| In The News
Bill would boost juries' role in sex crime
cases
Sponsors cite a recent attack
By Erin Ailworth
Boston Globe / February 8, 2008
A group of lawmakers filed legislation yesterday to
give prosecutors power to demand that juries decide whether offenders
nearing the end of their prison terms should be placed in a state
treatment facility.
The proposal was filed a week after convicted Level 3 sex offender
Corey Saunders was arrested on charges he raped a 6-year-old boy
in a New Bedford library. Level 3 is the most dangerous category
and is considered likely to reoffend.
The lawmakers, along with community activists and Middlesex District
Attorney Gerard T. Leone Jr., said the legislation would give more
power to prosecutors and community members to decide which sex offenders
are released.
Under current law, prosecutors can ask that offenders who have served
most of their sentences be tried to determine if they are sexually
dangerous, a designation that would commit them to the Massachusetts
Treatment Center in Bridgewater. Offenders and their lawyers can
choose whether a judge or jury hears their case.
"My son and I were driving along on the highway when we heard
that a 6-year-old was raped in a library in New Bedford; we both
gasped audibly," said Mary Lauby, executive director of Jane
Doe Inc., a supporter of the legislation who appeared at a press
conference yesterday at the State House.
The legislation "is a step in a direction that can make a difference,"
she said. "The more transparent we are, the more opportunities
we have for communities to be involved, the more likely that a sexual
offender will be held accountable."
Critics said the proposal would make it harder for offenders to
get a fair hearing.
"They're trying to take it out of the hands of the judges to
reach the emotions of the jurors," said Michael G. Cashman,
a lawyer who has represented sex offenders. He added that judges
are better equipped to make decisions based on the law.
In making a case for changing the law, Leone said that since 1999,
25 of the 47 trials to determine if a convicted sex offender is
sexually dangerous in Middlesex County have gone before judges.
In 60 percent of those cases, offenders were ruled sexually dangerous.
In 22 cases heard by juries, 68 percent were ruled sexually dangerous,
Leone said.
Lawmakers supporting the bill include state Senator Steven Baddour
of Methuen and state Representative Charles A. Murphy of Burlington.
"It's outrageous that convicted sex offenders have a say over
. . . their future," Baddour said.
Between 2004 and 2007, judges and juries released more than half
of the 181 sexual offenders who prosecutors and psychologists argued
were sexually dangerous, according to the Massachusetts District
Attorneys Association.
Saunders had been released from the Bridgewater center by a judge
in 2006, despite arguments by prosecutors and two court-appointed
psychologists that he posed a threat to children. Saunders is being
held at the Bristol County House of Correction.
New Bedford police Lieutenant Jeffrey P. Silva lauded the legislation.
"I think what it gives citizens is the opportunity to be represented
at the table," Silva said of yesterday's proposal. "If
the sex offender and his or her counsel are the only ones who dictate
the forum [of judge or jury] you no longer have equipoise. . . .
"I think it was a lopsided system of justice, and I think this
will level the playing field."
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