http://www.wmur.com/news/17851517/detail.html
"Video: Offender Will Need To Register With Police
Sex Offender Moves From Concord Garage To Manchester House
Police Say Man Has Five Days To Register
POSTED: 6:13 pm EDT October 30, 2008
MANCHESTER, N.H. -- A sex offender who said that he was worried he would re-offend and who had been living in a Concord parking garage has now moved to Manchester.
Jonathan Perfetto said he is now living in a rooming house about a few blocks away from a city high school. He hasn't registered with Manchester police yet, but police said that when he does, his address will be public.
Less than a day after News 9 spoke with Perfetto in the garage where he had been living, a concerned citizen offered him a place to stay in Manchester, Concord police said.
"Everybody is going to be safe," Perfetto said. "I'm not going to do anything, and that's that."
Perfetto served more than seven years in prison for 60 counts of child











. He said that he also sexually assaulted young women and girls years ago, but he was not charged in connection with those incidents.
Perfetto said that if he lapsed off his medication, he would be concerned that he would re-offend, but he doesn't want to.
"Let's just say (I) was destroyed about what happened," Perfetto said. "I know personally, because I was molested as a kid, and so I know how it is. I ain't going to do it."
Perfetto is now living in the Bridge Street area, the same area where convicted child killer Raymond Guay moved in September before he was moved out of state.
"I am concerned about that location because it's in close proximity to schools and children," Mayor Frank Guinta said.
Central High School is a few of blocks away, but Perfetto said he avoids the students.
"I go away," he said. "I walk the other way."
Legally, the city cannot force sex offenders to move, but police can gather details and watch him closely.
"Exactly where he's living, vehicle information, where he may be going to college or school, his employment," Detective Victoria Catano said.
Perfertto said that's all information he'll willingly give up.
"Yeah, of course," he said. "You gotta do what you gotta do."
Perfetto has five days to register with Manchester police. He then has to reregister two times every year and let police know if he gets a job. His information will be listed in the state sex offender registry. "
This illustrates my point. I truly believe that most of these people were abused as children, given no help, hope, compassion, understanding, TREATMENT to understand what happened and how to deal with it. I fully understand that many are beyond reach (and should be treated as THE WORST danger to society IMO), but unless we are simply going to begin shooting them on sight or confining them to a deserted island until they die, we need to change how we see and treat them or else the problem just perpetuates itself. If we fully addressed this huge problem (along with jobs, education, and health care), I believe our drug problem would also begin to shrink.
I'm in no way suggesting they should have a free ride on tax payers money, just that we, as a society, need to view this differently. Compassion for these people is very hard for me, as with everyone. I just want to keep other kids from living through what I did.
I'll step down off my soap box now.