Early Parole and Missed Opportunities-What happened?

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I hope several people are fired over this!
Those that did not do their job, I hope they have sleepless nights.
Just think this COULD and SHOULD of been stopped 20 years ago!!!
No one REALLY watched this monster.......he prob laughed at the LE.
 
I just thank God that PG felt he was omnipotent and dropped the case into an inexcusably lax PO's lap!
 
The photos released today really make it hard to defend the (non)actions. Looking at the backyard you would easily notice that parts are fenced off separately - like where the carports are. If he was looking he easily would have seen bikes and toys. Also, there had to be easy access to get to the far back of the property. I'm sure he didn't jump the fence as someone on here said the PO would have had to do!

The police that did not do their job should be publicly humiliated as "the biggest loser" with their names on some plaque, and their pension should be taken.
 
Posted: 09/22/2009 04:33:04 PM PDT
Updated: 09/22/2009 05:33:45 PM PDT
<snipped>For eight years after Jaycee Dugard's abduction, through the sexual bondage of her teen years and the birth of her two girls fathered by Phillip Garrido, state and local authorities likely had no clue that a convicted sex offender was living at the house on Walnut Avenue near Antioch.

It appears Garrido didn't register as a sex offender in California until 1999, despite his 1976 convictions in Nevada for kidnapping and raping a female casino worker, and the fact he was under federal parole supervision over those years.

It may be nobody ever told him to register, a top federal parole official said.

There may be many others like him — people who were convicted of sex crimes in other states, moved to California and have since flown below the sex offender radar, a state Department of Justice official acknowledged.
Article:
http://www.contracostatimes.com/news/ci_13396226
 
I found myself not even wanting to read this thread
because
I have said my part about the PO in several threads.

But I do want to say this here:

I find it especially refreshing when I read about or meet people who CARE.
And I find myself increasingly angry about those who do not care.

I think we are way overpopulated anyway.
It would be fine with me if God and his wisdom did away
with all the people who do not care. :silenced:
 
By Thomas Portue
Guest commentary
Posted: 09/26/2009 12:01:00 AM PDT
In response to recent letters by Dale Myer and Sheriff's posse member Jack Roddy, the residents of Contra Costa should consider Sheriff Warren Rupf's "stand up" regarding Jaycee Dugard as nothing more than political posturing in the face of well-deserved scrutiny.

http://www.contracostatimes.com/opin...nclick_check=1
 
I read somewhere that PG had just recently started taking the girls out and about with him, to 'socialize' them. I think that was also part of it.

I just reread the interview that PG did in jail. IMO PG thinks he is the 2nd coming.



So he thinks that hundreds of thousands of people are going to read his document and it will so change their lives that they will flock to his rescue and he will lead them.

I hate to say this. But PG may have been somewhat normal, or at least cognizant and capable of telling right from wrong when JC was kidnapped. But I am wondering if he will be found capable of standing trial? He goes off topic of the questions, has grandiose thinking. It is going to be close whether they will determine if he is capable of understanding and assisting in the defense strategy.

I think the parole officer saw similar behavior from PG and thought the same thing. This 'kook' isn't capable of planning and carrying out a crime so I can get some slack here. Visits probably consisted of something like "How ya doin Phil, any problems, anything I should know about? Ok then see you whenever. You stay out of trouble now."

BBM
The kookiest of the kooks can a lot of the time be extremely intelligent, sometimes genius. This is overlooked by many that just write insane people off as stupid and harmless, missing the fact that most known serial killers are insane or criminally insane but extremely intelligent, sometimes intelligent enough to never get caught, i.e. Jack the Ripper, Zodiac, etc. To me, Phil falls into the category of a serial killer, even though he has not (yet) been known to murder he is a serial violent offender. Unfortunately, he wasn't viewed as a serial offender until recently because he had only been convicted of one violent crime. Which is the first mistake, because 9 times out of 10, violent sex offenders are habitual. (In all honestly, though, I feel that I'm being generous here by giving 10 percent to them being reformed.)

You're right in saying that he probably seemed harmless to his PO & LE. But there HAS to be something that can be done to make our justice system more efficient and that prevents horrible things like this from continually happening to innocent citizens. Reform should probably start with the training process that all of our paid officials go through in order to become an officer of the law, somewhere along the lines of psychology. They are supposed to be trained to understand the criminal mind, they are supposed to be trained to protect us and didn't. I understand they have quite the heavy caseload and that California's and the rest of the country's current economic structure is extremely fragile and can't handle more staff, but its no excuse for such an enormous miscarriage of justice. In a perfect world, it would go like this...since the State of California and the U.S. Government failed Jaycee so horribly and she was robbed of her constitutional rights, as a result of their absolute neglect, Garridos should be robbed of their constitutional rights to a fair trial. They should bypass the trial process completely, save the tax payers the added expense and ship em off to general population in the worst prisons our country has to offer. Let those animals do what they do to animals like Phil n Nancy in prison. Too bad this ain't a perfect world, huh? It sickens me that these 2 pieces of filth will be allowed more rights to fairness than they ever allowed Jaycee to have.
 
was he or wasn't he on parole a time of arrest? I heard a piece the other night that included a reading of a letter from the head of parole(or other agnecy) commending him on his exemplary behavior and releasing him from parole. I also know there are several agencies involved and I am not up to speed on that so perhaps this is just one agency and he was on parole with another?
help and thanks.
 
