QUOTE(DaytonRocker)
I have enough problems with the Dateline sting because nobody really committed a crime. They are arrested because if the decoy were underage, it would be a crime. But in reality, guys are hitting on adult women. Being a pathetic despicable loser is not a crime. Neither is hitting on adults who do not object.
Do you think this operation is a legitimate police procedure? Why or why not?I have long had my doubts about this sort of operation. Not regarding
Dateline NBC's ratings efforts so much as the underlying law and
Perverted Justice's tactics.
In many jurisdictions, solicitation with the
belief that the other person is a minor is a crime, regardless of whether or not the other person actually
is a minor - and I find that law itself a bit questionable. As
DaytonRocker put it, no one has really committed a crime. Unless one is actually soliciting sex
from a minor, how can one be charged with soliciting sex
from a minor? Besides, if it's a crime to talk about sex with someone you think is underage, is it not equally criminal to talk about sex
posing as someone underage, tacitly encouraging sex with minors? (If nothing else,
Perverted Justice is violating AOL and Yahoo's Terms of Service by posing as underage participants in their chat rooms - for what it's worth.)
Prosecuting people for
intent is always dangerous territory and can, in some cases, verge on "thought crime". When entrapment tactics come into play regarding such "crimes", the water is further muddied. How, for example, is it determined that the suspects
do believe that the decoy is underage? I've spent enough time in the gay.com chat rooms to have come across more 6' tall, 18-year-old jocks with blond hair, blue eyes, and prodigious genitals than
exist in the United States. Do I "believe" these guys stats when I chat with them (assuming they're actually
guys), even if I
don't question them about it? Seldom - even when they have
someone's pictures in their profile. But how does an uninformed observer know what I believe?
If decoys
are going to be used to capture criminals, a legitimate tactic in relation to many crimes (and, possibly, if handled correctly, in relation to online predation), then they must be very cautious to ensure that the crime is initiated by the suspect. Any question raised in that regard can - and should - result in the charges being dismissed on the grounds of entrapment. The fact that
Perverted Justice is
not a law enforcement agency - and is actually more akin to a vigilante group - casts further doubt on these operations, especially as they
don't seem to be as meticulous as the police are when operating such stings.
In
Murphy, Texas, charges were dropped against all twenty-four men arrested in
Perverted Justice's sting there. According to Collin County District Attorney John Roach, he had no jurisdiction in sixteen of the cases, since neither the suspects nor the decoys were in the county during the online chats, and dismissed the rest because neither the police nor NBC could guarantee the chat logs were authentic and complete:
QUOTE(DA John Roach)
The fact that somebody besides police officers were involved is what makes this case bad. If professionals had been running the show, they would have done a much better job rather than being at the beck and call of outsiders.
The
International Herald Tribune article cited above raises additional questions about such stings in private hands:
QUOTE
Eric Nichols, a Texas deputy attorney general, said that when law enforcement authorities pull an Internet sex sting, officers posing as decoys follow strict rules. Detailed chat logs are kept to ensure that "sex talk" is initiated by the potential predator. That way, a defendant cannot claim entrapment.
Eric Chase, a defense attorney specializing in sex crimes, said stings are the job of police, not TV crews. "Police should not be abdicating a very important function to either private organizations or entertainment organizations," he said.
Dateline has admitted that it is often the decoy that first raises the issue of sex in
Perverted Justice's stings. To me, this would cast doubt on the "willingness" of the suspect. That would also appear to be the case in Murphy, Texas - though that is, as far as I know, the only jurisdiction in which
To Catch a Predator has run into any difficulties with the locals. I also find the "willingness" called into a bit of question as it is always the case that it is the "minor" who invites the suspect to his or her house. Without the enticement, would there have been a "crime"?
If such sting operations are going to take place,
they should be in the hands of police. While
Perverted Justice is not law enforcement, the fact that they collaborate with local authorities makes them "agents" of the police (in some cases, they have been temporarily deputized) and any evidence gathered is subject to the same scrutiny - and the same "entrapment" defense - as the police themselves. Could they be compromising investigations through shoddy work?
