Police, State Examine Ways to Prevent Sexual Assault of Minors

Two men are being sentenced this week for those crimes

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By Bill McAllister
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ANCHORAGE - Two Anchorage men are being sentenced this week for sexual assaults of girls less than 13 years of age.

It’s an ongoing epidemic in which Alaska leads the nation.

It’s keeping the Crimes Against Children Unit in the Anchorage Police Department busy all the time, and it calls into question whether such perpetrators can be rehabilitated.

David Pierren has been sentenced to 29 years in prison for the rape of a six-year-old girl to whom he was a trusted family member.

On Friday, David Robbins is expected to accept a plea deal that he sexually assaulted three girls less than 13 years of age who were his neighbors – including that he raped one of them. His plea deal calls for him to serve 10 years in prison.

"He would leave candy and Mountain Dew and things like that in his house, and the kids knew that they could just come in and grab a soda or grab something to eat. He had a trampoline out front,” said APD Officer Christ Thomas

That’s called grooming children for sexual abuse, and in one case Robbins allegedly also groomed the parents by buying them groceries.

Thomas said parents need to be wary of men who have no children of their own but seem intensely interested in their children.

"And sometimes we see kids that come to us, and they will have told their parents, well, you know, so-and-so is messing with me, and it's really easy for a parent to dismiss something like that, but that might be the child's way of telling them they're being sexually abused."

When released, there's dispute about the likelihood of child molesters to re-offend.

A 2008 white paper by a UAA professor says the recidivism rates for those criminals are exaggerated.

But Thomas doesn't see it that way.

"The average person who commits sexual offenses against children does it first when they're 13. So if you can get to that child when they're 13, we have a really good – I think, the recidivism goes to about 8 percent, which is pretty fantastic, right? I mean, but with adults, I think the recidivism is much, much higher."

The incoming chair of the House Judiciary Committee agreed. "I’d like to think that rehabilitation would work, but everything I read and everything I see doesn't seem to be the case,” said Representative Wes Keller, R-Wasilla.

But whether first-time or repeated, the offenses are too many. The 2008 UAA white paper argues that the sex offender registry actually frustrates rehabilitation because the released criminals cannot reliably find work or escape harassment.

It does not address a potential alternative -- even longer prison sentences -- which Keller said would be a budget-buster for the state.

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Anonymous said on Wednesday, Nov 28 at 3:56 PM

how about prosecuting the cases collecting dust? oh right that has political consequences nevermind the children and responsible parent raising the children amidst the state stupidity...what is new?

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TedtheBear said on Wednesday, Nov 28 at 9:30 AM

Having working for DOC Alaska for 27 years, I have never met an person convicted for SAM to be rehabilitated in any way. They always come back. Smart ones, will always leave the state. Sexual predators can hold off until they are done with their probationary period, they can stay low for a period of time. But their hunger of young flesh, never dies. I had several SAM inmates who told me that they can handled it for five, even seven years without touching a child but once they feel safe, they go right back hunting kids. Perception of remoteness of Alaska encourage many to come to our state. Its sad that there is no fix for people like them. On the positive side, they do make excellent inmates inside the prison system.

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TSM said on Wednesday, Nov 28 at 12:44 AM

Well, for one we could start making everyone that will be working with children take the MSI II it's a test specifically made to detect sexual predator's. I don't understand why teachers, coaches, boy scout leaders, etc. take the test for the position? Or start testing for this when they are young for early detection, to prevent future sexual abuse?

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