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Few Sex Offenders Are Treated in Prison
By tulsaworld.com
Published: 07/13/2009

Few sex offenders receiving treatment in prison

They number 3,000 in state prisons, but a treatment program has room for just 55.

By Jay F. Marks NewsOK.com

Sex offenders are likely being released from Oklahoma prisons without any treatment to curb their criminal behavior, a state Corrections Department official said.

Oklahoma has space for only 55 inmates in the treatment program for sex offenders, who number more than 3,000 in state prisons.

"I was not prepared to hear that," said an Oklahoma City attorney, Robert Sisson. "It's appalling."

That figure came to light recently when Gilbert D. Smith, 20, unsuccessfully sought to have an Oklahoma County judge reduce his 15-year prison sentence for rape.

Sisson said the Corrections Department needs to ensure that those offenders aren't released without receiving treatment to control their sexual urges.

A Corrections Department spokesman, Jerry Massie, said resources such as bed space and manpower limit the size of the sex offender treatment program. It is not likely to expand.

Inmates who are closest to completing their prison terms are given priority when slots open, Massie said, citing research that indicates that such programs are more effective then.

"You've just got to maximize the resources that you have," he said.

Another Oklahoma City attorney, Jack Dempsey Pointer, said he plans to ask an Oklahoma County judge to release one of his clients from prison so he can continue sex offender treatment at his own expense.

The man — whom Pointer declined to name because nothing has been filed in the case — is not getting treatment in prison.

"This is a tremendous waste of resources," Pointer said. "Plus my guy's not getting any help."

Pointer unsuccessfully lobbied the judge last year to sentence his client to probation, citing his progress in sessions with Dr. Richard Kishur.

Kishur, who created the Corrections Department's sex offender treatment program, offers similar treatment in his private practice.

Pointer said releasing his client would relieve the burden on the prison system, while allowing him to get the treatment he needs.

He said sex offenders who are amenable to treatment should be allowed to get it, even if that means not putting them behind bars.

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Comments:

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