Harsher Punishments for Sexual Offenders

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Before Antoine Dodson was on Oprah and had a song on iTunes, he was merely a man who was worried for his sister. One night, Antoine woke up to the sound of his sister screaming for help. Upon further investigation, he discovered that a rapist had broken into his apartment (“Antoine Dodson warns a perp”). Unfortunately, Antoine Dodson’s story is not a completely uncommon one in the United States. Every two minutes, someone in the United States is sexually assaulted (“Rape Abuse and Incest National Network”). In 2006, there were over 260,000 victims of sex related crimes, and that figure is only rising (“Statistics Table” 97). In 1990, the Senate Judiciary Committee reported that seventy-five percent of women, and thirty-three percent of men, will experience some sort of hate crime in their lifetime (Violence Against Women 222). The U.S. Department of Justice’s Sex Offender Registry includes the names and residences of almost 550,000 sex offenders. The chances are that you have come in contact with one of them (Liautaud). Not only are there thousands of reported victims, but also, sixty percent of rapes are not even reported to the police and fifteen out of sixteen rapists will never spend a day in jail (“Rape Abuse and Incest National Network”).

Physical damage from rape often occurs in the form of bruises and cuts from the attacker as well as through sexually transmitted diseases. Mental damage however, is normally more substantial. Victims will often blame themselves for what happened (“James R. Snell Jr.”). On average, a sex offender spends between five and eleven years in jail. Upon release from prison, a sex offender is more than ten times more likely to commit another sex related crime than someone who has committed another...

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