By Joseph Kolb, FOXNews.com
Imprisoned
sex offenders are free to have conjugal visits in a handful of states,
including New York and New Mexico, where one convicted killer and rapist
has married twice and fathered four children from behind bars.
Exasperated lawmakers told FoxNews.com that letting sex offenders,
including violent rapists and child predators, have intimate contact
with visitors while serving their sentences sends the wrong message. But
they said they doubt anything can be done about it.
"I think it's ridiculous that this is done on public property, why
should there be a reward system like this," New York State Sen. Martin
Golden, a former police officer, said. Golden said he any attempt to
repeal this program would likely pass the New York Senate but fail in
the assembly.
"The assembly would never vote on something they feel would hurt an inmate," he said.
For more than 40 years some inmates in New York State have enjoyed
the benefits of the Family Reunion Program, otherwise known as conjugal
visits, a little known service also available to convicted sex
offenders.
"The policy does not automatically disqualify sex offender
participants as a whole," said Peter Cutler, spokesman for the New York
State Department of Corrections.
Cutler said a special review is required for any inmate who has been
convicted of a heinous or unusual crime, or has been convicted of a sex
offense, including a sexually-motivated felony, or any other offense
where behavior of a sexual nature occurred during the commission of the
crime.
Between 2011-2012, there were five inmates convicted of sex crimes
admitted to the Family Reunion program out of 290 applicants.
According to Cutler these figures do not include participants who
received approval during previous years, because the policy does not
automatically disqualify,
"We do not track sex offender participants as a whole," Cutler said.
Participants in the New York program are provided by the prison pillows, blankets, bed linens, towels, soap and condoms.
Other states offering "family reunion or extended visit" programs are
California, Connecticut, New Mexico, Mississippi, and Washington.
But California draws the line with sex offenders.
"If you are convicted of a sex offense in California, you are not
eligible for an extended family visit, which can be 72 hours, at any
time during the incarceration," said Dana Simas, a spokesperson for the California Department of Corrections.
Connecticut's allows extended visits, but its policy is to prohibit
sexual contact. Still, when pressed as to how officials prevent sexual
contact during a sleep-over type visit, a Connecticut Department of
Corrections spokesman acknowledged that sexual contact is not monitored.
"There are restrictions that only the lowest level of sex offenders
can even be considered for that, and then it requires case by case
examination," said spokesman Brian Garnett.
It is the remaining states that find that these types of visits do serve a purpose.
Officials in each state contend that while there is an assumption
each visit is of a sexual nature it is also an opportunity to allow
families to stay connected during prolonged periods of incarceration. A
recent report in the American Journal of Criminal Justice also found
that conjugal visits can decrease sexual assaults in prison.
"Research has found that by allowing these visits, inmates are better
behaved and more productive during their incarceration," according to
Grace Fisher, of the Mississippi Department of Corrections.
Each state has its own requirement for participating in a family
reunion or extended visit program, which can last 72 hours in some
states, but generally must be an extension of a legal, pre-incarceration union.
Cristina Rodda,
a spokeswoman for the New Mexico Department of Corrections, where sex
offenders can have extended visits, agrees with the benefits of the
programs and says there is virtually no cost to the state with support
coming from inmate accounts and work.
"The majority of the funding comes from the inmates and not the state," Rodda said.
But some legislators who weren't aware of the policy said it should be reconsidered.
"I was not aware we were doing that and think it is a slap in the
face to the victim, especially on the state's dime," said New Mexico
State Senator Lynda Lovejoy. "We're providing too many conveniences to
sex offenders already."
Lovejoy said she will raise the issue in the upcoming January legislative session.
Critics of the conjugal visits for sex offenders point to Michael
Guzman as a poster child for all that's wrong with the policies. In
1981, Guzman kidnapped two women at knifepoint near the University of
New Mexico, raped both and killed one. Guzman tried to kill the other
woman – stabbing her 33 times – but she survived.
Guzman was later sentenced to death, but the sentence was commuted in
1986. Guzman has since been married twice and fathered four sons while
in prison. He is among 254 New Mexico inmates who are eligible for
conjugal visits, not all of whom are sex offenders.
Read more:
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/11/26/sex-offenders-free-to-father-children-from-behind-bars