USA:
Porn
triggers acting out on victims?
Really?
by Dr. Judith Reisman
Why
did the Federal Bureau of
Prisons, or BOP, spike its
own shocking study, that during
therapy, fully 85 percent
of incarcerated child pornography
users have reluctantly admitted
to sexually assaulting children?
The
BOP study by psychologists
Andres E. Hernandez and Michael
L. Bourke has been momentarily
suppressed and tossed onto
the political hot seat as
"debated" and "contested."
The
New York Times recently leaked
the BOP report on 155 child
pornography users who were
in a treatment program at
the low security Federal Correctional
Institution in Butner, N.C.
At the time of their arrests,
26 percent (40 men) admitted
to being child molesters.
However,
during therapy, 85 percent
(132 men) confessed to sexually
abusing children.
Also
at arrest, the men admitted
to victimizing 75 children.
During therapy, however, the
155 felons finally confessed
to 1,777 young victims – and,
this is what they admitted.
Why
should BOP yank the Butner
prisoners' study from the
peer-reviewed academic journal
poised to publish it?
Anyone
can check the Bureau
of Justice Statistics Prison
Statistics website for
thousands of prisoner studies.
Just from the top:
Although
many readers would – rightly
or wrongly – interpret the
above study findings as vilifying
convicts, the studies have
not been publicly disputed
and suppressed. Yet, scientific
findings that prove pornography's
harmful effects are immediately
disputed and suppressed by
closeted persons and entities.
In her Culture
and Media Institute essay (see below) on this scandal, legal maven
Jan LaRue wonders why the
BOP is hiding the study: "Are
officials more concerned about
misinterpretations than protecting
kids?
"
La Rue reports, "Judith Simon
Garrett, assistant general
counsel at the BOP, is heavily
involved in squelching the
study." Garrett has railed
against legislators, says
LaRue, who want longer sentences
and "restrictions on early
release mechanisms."
On point, Garrett also feels
commercial "nudity or sexually
explicit pictures" should
be available to convicts.
La Rue observes that Garrett's
own advocacy writings are
published with a BOP disclaimer.
"Why
isn't she urging the BOP to
do the same here?
Is
it because she thinks 'programs'
that permit prisoners access
to pornography are acceptable,
and the study could prove
her wrong?"
These
are prudent questions.
Garrett's
sexual activism exemplifies
why our "adult" pornography
laws are ignored by those
whose special interests misdirect
our justice system.
For years, I have received
mail from homosexual and heterosexual
convicts who claim theirs
was a "soft pornography" downward
spiral into abuse and prison.
Did
the psychologists gather embarrassing
data on these hot-button political
issues?
And
Butner is not dé jà vu – because
I have been here before.
Some
brief background.
In
1986, my federally funded
analysis of "Images of Children,
Crime & Violence in Playboy,
Penthouse and Hustler," was
suppressed by Verne Speirs
who was then director of the
U.S. Department of Justice,
Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention.
In 1994, after my study was
endorsed by OJJDP Director
Robert Sweet, in-depth investigations
proved that Big Porno and
the Kinsey Institute had significantly
invested in discrediting our
study findings.
For,
like Butner, our research
identified a strong link between
pornography and child sexual
abuse.
The claim that the Butner
study did not "meet agency
approval" and that "the results
might be misinterpreted" is
suspect and does not justify
BOP censorship.
The
pornography industry and its
closet cohorts never want
the public to learn that "just
looking at pictures" has too
often triggered serious copycat
crimes against women and children.
Before leaving this subject,
I must note that Dr. Fred
Berlin, of the Johns Hopkins
Sexual Disorders Clinic worried
that the Butner findings might
actually be dangerous.
The New York Times reporters
quote Berlin: "If people we
thought were not dangerous
are more so, then we need
to know that, and we should
treat them that way. But if
we're wrong, then their liberties
aren't going to be fairly
addressed."
However, Berlin has historically
protected the "liberties"
of convicted pedophiles who
he knew were abusing children
during their mandated sex
therapy program at Hopkins'
Berlin/Money clinic.
Based
on decades of "liberties"
wrongly given to dangerous
child predators, the Butner
prison findings may cause
such sexperts legitimate worry
about future litigation.
Now, as LaRue says, after
We The People study the whole,
unedited report, let a real
"debate" begin!
Dr.
Judith Reisman is president
of the Institute for Media
Education and is the author
of "Kinsey, Crimes & Consequences."
More
is available at Reisman's
website.
http://drjudithreisman.com/ |