But I feel you fail to grasp the point of my post.
Why disclose a 14 year old crime, why risk the life you have now, the friends you have now, the women who loves you.
The point is that convicts try to attempt to integrate into a `"normal life" because that benefits them to be a normal person.
There are many, many women who marry men who have UNDISCLOSED criminal records and they do that because they know that the women will have nothing to do with them or anyone else.
These men are the child abusers, the wife beaters, the druggie, the man who killed another man with his buddy on a night out, drunk driving.
These people have been released from prison and go out and meet a women with a child specifically to abuse that child and or mother.
Or what about the rapist, or the guy charged with manslaughter.
These people with intent do this to deceive others to victimize others. They have been in and out of prison all their life.
BUT, again these men did not commit these crimes as 10 year old children, they committed them as adults.
I do not see anything benefit to anyone to disclose the past of the killers.
Again a person grows, changes and knows what they did was wrong from a child of 10 to 14. This man has a caseworker, you can bet your bottom dollar that the caseworker will keep tabs if a child is involved.
But again, he did not harm his own child, as he was merely a child himself, albeit a disturbed child.
So please, speculation aside. I do not see the evidence to compel disclosure.
I can see what you're saying - I am sure that both these men are being watch closely by authorities in their paroled positions! I think that the question here is an ethical one. And I think that ethically - that bride deserves to know. If you were her, wouldn't you want to know? I would. But law wise... no, I do not know that THAT can be mandated.