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What makes a paedophile?
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| FACE OF A PAEDOPHILE: Tom O'Carroll who was jailed in 2006 for child pornography offences |
Why do some adults
find children sexually
attractive and is there
a stereotypical
paedophile? In the second of a
two-part series, Owen Amos
speaks to an academic expert
and visits a worrying website
THE website appears academic: plain, unthreatening
and dull. I click "library" and
see a menu with options like "scientific
articles" and "articles and essays, general".
I click articles and essays.
The first piece seems scholarly. There are footnotes
and references to research and quips about
Freud. So far, so academic. It's the content that's abnormal.
It's the content that makes your eyes
widen, makes your mouth open and makes you
wonder whether you're reading right.
"Families which deny children their sexual life,
including the possibility of sexual contact with
adults, are profoundly limited," it states, plainly.
The website - which is legal - continues: "The
fact is children are no less likely to be able to learn
maths or geography as a result of involvement in a
sexual relationship. Indeed paedophiles, like parents,
usually love to help their' children, either to
do their homework, or fix their bike, or in a thousand
other ways. It makes them feel good to do so.
It is simply an expression of the love they feel."
I scroll to the article's start. The chapter is called:
"Do Children NEED Sex?" The book is called "Paedophilia
- The Radical Case." In the preface, the
author states: "I am a paedophile. In the chapters
that follow it will become apparent why I have felt
it necessary to crash through the barriers of societal
disapproval by speaking out."
The book was written in 1979. The author is Tom
O'Carroll. It's the same Tom O'Carroll who was
once a journalist and union official. It's the same
Tom O'Carroll who lived in Shildon, County
Durham, and was sentenced to two-and-a-half years
in prison in 2006 for child pornography offences.
"Not understanding the damage they are doing
to the children is a characteristic of paedophiles,
they have low victim
empathy," says
Michael Teague,
senior lecturer
in criminology
at the University
of Teesside
and a former
p r o b a t i o n
worker with sex
offenders.
"They are in
denial. Denial
over
t h e i r
victims, denial over the number of victims, denial
over the fact the victim is not consenting. When you
hear someone telling you, as I have, that a five-yearold
has consented, it's quite astounding."
That denial - that children are mentally and
physically under-developed - is clear on the pseudo-
academic website. "Children are in a remarkably
analogous position to that of the white women who
used to be protected' by lynch mobs of Ku Klux
Klansmen in the American south," writes one man.
"The dominant white male culture held that
women, like today's children, were not sexual beings
- they were pure. Thus, if there was any sexual
contact between a white woman and a black man
it could only mean one thing. Rape."
So what does a paedophile look like? Are they
men in long coats, lurking outside schools, preying
on toddlers by offering sweets? Are they isolated,
lonely bachelors, glued to their computers?
Paedophiles are not like burglars, says Mr
Teague. There is no profile, no stereotypical
offender.
"Paedophiles are unlike other criminals," he says.
"There are all kinds of social status, race and so
on. It's almost always males, but it's not like you can
predict who an offender will be. The idea that it's a
bloke who wears a dirty mac and hangs round
schools - that stereotype is not true. Most child
abuse happens in the home, or by someone who
knows the victim. We have this idea of stranger
danger' - but it's normally not true."
The man who catches paedophiles agrees with
the man who studies them. "It's easy to categorise
criminals - the burglar, the drug dealer - but paedophiles
cut across all professions," says DI Geoff
Smith, Durham Police's head of economic crime.
But what makes a man - be it an actor like Chris
Langham, or a pop star like Gary Glitter - download
child pornography? Is there a paedophile gene,
or is the behaviour learnt?
"We're not absolutely sure what makes a child
sex abuser," says Mr Teague. "If we were, we could
do something about it as a society."
What about Chris Langham's defence? In court,
he said he wanted to "look into the eyes" of paedophiles
after he was abused as an eight-year-old.
"It's a fairly common misconception that you can
grow up being a paedophile because you were the
victim of abuse," says Mr Teague. "That's quite
problematic. The majority of victims, for example,
are female, but we know the prisons have thousands
of male sex offenders. Victims can be very severely
damaged mentally, but I think a paedophile will
always have denial, a defence mechanism and often
a quite twisted view of their behaviour."
AS no one is sure what causes paedophilia,
there is no miracle cure; the aim of treatment
is "harm reduction" rather than total prevention.
In 1991, the prison service set up the Sex
Offender Treatment Programme, which now runs
in 26 prisons in England and Wales and treats 1,000
offenders a year. Around four in five sex offenders
are not re-convicted of further offences.
As The Northern Echo's archives prove, there has
been a vast increase in reported paedophilia. But
even now, vast amounts of child sex abuse goes unreported.
According to the NSPCC, 75 per cent of
victims do not tell anyone at the time and a third
never tell anyone.
"We know from cases like the Jersey care home
that there is a lot of sex offending that no one knows
about," says Mr Teague. "We need to ensure schools
and parents sensitively educate children about how
to avoid sexual abuse and to give children every encouragement
to report potential abusers."
Child sex abuse, though, is not a recent phenomenon.
Paedophiles did not arrive on the back of
high-speed broadband.
"One of the most common things I hear is Why
has there been this rise?' The reality is there
hasn't been - it's always been there but the internet
has focused attention and brings it out in a way
it didn't before," says Mr Teague. "We've just
become more aware it's there."
1:28pm Wednesday 7th May 2008
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