Sunday, November 8, 2009

Death by Legislation

Death of homeless sex offender in Grand Rapids poses questions - Yahoo! MailWednesday, February 4, 2009
From: "Criminal Justice Forum" news@criminaljusticeforum.com

Death of homeless sex offender in Grand Rapids poses questions
Death by legislation!

01/29/2009
By Tom Rademacher - The Grand Rapids Press
So is this what it finally takes for us to hear the muffled cries of the homeless - an ex-con dead in the snow because it's against the law for a sex offender to huddle up at either of two Grand Rapids missions?
Thomas Pauli didn't choose to die alone in the cold.
He apparently froze to death because of a crime he committed nearly 20 years ago, and a niggling law that's dogged him ever since his release from prison.
In the days prior to the discovery of his body Monday morning at a recycling operation in the 600 block of South Division Avenue, he reportedly attempted to score a bed at either or both the Guiding Light Mission and Mel Trotter Ministries, just blocks away.
But officials at both facilities reluctantly acknowledge they would have turned him away because registered sex offenders can't reside for even one night within 1,000 feet of a school, in this case, Catholic Central High.
Never mind that school isn't in session during the hours a guy like Pauli would have been snoozing away on a warm cot.
Or that ex-cons - or anyone else -- are more likely a threat to a neighborhood when they have nowhere to go. When they are desperate.
The missions aren't to blame. They risk fines or even being shut down if they don't comply with the law.
But it's a law that needs changing. And we need to re-examine our collective level of commitment to a part of society that, to most of us, matters least.
Asks Bill Shaffer, an officer with Guiding Light, "How do we treat the unlovable?" - So why is he unlovable?
"I couldn't sleep last night thinking about Thomas Pauli freezing to death outside," said a tearful Marge Palmerlee,
executive director at Degage Ministries, which cares for folks like Pauli who live and frequent the Heartside area on downtown's fringe.
"Who can sleep at night, thinking of these people outside. It's just unbelievable." No, it's not.
I'll bet that even before readers got to my fourth paragraph, some were thinking that Thomas Pierrie Pauli, who was born on Christmas Eve 52 years ago, got what he deserved. OK, so he spent time in the joint. Big whup. A sex offender should pay forever.
Maybe so. I know too many people - people close to me - who have been victims of sexual assaults. !n Pauli's case, he was convicted in Grand Traverse County in 1991 of second-degree criminal sexual conduct against a person younger than 13.
Of the 5 to 15 years to which he was sentenced, he served more than 11. Not exactly a slap on the wrist. His wife divorced him two years into his stint.
After his release in 2003, he eventually ended up at an address on Leonard Street NE. But he wandered from there and ended up roaming Heartside's gritty domain. He checked in and out of Project Rehab.
On Dec. 30, he was booked for failing to register his address with authorities. He got 16 days for that misdemeanor and was freed Jan. 14.
Sometime during the past two weeks, he tried to bed down at either or both missions, according to Palmerlee, who knows of two people saying they saw Pauli standing in lines.
"A patron told me they'd seen him in Mel Trotter's line not long ago," added Lori King, life enrichment center supervisor at Degage.
Officials at both missions cannot confirm Pauli tried to get in, but they also can't rule it out, because they don't track applicants who are refused admission, only those who make it across the threshold.
Either way, they said it breaks their hearts to know they have to abide by a law that puts men in life-or-death situations.
"Ethically, it feels like we're responsible," said Bill Merchut, in charge of programs at Mel Trotter. "But we have to follow the law."
Added Shaffer, of Guiding Light, "These men and women are clearly The Scarlet Letter' folks of our day. "I've had (sex offenders) say, 'Where can I go?' and I stand there with my mouth open and I have no answer."
There aren't many options for men seeking overnight shelter outside of the two missions. In a perfect world, there would be a homeless shelter located where it could accept sex offenders. Maybe a place like the former Greyhound bus station, Merchut said. Or perhaps the former site of a corrections center on Wealthy Street SW near the Grand River. But any solution will require a monstrous coalition. And money.
Don Lamse was the gentleman who found Pauli about 10 a.m. Monday in a parking area adjacent to the auto recycling operation he manages on South Division. The victim was beside a '93 or '94 GMC conversion van.
Lamse, 70, walked over and tried to rouse him. "Hey, hey," Lamse remembers saying. "Something like that."
Pauli was bent into a crouching position, knees and hands on the ground. He wore no gloves. "I tried to nudge him a bit while I was talking to him, and he felt pretty stiff."
Lamse said he found it odd that Pauli didn't crawl into any one of several unlocked vehicles, the van included. "He could have gone inside and had some shelter if he'd just opened a door.
He added, "That's not a nice way for anybody to die."

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