The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 

              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.



DATE: Monday, March 4, 1996                  TAG: 9603040067

SECTION: FRONT                    PAGE: A2   EDITION: FINAL 

SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS 

DATELINE: WASHINGTON                         LENGTH: Medium:   53 lines


MOLESTERS' USUAL TARGETS ARE CHILDREN, STUDY SHOWS RELATIVES AND ACQUAINTANCES MOST USUALLY THE GUILTY.

Two-thirds of sex offenders in state prisons attacked children, and a third of these victims were offspring or stepchildren of their attackers, the Justice Department reported Sunday.

In a report based on the largest survey ever of state prison inmates, the department said that children under age 18 bear the brunt of sex offenses and that child molesting remains a crime most often perpetrated by relatives and acquaintances rather than strangers.

The department's Bureau of Justice Statistics estimated that state prisons held 43,552 inmates in 1991 who raped or sexually assaulted children under 18. That represents 65.5 percent of the estimated 66,482 state inmates convicted of raping or sexually assaulting victims of all ages.

``This high rate of child victims is behind the heightened concern and the growing number of states passing laws that provide for notifying neighborhoods when sexual predators move in,'' said David Beatty, acting executive director of the National Victims Center, a private advocacy group in Arlington, Va.

The Justice Department data are consistent with a 1992 national survey of crime victims by Beatty's group. ``Of those who were sexually victimized, 61 percent said it happened when they were under 18 years old,'' he said in an interview.

The Justice Department study found that more than half of the child victims of rape or sexual assault were age 12 or younger. Among all child victims of violence, three-fourths were female.

A third of child molesters had attacked their own child or stepchild. Another half of the molesters were a friend, acquaintance or more distant relative of their victim. Only one in seven molested a child who was a stranger.

Three out of four child molesters committed their crimes either in their own home or the child's home.

The government found that inmates who had attacked children were mostly male, 97 percent, and were more likely to be white, nearly 70 percent, and married or divorced, 64 percent, than prisoners who had victimized those 18 or older. The average child victimizer was five years older than the average inmate who attacked adults.

The study was based on interviews of 14,000 inmates at 277 prisons in 45 states during 1991.

KEYWORDS: PRISONERS STUDY CHILD MOLESTER CHILD ABUSE SEXUAL ABUSE

by CNB