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Police Conduct Pre-Halloween Sex Offender Sweep

Officials have issued warrants for the arrest of two sex offenders they were unable to locate in advance of Halloween.

 

Updated Thursday, Nov. 1 3 p.m.

Howard County Police say they have located a sex offender after the department's annual pre-Halloween sweep led to the identification of two non-compliant, convicted sex offenders.

Police found Bryan Lamont Hawkins at a friends' house in Columbia Thursday morning, according to police spokesperson Mary Phelan. Hawkins was arrested without incident. 

Police continue to search for Robert Jamie Saiz, 32, of 8390 Montgomery Run Rd. in Ellicott City.

 

Original article:

In a recent pre-Halloween sex offender sweep, Howard County police officers located all but two of the 104 sex offenders registered in Howard County, according to a press release.

Police have issued warrants for the arrests of Bryan Lamont Hawkins, 37, of 7380 Broken Staff Court in Columbia, and Robert Jamie Saiz, 32, of 8390 Montgomery Run Rd. in Ellicott City, officials said.

Search by zip code here to find out where sex offenders live in your neighborhood.

“Registered sex offenders are forbidden from participating in Halloween.  Parents who would like to be informed about where offenders live can check the registry on our web site,” wrote police spokeswoman Sherry Llewellyn.

Police said they will be on hand tonight in residential neighborhoods to “make sure children stay safe.”

“They will also be alert for vandalism, theft and destruction or property,” police said in a release. “Officers will also conduct speed enforcement activities and be on the look-out for drunk or impaired drivers.”

Police are offering the following tips for a safe Halloween: 

  • Encourage children to trick-or-treat with a group, and before dark. After dark, an adult chaperone should carry a flashlight and choose well-lit streets.
  •  Be careful to avoid storm debris that may still be on sidewalks, areas where there may be standing water and neighborhoods without power as a result of the hurricane.
  •  Teach children that they should never go into a stranger’s home or car.
  • Remind children not to eat treats before they have been inspected by parents. Never eat candy that has been opened.
  •  Leave porch or other outside lights on to make clear that trick-or-treaters are welcome.
Related Topics: Halloween

Red White and Blue

12:00 pm on Wednesday, October 31, 2012

I am glad to see the police have issued warrants, but it does bring up other issues , it is fair to say that since they do not know where these 2 are, that somebody is not doing there job very well, parole officer? case manger? somebody should be getting fired, laid off, suspended without pay but something should happen

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MyBrandy

7:55 pm on Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Sex offenders are required to be on the registry and notify if they move, but most are not necessarily on probation or parole. So there is no officer or case manager to blame.

MR6453

4:48 pm on Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Is it also fair to say that since they do know where the other 102 sex offenders are, that we should feel more safe? I think not.

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Shana Rowan

8:43 am on Thursday, November 1, 2012

Sex offenders have the lowest recidivism rate of all criminals except murderers, according to dozens of university, federal and state studies. Not all sex offenders have victimized children, and over 1/3 of sex crimes perpetrated against children are committed by other children. 95% of kids are abused by family or friends who aren't on the registry. Dr. Jill Levenson’s 2009 study, “How Safe are Trick-or-Treaters: Child Sex Crime Rates on Halloween?” found that non-familial child sexual abuse accounted for less than .2% on Halloween. Why is law enforcement spreading such glaring myths, and why is the media latching on??

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Valerie Parkhurst

10:22 am on Sunday, December 30, 2012

Quit plying that crap Shana ..latest 2012 studies have Your Boys at the highest recidivism Rates:
The REAL RECIDIVISM STUDIES
1) One approach is to extrapolate a true crime rate from victimization surveys and compare that with reported crime, typically finding that roughly 90% of sex crimes go unreported. Some put the estimate even higher..
2)One of the main problems with recidivism studies is that all studies measure it differently and define it differently,"
3)One long-term study of sex offenders from Canada measured recidivism seven ways. The highest rate, 88.3%, included prior, undetected sexual offenses confessed by first-time convicts.
4)But Ohio Northern University criminologist Keith Durkin points to anonymous surveys in which sex offenders admit to as many undetected offenses as the number for which they have been caught. He views 50% as a "conservative" estimate for recidivism.
5)Young, violent offenders who suffer from mental illness, use alcohol or drugs and target very young victims "outside their family" pose the biggest risk.

kinda blows that 1994/witch doctor 2009 Levenson/ACLU RSOL/FAIR 5% BS right out the window Uh?

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