An Assessment of Current Management Practices of Adult Sex Offenders in California

 

Board Members

 

Suzanne Brown-McBride, CASOMB Chair
Executive Director
California Coalition Against Sexual Assault

 

Tom Tobin, Ph.D. , CASOMB Vice-Chair
California Coalition on Sexual Offending
SHARPER FUTURE

 

Gerry D. Blasingame, MA
Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist
California Coalition on Sexual Offending

 

Catherine M. Duggan
Director
Crime Victims’ Assistance Program
Ventura County District Attorney’s Office

 

Clyde Steele
Sex Offender Commitment Program
California Department of Mental Health

 

Angela Thompson
Probation Officer
Los Angeles County Probation

 

The Honorable Peter Espinoza
Judge, Los Angeles County Superior Court

 

Janet Gaard
Special Assistant Attorney General
Office of the Attorney General

 

Michael D. Johnson
County Administrator
Solano County

 

Pamela King
San Bernardino Public Defender’s Office
Criminal Defense Attorneys

 

Sophia McBeth-Childs
Detective
Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department

 

Nancy O’Malley
Chief Assistant District Attorney
Alameda County

 

Robert Ambroselli
Deputy Director
Division of Adult Parole Operations
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation

 

Jerry Powers
Chief Probation Officer
Stanislaus County

 

David L. Runnels
Undersecretary, Operations
California Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation

 

Diane Webb
Detective
Sex Offender Program Coordinator
Los Angeles Police Department

 

 

 

Vision

 

The vision of the California Sex Offender Management Board (CASOMB) is to decrease sexual victimization and increase community safety.

 

Mission

 

The vision will be accomplished by addressing issues, concerns and problems related to community management of adult sex offenders by identifying and developing recommendations to improve policies and practices.

 

Background

 

On September 20, 2006, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed Assembly Bill 1015, which created the California Sex Offender Management Board (CASOMB). The bill had been introduced by Assembly Members Judy Chu and Todd Spitzer and passed the California Legislature with nearly unanimous bipartisan support.

 

Because California is the most populated state in the Union and has had lifetime registration for its convicted sex offenders since 1947, California has more registered sex offenders than any other state with about 88,000 identified sex offenders (per Department of Justice, August 2007). Currently, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) supervises about 10,000 of those 88,000 sex offenders, of which about 3,200 have been designated as High Risk Sex Offenders (CDCR Housing Summit, March 2007). Additionally, there are about 22,500 adult sex offenders serving time in one of 32 state prisons operated by CDCR (California Sex Offender Management Task Force Report, July 2007).

 

While it is commonly believed that most sexual assaults are committed by strangers, the research suggests that the overwhelming majority of sex offenders victimize people known to them; approximately 90 percent of child victims know their offenders, as do 80 percent of adult victims [per Kilpatrick, D.G., Edmunds, C.N., & Seymour, A.K. (1992) Rape in America: A Report to the Nation. Arlington, VA: National Victim Center].