Level 3 sex offender? Put him under a bridge.

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Ozarks

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What's a thinking person gonna do with a level 3 sex offender?

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20...d=1#Why.rapist.got.put.under.Snohomish.bridge
Why rapist got put under Snohomish bridge

High-risk sex offender had no place to go, now on the lam

By Jackson Holtz and Jerry Cornfield, Herald Writers

SNOHOMISH -- They tried motels. They tried relatives. They tried homeless shelters.

When a high-risk sex offender was about to be released from prison, he had no place to stay. The state told him to sleep under a bridge beneath U.S. 2 near Snohomish.

"That's not an acceptable place to be living," Snohomish Police Chief John Turner said. "There is an issue. Where do sex offenders live? Where can they live?"

There's another issue, too.

Three days after being released from prison, David J. Torrence, 43, on Wednesday cut off the electronic monitoring bracelet he was issued and stopped reporting to his parole officer.

A nationwide no-bail arrest warrant has been issued for Torrence. He's a level-3 sex offender and considered at the highest risk of reoffending.

State Department of Corrections officials started working months before Torrence's release to find a place for him to stay, said Mary Rehberg, the officer assigned to Torrence's case.

"We'd rather them have a home and know where they're at than have them wandering the streets," she said. "The only reason he was there under the bridge was so we could know where he was."

The bridge near Snohomish was selected because it was convenient for Torrence to check in with parole supervisors and get transportation to other services, Rehberg said, adding there were no other alternatives for the homeless offender.

"I didn't want him under that bridge either," she said.

In 1995, Torrence pleaded guilty to second-degree rape. He was accused of grabbing a 16-year-old Snohomish County girl off Fifth Avenue near Casino Road. He threatened to shoot her and then sexually assaulted her, according to court records.

"He's a stranger rapist, which is the worst of all kinds," Snohomish County sheriff's detective Joseph Beard said. Beard tracks sex offenders in the county.

Torrence was sentenced to more than seven years in prison. Since completing that sentence, he's been arrested several more times.

"He has a history of failing to register," Beard said.

On Sunday, he was released from prison after serving a one-year term for failing to register as a sex offender.

People cannot be kept in prison once they've served their time even if they have no home, Snohomish County Sheriff John Lovick said.

"We can't really protect everyone from everything. We're doing our absolute best. That's all we can do," he said. "I believe we will find this guy."

Finding a place for high-risk sex offenders to live can be difficult, officials said.

State laws prevent them from living within 800 feet of a school or other places where minors come together to play. Local police must notify neighbors when a sex offender moves into a neighbor.

In Torrence's case, local motels and homeless shelters refused to give him a bed, Rehberg said.

He has relatives in Lynnwood, but he declined to live with them, she said.

Torrence's case isn't unique.

In the first three months of 2008, the state Department of Corrections released 34 level-3 sex offenders. Of those, 15 were homeless at release, said spokeswoman Anna Aylward.

State lawmakers said there needs to be a better solution for homeless sex offenders.

"We're going to have to get some facility, state-operated, to house them until they find permanent housing," said Rep. Al O'Brien, D-Mountlake Terrace. "It is not acceptable that we'll put them under a bridge."

Offenders determined to be sexually violent predators can be locked up in the civil commitment center on McNeil Island, said Rep. Kirk Pearson, R-Monroe. That's not easy. Mental health professionals must diagnose the offender as being among a narrow category of people geared toward sexual violence, and a court must agree.

Most sex offenders coming out of prison don't fall in that category, he said.

"The state should have some transitional place where they should be and if they do not comply with terms of their release they should go back into the slammer for a very long time," Pearson said.

There are about 55 homeless sex offenders in Snohomish County, Beard said. Each week, the offenders must check in with his office and let them know where they're sleeping.

"They're higher risk, they don't have any stability," he said.

For many of the men, it's all a game of trying to shrug off supervision, he said.

"They'll do anything to manipulate the system to avoid detection," the detective said.

O'Brien, the chairman of the House public safety committee, said he will push for a new law imposing a sentence of five years to life in prison for sex offenders who disable their GPS-monitoring devices.

Officials said Torrence's GPS system worked exactly as it was intended. When he cut it off, a warning was sounded and within hours police knew he was on the run.

"It gave us a head start," Beard said. "Nobody can follow them around 24-7."

As the search for the fugitive continued Friday, Pearson said he was frustrated with the state's handling of sex offenders.

"I am pretty irritated," the ranking Republican on the House public safety committee said. "What terrifies me is this person is very highly likely to re-offend.

"I am praying there is no catastrophe here."

Reporter Jackson Holtz: 425-339-3437 or [email protected].

Help sought

Anyone who sees David J. Torrence, 43, a missing sex offender, is asked to call 911 immediately.

I think the world is close to the end...
 
I'm sure what we can do when they won't allow them within 800 feet of anything that could possibly be child related.

In most metro areas that doesn't leave many options..

Seems a state operated group home in a rural area with daily bus transport in the cities might be the only possibility.
 
Win 73, just a note, those are about the same issue, but on the other side of the country. Snohomish is in Washington State.

I can't say I'm particularly surprised to read about this. Although I have to ask why they are out of prison so early...
 
The best solution is to put a bullet in their head how hard is that? This was a violent sex offender who by the story
Story said:
"He's a level-3 sex offender and considered at the highest risk of reoffending."

Why was he even let out of prison? I personaly believe that there is no need to even let them breath my Air. If the police come knocking on my door to tell me I have a violent sex offender moving into my neighborhood I would be getting ready for the STHTF. I would have no problems putting a bullet in his head. I am sorry if that is not high road and he paid his price to society but what about the boy or girl that he scared for life.

This is a bad subject for me.
 
Either someone is rehibilitated and paid their debt or they haven't. Why do they even have this lifetime registry? If they are at risk enough that they need to be tracked for the rest of their lives, why are they not in prison. Again, either the case is closed, debt paid end of story. Or if it's not, leave them in jail.
 
*edit*

Why was he even let out of prison? I personaly believe that there is no need to even let them breath my Air. If the police come knocking on my door to tell me I have a violent sex offender moving into my neighborhood I would be getting ready for the STHTF. I would have no problems putting a bullet in his head. I am sorry if that is not high road and he paid his price to society but what about the boy or girl that he scared for life.

This is a bad subject for me.

Taking him out of the population is clearly the best thing for the community's safety, piece of mind, and finances. Everyone else's life would be better; even his family would benefit by not having to live under his stigma. Sounds like the high road to me.
 
Well they are releasing these "people" so they can make more room other people.

Maybe ones with worse crimes, like marijuana offenses or maybe even gun violations.
 
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