Concentration
of sex offenders is worrisome Commentary Barbara Carmen, The Columbus Dispatch, October
11, 2004
Abundant Love Tabernacle is, indeed, a place of plenty:
Plenty of love. Plenty of faith. Plenty of sexual predators
in the house it owns next door.
The church’s white-frame
rental at 881 S. Champion Ave. has four bedrooms, three
rapists and one guy convicted
of gross sexual imposition.
A small number of understanding
landlords in Franklin County accept —even recruit — rapists
and molesters as tenants. As a result, several houses
and small apartment
buildings are packed with predators.
This startled child activist Bret
Vinocur, founder of www.findmissingkids.com. While scanning
Web sites run by
the Franklin County sheriff’s office and the Ohio
attorney general, he noticed that certain addresses looked
familiar.
" I couldn’t believe it," Vinocur said. "I’m
concerned when a private landlord is loading up predators
in buildings a half mile from an elementary and a half
mile from a middle school.
" I guess, in a way, you
could call that a halfway house."
Landlords call it business. Felons call it a lucky find.
" There’s no place for these guys to go. They
have very limited options," landlord Gordon R. Rankin
said.
Predators cannot live near a school and often hold low-paying
jobs that restrict them to low-rent neighborhoods.
Rankin and two other landlords said that despite their
initial concerns, these tenants are clean, quiet, employed
and grateful.
" These are guys who know they’re under the
microscope," Rankin said. "They just want to
be invisible."
Another landlord told me he gives "apartment for
rent" fliers to current tenants to distribute at group
therapy sessions. However, Rankin gets tenants by word
of mouth. As a result, his two buildings with apartments
renting for $350 a month are fairly full.
The building at 3205 Joan Rd. has seven predators. The
one at 180 N. Sylvan Ave. has four.
New tenants, including a few women,
are always told of their neighbors’ pasts. Many
have been accepting. One nut job actually phoned to ask
if a predator could
baby-sit. She got his name off a neighbor-notification
letter.
Neighbors also haven’t complained
to John J. Gallick, whose house at 1021 Bryden Rd. is
home to three sexual
predators who rent efficiency units.
" Landlords aren’t allowed to discriminate," Gallick
said. "These guys aren’t really around. They’re
working at their jobs. No idle hands here."
Sexual offenders have the same
rate of returning to prison — 1
in 3 — as other criminals. Only one in 10 commits
another sexual offense, according to a state corrections
study.
These are good odds — until
more than 10 move next door.
Staci Kitchen, executive director of the Ohio Coalition
on Sexual Assault, is concerned about concentrated living
arrangements.
" Depending on what kind of (treatment) programming
and supervision they’re getting . . . that sounds
like a recipe for disaster," Kitchen said. "But
it doesn’t surprise me because there are major issues
in housing. Some (predators) are going to nursing homes
or homeless shelters."
Or moving next door.
A three-bedroom house at 997 Oakwood
Ave. has five sexual predators or offenders listed as
living there. The owner,
New World Real Estate Consultants, said it sublets the
house and couldn’t comment.
Vinocur wonders about this:
" Most guys who live in apartment buildings get together
and play video games and watch football. What the heck
are these guys doing? I cannot see anything positive here.
I don’t even think it’s good for the sex offender."
The Ohio Adult Parole Authority
says it keeps close tabs on the 1,100 sexual predators
and offenders registered
in Franklin County. The ex-cons get therapy, weekly home
visits and checks to make sure they aren’t breaking
any rules of their parole.
But recent court decisions have sped the early release
of convicts, worsening a housing shortage. So predators
often look for people like Michelle, of Abundant Love Tabernacle.
" She has a program specifically designed for sexual
predators," the Rev. Robert Taylor explained. A house
came with the church’s new building, and it saw an
opportunity for a ministry.
One resident even joined the church. Let us all pray.
Citizens who abuse information
to threaten, intimidate or harass registered sex
offenders could potentially end law enforcement's
ability to do community notification. Abuse of this
information to threaten, intimidate or harass registered
sex offenders is illegal and violators' can be prosecuted.
This web site is for informational purposes only.
Any person, agency or entity,
public or private, who reuses, publishes or communicates
the information available from this web site shall
be solely liable and responsible for any claim or
cause of action based upon or alleging an improper
or inaccurate disclosure arising from such reuse,
re-publication or communication, including but not
limited to actions for defamation and invasion of
privacy. This web site is for informational purposes
only.
All pictures of Danielle van
Dam and Samantha Runnion on this site are the property
of the van Dam and Runnion Families. The families
have given Find missing Kids, Inc. expressed written
permission to use these pictures. Please contact
the van Dam and Runnion families for the use of any
of Danielle or Samantha’s pictures.