Research indicates that 25% of children are sexually abused prior to
their 18th birthday. Most children are molested by someone they are
related to or know very well like relatives, neighbors or family
friends. One study indicated that one out of every 10 men has molested a
child. Despite the high rate of child sexual abuse, only 16% of child
victims are able to tell someone that they are being abused and only 3%
of sex offenders are caught and prosecuted. Most offenders are able to
“get away with” molesting children for years before they are
reported to law enforcement.
What these facts tell us is that all parents, caretakers and community
members must educate themselves about sexual abuse and child molesters
in order to improve their ability to protect children. It is important
for people to understand how “normal” child molesters look and how easily they can
gain access to children, isolate them and manipulate them into thinking
that the abuse is “ok.”
Offenders also make children feel guilty and responsible for the abuse.
These dynamics make it very hard for children to tell anyone what is
happening to them. We hope this brochure will help you protect children
from people who molest and abuse children.
Who is the typical child molester?
• I am probably well known and liked by you and your child.
• I can be a man or a woman, married or single.
• I can be a child, adolescent, or adult.
• I can be of any race, hold any religious belief, and have any sexual
preference.
• I can be a parent, step parent, relative, family friend, teacher,
clergyman, babysitter or anyone who comes in contact with children.
• I am likely to be a stable, employed, respected member of the
community.
• My education and my intelligence don’t prevent me from molesting your
child.
I can be anybody.
Parents can defeat me if they work together.
How Child Molesters Gain Access To Your Child
It’s very easy to gain access to your child.
Why Don’t Child Molesters Always Get Caught?
Remember, once I start, I will do everything possible to continue
molesting your child. I am sexually turned on by kids and I enjoy being
sexual with them. If I have had a lot of practice, I can become very
skilled at offending. I will not stop on my own. I am very selfish and
do not care if my behavior is hurting your child. After I’ve begun
molesting your child, I maintain their cooperation and
silence through guilt, shame, fear and sometimes “love”:
What is Child Sexual Abuse?
Child molestation usually begins with a sex offender gaining a child’s
trust and friendship. The offender then begins “testing” the child’s
ability to protect themselves by telling sexual jokes, engaging in
horseplay, back rubs, kissing or sexual games. If the child appears
comfortable with or curious about this type of behavior, (and most
healthy, normal children are) the offender will slowly
increase the amount and type of touching to include more direct sexual
touching. Child sexual abuse can include exposing, fondling,
masturbation, oral sex, intercourse, and pornography. Many children do
not understand that what is happening is sexual or wrong. Most offenders
know that if they physically harm a child while molesting them, the
child is more likely to tell. They are also clever enough to make the
child feel as if they are equally responsible for the contact. Children
become trapped and are unable to tell anyone what is happening.
Research has demonstrated that most of our school based child abuse
prevention programs do not prevent children from being abused and have
little impact on reporting.
The reason for the lack of impact on abuse is that children are not in a
good position to protect themselves from adults, especially if the
adult offender is a parent or caretaker. Given the way child molesters
operate, it is imperative that adults, not children become educated
about child abuse, supervise their children more closely and take action
if they suspect someone of abusing a child. Parents, schools, churches
and community groups must also work together to develop prevention
programs that incorporate parent training into prevention programs and
encourage reporting. The information in this pamphlet was compiled and
written by several sex offenders in treatment with CBI. We hope that
this pamphlet will help protect children by better educating community
members about child sexual abuse.
Indications That a Child is Being Molested
Because each child is unique, symptoms of sexual abuse vary and can be
hard to identify in some cases. Here are some things to watch for:
Sexual abuse is a crime. If you believe I have molested Your child or
any other child, don’t try to handle it yourself! I will always promise
you that it was the first time and that I will never do it again. I will be lying and I’m good at
it. Call the police! The best thing you can do for your child and my
past and potential victims is to report me to the authorities. If I
molested your child, I’ll do it to someone else’s child unless you stop
me!
Prevention
Don’t feel that your child is safe from me! At least one out of every
four children will be molested by the age of eighteen. Here are some
ways to protect children from me.
Church Security Solutions, LLC. (CSS) has nationally recognized threat assessment experts that train church staff and volunteers in how to identify a threat before it becomes a tragedy.
With proper security measures in place, a church or religious organization can deter or prevent a potential incident from happening, said security experts.
“Be shepherds of God’s flock that is under your care, serving as overseers.”
1 Peter 5:2