
@article{ref1,
title="Examining the Criminal History and Future Offending of Child Pornography Offenders: An Extended Prospective Follow-up Study",
journal="Law and human behavior",
year="2011",
author="Eke, Angela W. and Seto, Michael C. and Williams, Jennette",
volume="35",
number="6",
pages="466-478",
abstract="We examined police occurrence and criminal records data for a sample of 201 registered male child pornography offenders originally reported by Seto and Eke (Sex Abus J Res Treat 17:201-210, 2005), extending the average follow-up time for this sample to 5.9 years. In addition, we obtained the same data for another 340 offenders, increasing our full sample to 541 men, with a total average follow-up of 4.1 years. In the extended follow-up of the original sample, 34% of offenders had new charges for any type of re-offense, with 6% charged with a contact sexual offense against a child and an additional 3% charged with historical contact sex offenses (i.e., previously undetected offenses). For the full sample, there was a 32% any recidivism rate; 4% of offenders were charged with new contact sex offenses, an additional 2% of offenders were charged with historical contact sex offenses and 7% of offenders were charged with a new child pornography offense. Predictors of new violent (including sexual contact) offending were prior offense history, including violent history, and younger offender age. Approximately a quarter of the sample was sanctioned for a failure on conditional release; in half of these failures, the offenders were in contact with children or used the internet, often to access pornography again.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0147-7307",
doi="10.1007/s10979-010-9252-2",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10979-010-9252-2"
}