Mary S. Mittleman’s research while affiliated with The Graduate Center, CUNY and other places

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Publications (2)


The Impact of Parolees' Perception of Confidentiality of Their Self-Reported Sex Crimes
  • Article

July 1990

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7 Reads

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4 Citations

Sexual Abuse A Journal of Research and Treatment

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Jerry Cunningham-Rathner

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Mary S. Mittleman

Parole officers who supervise sex offenders need to know if parolees continue to be a risk for child molestation after their incarceration. One hundred and twenty convicted child molesters under Parole Supervision were asked to participate in two interviews about their sexual offenses: first by a parolee officer in the parole office and then in a non-parole, psychologic setting by a psychologist. Seventy-four subjects agreed to participate in the parole setting, and 18 of those 74 agreed to participate in the psychologic setting. Hypotheses tested included whether perceived confidentiality affects reports of past child molestation or current urges to molest children or whether it improves the consistency between the offender's reports of their sex crimes and their arrest records. Results indicated that as confidentiality increased, reports of prior sex offenses and current urges to molest increased. The relevance of this finding to our current system of parole supervision is discussed.


The Impact of Parolees' Perception of Confidentiality of Their Self-Reported Sex Crimes
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 1990

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109 Reads

·

19 Citations

Sexual Abuse A Journal of Research and Treatment

Parole officers who supervise sex offenders need to know if parolees continue to be a risk for child molestation after their incarceration. One hundred and twenty convicted child molesters under Parole Supervision were asked to participate in two interviews about their sexual offenses: first by a parolee officer in the parole office and then in a non-parole, psychologic setting by a psychologist. Seventy-four subjects agreed to participate in the parole setting, and 18 of those 74 agreed to participate in the psychologic setting. Hypotheses tested included whether perceived confidentiality affects reports of past child molestation or current urges to molest children or whether it improves the consistency between the offender''s reports of their sex crimes and their arrest records. Results indicated that as confidentiality increased, reports of prior sex offenses and current urges to molest increased. The relevance of this finding to our current system of parole supervision is discussed.

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Citations (2)


... Given the forensic context, the tendency of most individuals being evaluated is to minimize or deny any deviant behavior (Kaplan, Abel, Cunningham-Rathner, & Mittleman, 1990 ). Thus, it is extremely important to have an offi cial criminal record (to ascertain both current and previous sexual and nonsexual charges and offenses) and to obtain other official legal documents such as search warrants, arrest warrants, victim's statements, supporting depositions, or indictments in order not to rely solely on self-report. ...

Reference:

Noncontact Paraphilic Sexual Offenses
The Impact of Parolees' Perception of Confidentiality of Their Self-Reported Sex Crimes
  • Citing Article
  • July 1990

Sexual Abuse A Journal of Research and Treatment

... The negative consequences for the victims of childhood sexual abuse are often serious and long-lasting, including substance abuse, sexual acting out, and suicidal behaviour (e.g., Briere, 1988;Conte, 1988). Moreover, child molesters underreport the number of children they have victimized, and many of these cases go undetected (Abel et al., 1987;Kaplan, Abel, Cunningham-Rathner, & Mittleman, 1990). Even after being identified as a child molester, and after involvement in the criminal justice system, child molesters are likely to reoffend. ...

The Impact of Parolees' Perception of Confidentiality of Their Self-Reported Sex Crimes

Sexual Abuse A Journal of Research and Treatment