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Have you got a link for this? Genuinely curious as I haven't been able to find out more about it.
I did...
Law can be quite obscure and intranparent, even to those who are qualified in law. As law in general is such a huge subject most people specialise in a specific area of law. The people at STOPSO are clearly primarily concerned with arguing the issues as they affect sex offenders .
At https://www.stopso.org.uk/ it is explained by these words:
"We believe prevention is better than cure, so StopSO provides specialist therapy to sex offenders and those who have yet to act on their ‘troubling thoughts’. We also work with families, helping them come to terms with being related to a sex offender."
Contrast this aspect with the needs of the Victims of Sex Offenders; that is those appertaining to this site, those suffering PTSD and CPTSD. Most victims have a right that the offenders are prosecuted and convicted for the wrongs they have done. Most victims would like to prevent others suffering the same traumatic experience as they suffered. This has particularly come to light in the UK within the case of sex offender John Worboys where this offenders early crimes were reported and ignored such that he became a notorious offender. As one victim said "The first women he raped, who has a right to remain anonymous, told Sky News: "The bottom line is, if the police had believed me in 2003 then there would only be one victim of Worboys." Victims of black cab rapist Worboys were failed by police, rules Supreme Court
It does have to be said that for any citizen there may be reasonable and understandable mitigating circumstances that prevent them from reporting crime or potential of which they are aware. For instance, when a victim of csa does not report what happened to them for twenty, thirty, forty years, most people understand the delay and all that goes along with it; similarly the victims of the holocaust have only achieved some prosecutions of the perpetrators of their injuries fifty years hence.
The citizens' duty to report crime or potential crime is based in society's values, the moral duty, and the legal fact that if one is thought to have encouraged, incited, aided or abetted a crime then one is open to be charged oneself with a criminal offence. More explicitly this is defined in the Serious Crimes Act 2007 Inchoate offences | The Crown Prosecution Service.
Ask yourself this question 'If I consider that I am a law-abiding citizen, why or when would I not report crime?'
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