Well, if Garrido had apparently kept his nose clean for 20 years it isn't surprising that they would be paying more attention to other cases in their caseload that presented more immiment threat.

If you have a 100 or so parolees to supervise, who are you going to be watching most closely? The guy who has appeared to be following the rules for the last 20 years, or the guy who keeps on getting into trouble?

It's all very well to look at these things with 20/20 hindsight, but these guys have to work in the real world and have to manage and prioritise their caseload with the facts and evidence that is available to them.
 
Well, if Garrido had apparently kept his nose clean for 20 years it isn't surprising that they would be paying more attention to other cases in their caseload that presented more immiment threat.

If you have a 100 or so parolees to supervise, who are you going to be watching most closely? The guy who has appeared to be following the rules for the last 20 years, or the guy who keeps on getting into trouble?

It's all very well to look at these things with 20/20 hindsight, but these guys have to work in the real world and have to manage and prioritise their caseload with the facts and evidence that is available to them.
Natal, I was thinking something similar early on. but other repots have shown that this officer had a smaller caseload than typical PO's.(70 or less I think?)
If there were no reports at all and no reasons to investigate I would also agree, but it does not seem that was the case. Opportunities were missed and that is where I have a problem.
 
was he or wasn't he on parole a time of arrest? I heard a piece the other night that included a reading of a letter from the head of parole(or other agnecy) commending him on his exemplary behavior and releasing him from parole. I also know there are several agencies involved and I am not up to speed on that so perhaps this is just one agency and he was on parole with another?
help and thanks.
There was an earlier article stating that Officer Edward Santos has been his parole officer since at least 1999. Don't know about prior to that...
 
There was an earlier article stating that Officer Edward Santos has been his parole officer since at least 1999. Don't know about prior to that...
okay I found this:

>>The first of these is the U.S. Parole Commission, which discharged Garrido from federal parole supervision in 1999. As we know now, that was eight years after he is alleged to have kidnapped Dugard <<
snip
>> Upon ending his parole supervision 11 years later, a federal administrator lauded Garrido in a document for "having responded positively to supervision," even though the convicted kidnapper had committed three drug offenses while in federal custody.
The Sacramento Bee unearthed these laudatory comments about Garrido through a Freedom of Information Act request. <<

http://www.montereyherald.com/opinion/ci_13418068
 
was he or wasn't he on parole a time of arrest? I heard a piece the other night that included a reading of a letter from the head of parole(or other agnecy) commending him on his exemplary behavior and releasing him from parole. I also know there are several agencies involved and I am not up to speed on that so perhaps this is just one agency and he was on parole with another?
help and thanks.

I'm pretty sure that was when he was released form Federal custody about 10 years ago. He was on lifetime parole in State of Cali after he was handed over to them by Nevada, though.
 
okay I found this:

>>The first of these is the U.S. Parole Commission, which discharged Garrido from federal parole supervision in 1999. As we know now, that was eight years after he is alleged to have kidnapped Dugard <<
snip
>> Upon ending his parole supervision 11 years later, a federal administrator lauded Garrido in a document for "having responded positively to supervision," even though the convicted kidnapper had committed three drug offenses while in federal custody.
The Sacramento Bee unearthed these laudatory comments about Garrido through a Freedom of Information Act request. <<

http://www.montereyherald.com/opinion/ci_13418068
Wonder if that administrator is kicking himself now???:waitasec::waitasec::waitasec:
 
There was an earlier article stating that Officer Edward Santos has been his parole officer since at least 1999. Don't know about prior to that...

No, he was under the Californian parole supervision from that time, and they declined to say how many times Santos had visited him. They made no comment about when Santos became his PO.
 
lol i like that "he was a model citizen even though he was busted for 3 drug offenses while in federal custody"
wtf? i guess it's ok to be a junkie while being on parole for being a rapist? wtf is up with our legal system
 
Anyone know what kind of drugs on all 3 drug charges besides the parole violation for marijuana in 93? What kind of testing was used on Garrido to detect recent LSD use? Shouldn't he have been tested regularly for it since it was apparently his drug of choice and also, as claims have been made, the reason for his psychotic and criminal behavior. Is it even possible to get an accurate LSD detection as I've heard it never leaves your system but is the hardest to detect? Any ideas?
 
Anyone know what kind of drugs on all 3 drug charges besides the parole violation for marijuana in 93? What kind of testing was used on Garrido to detect recent LSD use? Shouldn't he have been tested regularly for it since it was apparently his drug of choice and also, as claims have been made, the reason for his psychotic and criminal behavior. Is it even possible to get an accurate LSD detection as I've heard it never leaves your system but is the hardest to detect? Any ideas?

i know it seems i do the majority of my spewing on slayton. but seriously........how can they not violate him? or ony violate him for one month.........not investigate his house? tear it up looking for more drugs??????? how is it jaycee slipped thru the cracks so many times :furious: and now this piece of cr*p and his dad are claiming the drugs and the motorcycle accident made him a sexual predator.............grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr :banghead:
 

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