That is true. But he’s admitted to them publicly, as have the parents and sisters/victims.
In general, prior bad acts (including convictions) are not admissible. That’s Federal Rule of Evidence 404, and it’s fascinating stuff. Lots of exceptions. But - in general - it wouldn’t be permissible to show evidence of prior molestation and use it to demonstrate that he downloaded CSAM. Lots of exceptions, though.
Yes, and generally, acts performed as a juvenile are not held against a person charged with a separate crime as an adult. CSAM...slippery slope on this one.
So, I know next to nothing about the law, and less than nothing about the law in Arkansas.
I was under the impression that something may be allowed in certain cases if it goes towards establishing a pattern of behavior. Is the situation here, besides that he wasn't charged as a juvenile, that there isn't an exact pattern, per se?
First instance (to our knowledge): physically assaulting his sisters, allegedly as a hormonal boy with a curiosity about the female body, and lots of female bodies conveniently under his roof?**
Second instance (to our knowledge): an adult, married man, with an allowable outlet for sex, is a disclosed user of Ashley Madison? Putrid and worthy of a divorce, but not illegal?
Third instance (to our knowledge): an adult, married man, with an allowable outlet for sex, reprehensibly, disgustingly, nauseatingly, incomprehensibly and illegally seeking out child sexual abuse material on the Internet? From sources that seem difficult to have accessed accidentally and which required exertion on his part to obtain?
These, legally, do not form a pattern, I guess? Other than the pattern of being sex-obsessed since his youth and acting on it in ways that are illegal/immoral and cause pain to his loved ones?
** although one of his victims being only FIVE makes this a magnitude more horrible