Title: Sexual Offenders
1Sexual Offenders
- Nipissing University
- Lecture 5
- 06 February 2007
2Myths of Child Molestation
- dirty old man
- Stranger
- Retarded
- Alcoholic / Drug Addict
- Sexually Frustrated
- Insane
- Homosexuals
Holmes, S. Holmes, R. (2002). Sex Crimes (2nd
ed.). London Sage Publications. P.95
3Incidence Rates
- Canadian Victimization Survey
- Sexual Assault
- Women 33 per 1,000 (3.3)
- Men 8 per 1,000 (0.8)
-
Besserer, S. Trainor, C. (1999). Criminal
Victimization in Canada, 1999. Juristat 20(10).
CCJS
Andrews, D. Bonta, J. (2003). The Psychology of
Criminal Conduct. Cincinnati Anderson
4Rates of Reported History of Childhood Sexual
Abuse (CSA)
- Samples of Undergraduate Women
- Range of Sexual Abuse History
- 23 - 58
- General Female Population Estimate
- 30
- Professional Women
- 30
- Female Psychiatric Patients
- 21
Beckman Burns, 1989 Berliner Elliot, 1996
Bryer, Nelson, Miller Krol 1987 Callum
Slade, 1989 Elliot Briere, 1992 Smolak,
Levine Sullins, 1990 cited in Barker, J.
(1997). An examination of the long-term effects
of sexual assault using linear structural
equation modelling. Dissertation Abstracts
International, B58109 p.5105
5Reports from Sexual Offenders Regarding Number of
Victims
- Abel et al. (1985)
- 411 S.O.
- 218,900 victims
- Average per offender 366
- Zolondek et al. (2001)
- 485 juvenile S.O.
- 9 to 46
Andrews, D. Bonta, J. (2003). The Psychology of
Criminal Conduct. Cincinnati Anderson
6Adult Criminal Court Stats 2003/04
Thomas, M. (2005). Adult Criminal Court
Statistics. Juristat 24(12). Canadian Centre for
Justice Statistics, Statistics Canada. Ottawa
Minister Responsible for Statistics Canada.
7Sexual Offences 2003/04
Thomas, M. (2005). Adult Criminal Court
Statistics. Juristat 24(12). Canadian Centre for
Justice Statistics, Statistics Canada. Ottawa
Minister Responsible for Statistics Canada.
8Type of Sentence
Thomas, M. (2005). Adult Criminal Court
Statistics. Juristat 24(12). Canadian Centre for
Justice Statistics, Statistics Canada. Ottawa
Minister Responsible for Statistics Canada.
9Type of Sentence
Thomas, M. (2005). Adult Criminal Court
Statistics. Juristat 24(12). Canadian Centre for
Justice Statistics, Statistics Canada. Ottawa
Minister Responsible for Statistics Canada.
10Thomas, M. (2005). Adult Criminal Court
Statistics. Juristat 24(12). Canadian Centre for
Justice Statistics, Statistics Canada. Ottawa
Minister Responsible for Statistics Canada.
11Victims
Kong, R..(2004). Victim Services in Canada.
Juristat 24(11). Canadian Centre for Justice
Statistics, Statistics Canada. Ottawa Minister
Responsible for Statistics Canada.
12Sexual Offender
- Someone who engages in sexual behaviors that
somehow cause harm - Inherent to this is the lack of mutual consent
- Children, by definition, cannot give consent
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
13Types of Sexual Offenders
- Hands-on vs. hands-off
- Both gender all ages
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
14How Unique are Sexual Offenders?
- Nonsexual Crimes?
- Weinrott Saylor
- 99 S.O. report 20,000
- Maletzky (1991)
- 5,000 S.O. (24 report hist)
- Soothill et al. (2000)
- 7,000 S.O. (60)
- Prospective Studies???
Andrews, D. Bonta, J. (2003). The Psychology of
Criminal Conduct. Cincinnati Anderson
15Etiological Factors in Sexual Offending
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
16Biological Bases
- solid evidence?
- sex steroids?
- evolutionary basis?
Slide concepts courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni
(2004)
17Developmental Bases
- Physical abuse
- Sexual abuse
- Polygraph
- related for some offenders?
