Coming soon to your community: the sex offender next door - Action News
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British ColumbiaAnalysis

Coming soon to your community: the sex offender next door

The struggle to find a home for high-risk sex offenders like James William Conway tests the limits of agencies tasked with monitoring him not to mention the patience of the neighbours who find themselves suddenly living next door.

Housing sex offender James Conway tests the limits of public patience and correctional oversight

An image taken from the Facebook page of a campaign mounted in protest of the arrival in Abbotsford of sex-offender James William Conway. (Protect our Children in Bradner/Facebook)

There are some people for whom it's really only possible to feel a theoretical kind of sympathy.

James William Conway is one of them.

The 40-year-old sexual predator is what one judge called a "disadvantaged offender"; exposed to alcohol in the womb andoxygen-starved at birth, he has borderline intellectual functioning; he grew upbetween 30 and 50 foster homes.

And yet,much as Conway was born into misery, he has inflicteda lifetime ofpain onto others.

He was convicted oftouching the buttocks of nine-year-old girls at a public swimming pool in 2005. He has a record for arson and theft. As a diagnosed pedophile, he has been assessed asa high-risk to re-offend.

Not surprising then that thesuccession ofLower Mainland communities where Conway has been slated to livehaven't exactlyrolled out the welcome wagon upon learning through public warnings of his arrival.

'This isn't good for him either'

Still, he's a human being. Heexists; we have to do something with him. Somethingforhim.

That's largely left to the government agencies tasked withprotecting the public from Conway andprotecting Conway from the public.

High-risk sex offender, James William Conway, has been moved to Mission B.C. where he will live under supervision. The previous residence where he lived in Abbotsford drew protests from residents. (B.C. Corrections)

Judging from his latest reception in Mission, someone has dropped the ball.

Neighbours are fuming. Parents are alarmed about the proximity of his new home to a school. And District Mayor Randy Hawesis contemplating the same kind of zoning-related B.C. Supreme Court action which saw Conwaybounced from Abbotsfordlast month.

Hawesblames B.C. Corrections, which is tasked with managing offenders in the community.

He says the case highlights the need for a mental health facility specificallydedicated to the handful ofoffenderslike Conway whose cases hit the headlines with each dire notification. People, whose proven inability to change, turns their stints of limited freedominto a dangerouswaiting game between prison sentences.

"They can be in very intensive programming and therapy that hopefully straightens them out, but then they're away from the public. The danger to the public is minimized, and I happen to believe that their life is a little better than sitting in a house where there's dozens of protesters standing a few feet away," Hawes says.

"This isn't good for him either."

Who exactly is responsible?

Because of his mental problems, Conway is housed by Community Living B.C. (CLBC), the Crown agency which funds services for adults with developmental disabilities.

They, in turn, contracta care provider called WJS Canada to look afterhim. And in Abbotsford, at least,WJS Canada subcontracted another individual to do the job.

Mission mayor Randy Hawes says James William Conway should not be living in a house in his community. (randyhawesmla.bc.ca)

But because of Conway's criminal history, B.C. Corrections also has a role to play, ensuringConway abides by25 court-ordered conditions which include staying away from parks, swimming areas and any site which offers activities for children.

As such, they say he's living under the highest degree of supervision: 24-hour house arrest, electronic supervision, and not leaving his residence at any time without prior approval and with an approved adult.

B.C. Corrections makes the decision to issue notifications about high-risk offenders. And Hawes says theytold him they approved Conway's residence from a list of potential homes provided by CLBC.

But while the agencywarned the public at large about Conway, his neighboursin both Abbotsford and Mission have complained bitterlythat nobody told them specifically about the dangers of the new guy on the block.

'This is not meant to scare the public'

Nor is this a hypothetical concern.

In2008, a court found B.C. Corrections partly responsible when ahigh-risk offender sexually assaulted a boy after moving into a suite in the child's home; the location wasapproved by the man's probation officer.

The provinceultimately had to pay $135,000.

According to a paper called'Best Practices to use when Housing High-RiskOffenders in the Community' that decision "prompted agencies to look at their current policies surrounding placement of high-risk offenders in order to determine their own levels of liability."

James Williams Conway's first move to Abbotsford was met with protests in 2015. Similar concerns have followed him to Mission. (CBC)

The paper featuresthree cases studies, none of which exactly fit Conway's profile in terms of mental functioning.

But the authors strike a chilling note onthe impact of public notification, media attentionand vigilantismon the prospectsof safely releasinghigh-risk offenders.

"At times, the most dangerous people in the province are released homeless, un-medicated and without financial means," the paper says.

"These barriers, compounded with lower optimism, loneliness and isolation can contribute to the likelihood for lack of success. This is not meant to scare the public."

Neither, presumably, are warnings like the one Vancouver police issued this week about the release on day parole ofanother high-profile prisoner, Larry John Takahashi, better known as the 'BalaclavaRapist'.

He's serving three life sentences for sexually assaulting dozens of women in Edmonton three decades ago, but is still considered at a moderate to high-risk to reoffend.

A 'principled position'

Like Conway, it's hard to muster up anything beyond revulsion for Takahashi.

According to probation documents, one victim spoke of the "never ending devastating impact" of the rapist'scrimes. Another attempted suicide twice.

Edmonton's notorious 'Balaclava Rapist' has been approved for day parole in the Vancouver area while serving three life sentences.
Edmonton's notorious 'Balaclava Rapist' has been approved for day parole in the Vancouver area while serving three life sentences. (CBC News)

And yet another victim said she lostfaith in a justice system that allowed Takahashito plead guilty to just 14 of 70 charges. The charge involving her was stayed. The woman said shefelt victimized twice, first by the plea bargainand then by a presidingjudge who "commented on her sexual past."

But as John Howard Society head Catherine Latimer points out, we have a system which is built on the prospect of rehabilitation, and so we don't lock people up and throw away the key.

She isn't asking the public to embrace men likeConway or Takahashi. But she sayshigh-profile paroleshould prompt more than just outrage.

"I think the right thing to do is to have an effective corrections regime which understands that people are going to be released at a certain point and works towards mitigating the risk, giving them options and giving them opportunities to do something other than participate in criminal activity," she says.

Latimer admits hers is a "principled position."

But how else to findmercy for the worst among us?