

Many child molesters are people that have opportunity and trust. They are: step- fathers, uncles, siblings, teachers, coaches, friends of the family, and neighbors. Many of them are good looking, charming and are genuine psychopaths that have mastered fitting in, and manipulating those around them into a false sense of safety.
Decades of statistical data reports that when these perpetrators are released back into society, they immediately find new victims to harm and assault. They are predatory and succinct premeditated sociopaths. They have the patience to build a false relationship so that they can infiltrate your life in an malicious campaign to destroy you.
Vote for a new law to instate a death penalty for child molesters to send a strong message that the United States of America will no longer release child molesters back into the general population.
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Recidivism Rates for Child Molesters
A relatively large body of research exists on the
recidivism rates of child molesters. The study of sex
offenders released from state prisons in 1994, by Langan
and colleagues (2003), included a large sample (N =
4,295) of child molesters. The researchers reported that
5.1 percent of the child molesters in the study were
rearrested for a new sex crime within 3 years of their
release, 14.1 percent were rearrested for a violent crime,
and 39.4 percent were rearrested for a crime of any kind.
Similar to the pattern for rapists, child molesters with
more than one prior arrest had an overall recidivism rate
nearly double (44.3 percent compared to 23.3 percent)
that of child molesters with only one prior arrest. As
might be expected, child molesters were more likely
than any other type of offender—sexual or nonsexual—
to be arrested for a sex a crime against a child following
release from prison.
Harris and Hanson (2004) documented differential rates
of recidivism for different types of child molesters. Table
1 presents the study’s recidivism estimates (based on
new charges or convictions) for 5-year, 10-year, and 15year
followup periods for boy-victim child molesters,
girl-victim child molesters, and incest offenders.
Prentky and his colleagues (1997) also examined the
recidivism of child molesters. Based on a 25-year
followup period, the researchers found a sexual
recidivism rate of 52 percent (defined as those charged
with a subsequent sexual offense) using a sample of
115 child molesters who were discharged from civil
commitment in Massachusetts between 1960 and 1984.
While the difference between the 52 percent sexual
recidivism rate found by Prentky and colleagues (1997)
using a 25-year followup period and the 23 percent rate