- Poor attachment emotional loneliness combined
with poor peers relationships in adolescence
Slide concepts courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni
(2004)
18Sociocultural Bases
- Societal attitudes
- Large correlation between aggression, rape, and
negative attitudes toward women - Attitudes supportive of violence
Slide concepts courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni
(2004)
19Finkelhors (1984) Precondition Theory
- Four underlying factors to explain child sexual
abuse - Emotional congruence with children
- Sexual arousal to children
- Unable to meet sexual needs in socially
acceptable ways - Disinhibitory states
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
20Marshall Barbaree (1990) Integrated Theory
- Sexual aggression occurs as a result of
interacting distal and proximal factors - Developmentally adverse conditions
- Conditioning process during adolescence pairing
sex and aggression or sex and children - Lack of social self-regulatory skills leads to
rejection and failed relationships and negative
attitudes toward women kids viewed as safe - Sex is utilized to meet a number of emotional
needs - Transitory states set-up the stage for offending
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
21Hall Hirschmans (1992)Quadripartite Model
- An interaction of 4 factors
- Physiological sexual arousal
- Inaccurate cognitions that justify sexual abuse
- Affective discontrol
- Personality problems
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
22Ward Siegert (2002)Pathways Model
- Every sexual offense involves emotional,
intimacy, cognitive, and arousal components - Each pathway will have at its core a primary set
of dysfunctional mechanisms that impact on the
others.
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
23Assessment
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
24Estimating Recidivism Rates
Hanson, K. (1998). What do we know about sex
offender risk assessment?. Psychology, Public
Policy, and Law, 4(12). p.50-72.
25Hanson, K. (1998). What do we know about sex
offender risk assessment?. Psychology, Public
Policy, and Law, 4(12). p.50-72.
26Evaluation of risk of sexual recidivism
-
- Most common task required for decisions about
sentencing treatment needs and conditional
release. - Evaluation of risk always take into consideration
static and dynamic risk factors.
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
27Identification of Management Strategies
- To inform when the offender is most at risk of
reoffending - To inform about treatment needs
- To provide strategies for the supervision of the
offender that will promote the effective
management of the offenders risk.
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
28Static Risk Factors (Hanson Thornton, 1999)
- Deviant Sexual Arousal
- Prior Sexual Offenses
- Stranger Victims
- Unrelated Victims
- Boy Victims
- Age
- Single
- Treatment Drop out
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
29RRASOR
- 7 Variables
- prior sexual offenses
- Prior nonsexual offenses
- Age
- Any male victims
- Any stranger victims
- Any unrelated victims
- Never married / commonlaw relationship
Hanson, K. (1998). What do we know about sex
offender risk assessment?. Psychology, Public
Policy, and Law, 4(12). p.50-72.
30RRASOR cont
- 4 Variables
- Number of Prior Sexual Offenses (0-3)
- Under age 25 (1)
- Any victims unrelated (1)
- Ever targeted male victims (1)
Hanson, K. (1998). What do we know about sex
offender risk assessment?. Psychology, Public
Policy, and Law, 4(12). p.50-72.
31Remember the ROC?
1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0
Hits
O .1 . 2 .3 .4 .5 .6 .7 .8
.9 1.0
False Alarm
32RRASOR cont
Hanson, K. (1998). What do we know about sex
offender risk assessment?. Psychology, Public
Policy, and Law, 4(12). p.50-72.
33What About Dynamic Factors?
- Dynamic Predictors of Sexual Reoffense Project
- Hanson Harris (2001)
- Compare
- S.O. who recid sexually
- S.O. who didnt recid sexually
- Acute and stable
- Retrospective cross sectional study
- SONAR
Andrews, D. Bonta, J. (2003). The Psychology of
Criminal Conduct. Cincinnati Anderson
Hanson, K. Harris, A. (2001). A structured
approach to evaluating change among sexual
offenders. Sexual Abuse A Journal of Research
and Treatment. 13(2), p.105-122.
34Hanson Harris(1998, 2000, 2001, 2003 ongoing)
- Retrospective prospective comparison between
recidivists and non-recidivists - Files reviewed for static risk factors
- Dynamic risk factors generated from theoretical
review, previous research, interviews with
community supervisors - Increases in scores on dynamic risk factors
correspond to increased recidivism after
controlling for static factors
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
35Stable Dynamic Factors (Hanson Harris, 2003)
- Intimacy Deficits
- Significant Social Influences
- Attitudes supportive of Sexual Assault
- Sexual Self-regulation
- General Self-regulation
- Cooperation with Supervision
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
36Acute Dynamic Factors (Hanson Harris, 2003)
- Substance Abuse
- Emotional Collapse
- Collapse of Social Supports
- Hostility
- Sexual Preoccupation
- Victim Access
- Rejection of Supervision
- Unique Factor
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
37SONAR
- Theory
- Research findings
- 5 Stable Factors
- 4 Acute Factors
Hanson, K. Harris, A. (2001). A structured
approach to evaluating change among sexual
offenders. Sexual Abuse A Journal of Research
and Treatment. 13(2), p.105-122.
38Hanson, K. Harris, A. (2001). A structured
approach to evaluating change among sexual
offenders. Sexual Abuse A Journal of Research
and Treatment. 13(2), p.113.
