« Where were you when the flood waters came? | Main | E-mails from the disaster zone »

"Operation Boo!" traps sex offenders offering Halloween candy to children

California's parole agents are not taking the night off on Halloween. They'll be cruising neighborhoods to make sure sex offenders are not decorating for the holiday, staying home with lights out and away from children.

According to a press release:

"Our agents will be out in force, checking on sex offenders, to ensure that they stay behind locked doors, in dark houses, with absolutely no contact with ‘trick or treaters’ on Halloween night," said Tom Hoffman, CDCR Director of Parole. "Our goal is to make sure that children have a carefree night free of any potential contact with sex offenders."

CDCR imposes its most stringent parole conditions on sex offenders, including mandatory curfews and treatment, and limitations on their behavior and where they live to prevent contact with potential victims. Even so, sex offenders are held to even stricter limits on their behavior on Halloween night, when children are on the streets and going door-to-door, sometimes through unfamiliar neighborhoods.

Among the Special Conditions of Parole imposed on sex offenders for Halloween night:

· A 5p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew during which parolees must remain indoors;

· All exterior lights of their homes must be turned off so that it looks as if no one is home, which takes away any opportunity for children to be tempted to ring the door bell;

· No offering of Halloween candy and no Halloween decorations are allowed;

· During the curfew, sex offender parolees can only open the door to respond to law enforcement, such as parole agents who are patrolling their caseload to ensure compliance.

All CDCR parole agents will be enforcing these conditions on their caseloads individually. In some regions, such as Sacramento and Fresno, CDCR agents will conduct what has become an October tradition. During "Operation Boo," agents and police will work together to knock on the doors of sex offenders who are on parole or probation to ensure they comply with all the special restrictions.

Comments

Does this mean we should all Trick the homes that have no lights on MORE than usual? ^^

*gets the eggs, readywhip and toilet paper ready

This is a good thing to provide a safer evening for the children. Parents need to be with their kids at all times anyway. If these predators really want to get out there they could because the number of them far outweigh the number of officers to oversee them.To Mr Z I say that not all houses that have lights out are predators so keep the childish tricks at bay. Happy Halloween

It was a joke! Dear God I plan on taking my daughter trick or treating tonight.

I stopped tossing eggs at cars 15+ years ago.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Advertisement
Advertisement