Even if vigilante sting operations
were more effective than police efforts, I would feel more comfortable with chat logs being used to get court orders for monitoring a suspect's online chat or subpoenaing his hard drive for the sort of evidence mentioned in Jacobson v. United States cited by
CR above:
QUOTE
Since no other material was found in his home save what he had purchased from the undercover postal inspectors, Justice Byron White believed the operation had implanted the idea in his mind
I would much rather that there be evidence of intent apart from responses to a decoy. Some of the guys featured on
To Catch a Predator have had records of previous sex crimes - and it's good that serious predators are off the street (if, in fact, they are). But others strike me as being pretty gormless losers with no criminal record. Many of them may
not have willingly committed crimes without the decoy's come-on. Solely on the basis of contact with someone who is
looking to hook up with an older man, I think it's difficult to tell whether this
is a trap for the unwary innocent or the unwary criminal - or a dangerous mix of both.
Do you think Hansen and his crew are entrapping people with their sting operation? If so, is it worth it?It would seem that they are adhering to the letter of the law - for the most part - in the jurisdictions in which they've been operating, despite several court appeals, so I guess legally they're not. I must admit, though, that I remain uncomfortable with the operation.
As numerous men arrested in these stings have plead "guilty", it would
appear that this is keeping some would-be predators off the streets. I wonder, though, how many of these men would have pursued such an assignation without sex having first been raised by the "minor" - and how many would have followed through without studied encouragement? To what extent
is the crime being suborned? I also wonder how many of those guilty pleas are actually plea
bargains? At least a few of the cases cited at
Wikipedia have ended with suspended sentences (others with charges dropped or cases dismissed) - and many of the charges are misdemeanors to start out with.
But those concerns are more with
Perverted Justice than with
Dateline. My main problem with
Dateline isn't that they're
entrapping people (they're just exploiting - and, recently, subsidizing - someone else's potential entrapment), but they're further blurring the line between law enforcement and entertainment - or, worse,
justice and entertainment. How many men in these cases cop a plea because they're on camera, regardless of whether or not they intended to have sex with a minor? How many court appointees recommend such pleas for the same reason?
And there's also the question, raised by Brian Montipoli at CBS's
Public Eye blog:
QUOTE
It's essential that one consider whether the media is circumventing the legal rights that normally protect citizens for its own purposes. "Dateline" is using aggressive decoys and hidden cameras to destroy the lives of the men that unwittingly appear on the program. Perhaps they deserve it. But what they deserve should not be up to NBC.
And these are men, I might add, who have not yet been arrested, tried, or convicted of
anything. Does such public humiliation (however well-deserved it may seem) constitute ex-judicial punishment for crimes that may not have been proved?
There's also the ethical question of NBC
paying Perverted Justice for their sting operations, which they've been doing for the past several series. Montipoli and others have said this is tantamount to paying a source for a story (or, worse, paying a source to
create a story) - and it could also be a conflict of interest for
Perverted Justice as a foundation seeking non-profit status.
But the bottom line for NBC is... the bottom line.
To Catch a Predator gets ratings - and does extremely well on rerun. I suspect that may be more important to them than actually catching predators. I look forward to the footage of Larry Craig on
Dateline's toilet-cam in
To Catch a Restroom Cruiser.
I suppose I have to add that I find the men featured on
To Catch a Predator disturbing and have little sympathy for any of them - and those who
are predators should be prosecuted. But we shouldn't allow the lines between law enforcement and vigilantism or between law enforcement and journalism to be blurred just because those being targeted fill us with disgust.
Final, idle question here: How many online predators
are there really? How serious a problem
is this? Has anyone found any recent statistics? The few stats I've seen
cited seem to have been somewhat
debunked. And, apart from one or two sensational stories like the Justin Berry case, most of the items I see seem to arise from sting operations. Do the
majority of online predation crimes involve
decoys?