Publication | Closed Access
Sexual and Nonsexual Offenders With Intellectual and Learning Disabilities
57
Citations
18
References
2004
Year
DisabilityCriminal LawSexual DisordersMental HealthDevelopmental DisabilitiesSocial SciencesPsychologyLearning Disability AssessmentIntellectual ImpairmentSexual OffendingGender StudiesDevelopmental DisabilitySexual CrimeFire RaisingSex OffendersForensic PsychiatryOffender ClassificationLearning DisabilitiesCriminal JusticeSexual AssaultCriminology LiteratureSociologySpecial EducationMedicineSexual Orientation
This article reports an evaluation of a community intellectual disability offender service over the period from 1990 to 2001. Men who committed sex offenses or sexually abusive incidents (n = 106) and men who committed other types of offenses and serious incidents (n = 78) are compared on personal characteristics, referral sources, forensic details, and outcome up to 7 years after referral. The cohorts are older than one would expect from the criminology literature, and, at about 33%, the incidence of mental illness is consistent with some previous studies. A greater proportion of sex offenders had criminal justice involvement and a formal disposal from court. Fire raising was not overly represented as an offense. There was a higher rate of reoffending in the nonsexual cohort, which persisted up to 7 years. Investigating only reoffenders, there was a considerable amount of harm reduction recorded up to 7 years, statistically significant up to 5 years following initial referral.
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