39Diagnosis
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
40Paraphilias
- Exhibitionism
- Frotteurism
- Pedophilia
- Sexual sadism
- Sexual masochism
- Voyeurism
- Fetishism Transvestic fetishism
- Paraphilias No Otherwise Specified (NOS)
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
41Psychopharmacological Treatment of Paraphilias
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
42Antiandrogens medication
- Androgens are male sex hormones
- Antiandrogens are medications that block the
synthesis or action of androgens, and therefore
lower sex drive and sexual interest, including
deviant sexual interest - This is what is called Chemical Castration
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
433 major types of Antiandrogens
- Cyproterone Acetate (CPA)
- Medroxyprogesterone Acetate (MPA)
- Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone Agonists (GnRH
Agonist) - All work at reducing levels of testosterone
- Serious side-effects present with all - leading
to lack of adherence to treatment
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
44Effectiveness
- Antiandrogens reduce both normal and deviant
sexual interests - Does not eliminate the deviant arousal does not
change the ratio of deviant vs. normal arousal - These agents do not change the arousal patterns
of patients - in other words, they do not turn
deviant sexual interests into non-deviant ones
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
45Antidepressants
- Help control some of the obsessive / compulsive
aspects of sexual deviancy - Helps alleviate affective symptoms and mood
disorders associated with paraphilias - Has shown better success at reducing deviant
sexual interests, and has greater rate of
adherence
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
46Physiological Assessment of Sexual Arousal
Patterns or Preferences
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
47Phallometry
- What is it?
- What does it indicate?
- What do the results mean?
48Viewing Time
- What is it?
- What does it indicate?
- What do the results mean?
49Polygraph
- What is it?
- What does it indicate?
- What do the results mean?
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
50The Theoretical Offense Process
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
51Traditional Relapse Prevention (Marques
Pithers)
- Relapse process starts when increased stress
- Leads to a desire to indulge
- A series of apparently irrelevant decisions
- Progresses toward high risk situations
- May be emotional or situational
- These situations lead to a lapse problem of
immediate gratification - Abstinence violation effect occurs
- Finally, relapse a new sexual offense
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
52Self-Regulation (Ward Hudson)
- Discusses pathways to sexual offending
- Postulates two streams avoidance (the goal is to
avoid offending) and approach (the goal is to
offend) - Each stream further subdivided into
passive/automatic and active/explicit pathways
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
53Self-Regulation Pathways
- Avoidant-Passive the traditional RP model
- Avoidant-Active active attempts to avoid
offending but efforts actually increase risk - Approach-Automatic offenders follow automated
behavioral scripts experience positive emotions
post-offending - Approach-Explicit involves conscious strategic
planning with aims to offend
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
54Implications for Treatment
- Theoretical models are highly complex
- Cannot be applied directly to treatment nor
should they - due to limits to empirical
validation and individualized nature of offense
processes - Need to develop individual offense process for
each offender - using common patterns as guides,
but not strict templates - Enlist the offender in this work
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
55Treatment
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
56Treatment
- To address in treatment the dynamic risk factors
leading to sexual recidivism.
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
57Treatment Targets in Sexual Offender Treatment
- Offense Specific Treatment Targets
- Denial and Minimization - linked to cognitive
distortions - Victim Empathy - linked to cognitive distortions
- Attitudes and Beliefs
- Sexual Self-Regulation
- General Self-Regulation
- Self-Management
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
58Treatment Targets (cont)
- Offense Related Treatment Target
- Intimacy Relationships
- Emotions
- Social Competency Skills
- General Coping
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
59Treatment Targets (cont)
- Treatment is based on behavioural strategies,
including cognitive-behavioural, social learning,
modelling, and skill building. - Treatment needs to motivate the offender, and
provide optimal conditions for learning
pro-social behaviours.
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
60Treatment Effectiveness
Slide courtesy of Dr. Franca Cortoni (2004)
61Effect of Treatment for Sex Offenders
- With treatment, sexual recidivism reduced from
17 to 10 - With treatment, general recidivism reduced from
51 to 32 - (Hanson et al., 2002)
Andrews, D. Bonta, J. (2003). The Psychology of
Criminal Conduct. Cincinnati Anderson
62Recommended Reading
- Hanson, K. (1998). What do we know about sex
offender risk assessment? Psychology, Public
Policy, and Law, 4(12). p.50-72. - Hanson, K. Bussière (1998). Predicting Relapse
A meta-analysis of sexual offender recidivism
studies. Journal of Consulting and Clinical
Psychology, 66(2). p. 348-362. - Hanson, K. Harris, A. (2001). A structured
approach to evaluating change among sexual
offenders. Sexual Abuse A Journal of Research
and Treatment. 13(2), p.105-122