The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Moral panic

In the lobby
By LANCE TAPLEY  |  May 23, 2007

Ever wonder why legislators suddenly show a huge interest in a subject?

Many of this year’s large stack of bills aimed at sex offenders are “media driven,” says Stan Gerzofsky, the Brunswick Democrat who is House chair of the Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee.

Citing Fox News’s Bill O’Reilly and other TV and radio figures who “are making a living off” whipping up fears about sexual predators, Gerzofsky claims, “This is an absolute classic example of moral panic,” adding: “The number of victims hasn’t gone up; it’s gone down nationally. . . . In Maine, the DAs [district attorneys] say the numbers are dropping.”

Sociologists use the term “moral panic” to describe a fearful, usually-media-driven public reaction to what is seen as a menacing group. It is not based on statistical facts but, often, on a dramatic story.

O’Reilly, a popular right-wing talk-show host, last year called Maine a “child-predator-friendly” state because, in his view, the Legislature hadn’t adopted strict-enough laws dealing with sex offenders. He was promoting “Jessica’s Law,” which would impose mandatory 25-year prison sentences for sexual abusers of children under 12. Another Fox program, America’s Most Wanted, also has pushed Jessica’s Law, which is named after a Florida girl raped and killed by a previously convicted sex abuser.

Last session, Maine lawmakers rejected Jessica’s Law, passing instead a measure stiffening sentencing guidelines for judges considering child sex-abuse cases.

This year Jessica’s Law is back (LD 46), along with at least 27 other bills dealing with sex offenders. Some would limit where those who have served their sentences could live, some would toughen sentences, and others would modify the online sex-offender registry.

Local news media also have given attention to sex offenders, including to one released from prison who abducted and raped a 14-year-old girl in Augusta, and to ex-convicts whose residence in a community has been hotly contested.

William Diamond, the Criminal Justice Committee’s Senate chairman, also a Democrat, believes the large number of bills resulted after “constituents contacted legislators.”

Gerzofsky would prefer an approach to sex offenders that emphasized treatment over residency restrictions: “There’s a very low recidivism rate if they’re getting treatment.” Recidivism means a relapse into crime. Tight residence restrictions, he believes, may force dangerous sex offenders underground, where they will escape monitoring and treatment.

Gerzofsky’s committee was slated to discuss a pile of sex-crime-related bills May 23. So far this session, it has taken a non-panicked approach, killing off many bills, including one that would have criminalized going into an “opposite-gender” public toilet. But the committee may blend some rejected bills’ ideas into a committee-developed bill.

It still has to address proposals to change the sex-offender registry to help prevent such tragedies as the Easter murder last year of two Maine men who were targeted because they were listed on it.

Shipping out prisoners less likely
Governor John Baldacci has backed off from his threat to ship 125 prisoners to a corporate lockup in Oklahoma to relieve the state prison system’s overcrowding. (See “Prisoners as commodities,” by Lance Tapley, April 27.)

He is supporting the central recommendations made on May 18 to the Legislature’s Appropriations Committee by a joint Appropriations and Criminal Justice subcommittee.

The group’s main proposals, which received a promising reception by Appropriations, would:

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: The trials of Bernard Baran, Letting the DA skate, Prison in turmoil, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Criminal Sentencing and Punishment, Crime, Prisons,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/17 ]   "Guys, Gals, and Glitter"  @ Club Café
ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   MAINE'S DONKEY PARTY LOVES THE RICH AND THE POOR — BUT CAN'T PROTECT BOTH  |  February 15, 2012
    In the current legislative fight over Republican Governor Paul LePage's lust to slash Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) programs because of a $221-million shortfall in its budget, Democrats say over and over that they want to protect the poor, sick, and disabled people from whom the governor wants to withdraw state assistance.
  •   GANGS STUDY KILLED  |  February 15, 2012
    On February 9 the Legislature's Criminal Justice Committee, which had already informally decided against LD 1707, the bill that would have created severe penalties for people associated with criminal street gangs, killed a substitute proposal for a study to be done on how to define gangs and how to have police share information on them.
  •   ANTI-GANG BILL DUMPED  |  February 01, 2012
    After a January 27 public hearing featuring a rare insinuation by one legislator that a fellow lawmaker lied, Criminal Justice Committee members were ready to throw out LD 1707, a bill that piles heavy sentences onto people convicted of involvement with criminal street gangs.
  •   GANG-BUSTER BILL GETS DISSED  |  January 25, 2012
    A controversial legislative proposal developed by a secretive police group would send an individual to prison for up to 40 years if he or she is convicted of asking someone to join a criminal street gang.
  •   CHOMSKY TO OCCUPY: MOVE TO THE NEXT STAGE  |  December 23, 2011
    Noam Chomsky has advice for the Occupy movement, whose encampments all over the country are being swept away by police.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed