she said he responded.
    Blom has steadfastly maintained he did not kill Poirier.

    She is convinced her husband may have committed more
    crimes.

    She and others are curious about his connection to the unsolved
    1983 murder of Wilma Jean Johnson, a 42-year-old homeless
    drifter whose strangled, battered and nude body was
    discovered outside the Cathedral of St. Paul's chancery.

    Blom, then in jail awaiting trial in Dakota County for sexually
    assaulting a teenage girl, called St. Paul police investigators
    days after the 1983 murder and volunteered that he had
    witnessed part of the assault on the woman, and could describe
    the assailant.

    "He said he knew he had done bad, but that he wanted to pay
    his debt to society by coming forward,'' recalled Jim Frank, a
    case investigator and now the Washington County sheriff.

    A black homeless man was arrested, chiefly based on Blom's
    description of the killer. But the man was let go because of a
    lack of evidence.

    After the Poirier case broke, Frank remembered Blom and
    contacted St. Paul police, suggesting they might want to give
    the cold case another eye. The case remains open.

    "What struck me about it is that he said he was sitting on a park
    bench when it happened, and there was supposedly a torrential
    downpour that night,'' Amy Blom said. "I also remember Don
    and I were watching an episode of 'Law and Order' several
    years back and he casually commented that all homeless people
    and prostitutes are better off dead."

    State Reps. Kurt Zellers, R-Maple Grove, and Doug Meslow,
    R-White Bear Lake, who plan to reintroduce legislation that
    calls for harsher penalties against repeat sex predators,
    received the e-mails from Amy Blom.

    "I really do appreciate what she did, and her courage for doing
    so,'' Zellers said. "We welcome her gesture.''

    Blom also sent an e-mail to U.S. Sen. Mark Dayton, D-Minn.,
    offering her help in ensuring that a proposed national sex
    offender registry named after Dru Sjodin becomes law.

    "We appreciate the offer and would love to work with her as
    this issue moves forward,'' said a spokesman for Dayton.

    Amy Blom, who obtained a divorce two years ago and no
    longer corresponds with her ex-husband, says she's not looking
    for pity or empathy or absolution.

    She just wants predators like her husband put away and kept
    there. She wants her children to be proud of one of their
    parents, to one day be able to shed the cloak of stigma and
    shame draped on them by their father's crimes.

    "They are suffering also,'' she said. "I have a hard time
    forgiving myself for what happened. I don't know if I ever will,
    but I need to come forward because there are people right now
    living in the same situation I was in.''


    Rubén Rosario can be reached at [email protected]

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