Are You Overprotective Enough?
On my desk I have a product a fellow detective gave me to check out. It is a GPS locator watch for children. It’s big and bulky. It has a blue space theme on it to appeal to children. The wristband locks on to your child’s wrist and alerts parents if and when the ban is removed. Does this sound crazy? Does the word overprotective come to mind? Last week my daughter tripped and fell. She bumped her head on her toybox and started to cry. I rushed over in a panic to make sure she was all right. In my haste I tripped over my dog and nearly fell myself. My wife joked I was being overprotective. In the end the only thing that was damaged was my pride.
As a detective who sees children abducted and kidnapped each day, I wonder where the threshold between overprotective and safe lies.
Every year thousands of children are reported missing. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), as well as many law enforcement agencies, separate missing children into the following categories; family abductions; endangered runaways; non-family abductions; and lost, injured, or otherwise missing children. In most cases the perpetrator is someone the parents or child knows, and that person may be in a position of trust or responsibility to the child and family. As a detective who handles mostly child custody and divorce cases I see parental or family abductions most frequently. The above categories raise the question to us, as parents, “who can we trust?” The most frightening proposition for many parents is the reality that we cannot be watching our children every minute of every day.
The good news for parents is we are not alone in the fight to protect our children. While there is no substitute for a protective parent there are some very good resources to available to parents who want to utilize them.
Most states have adopted a version of a law called Megan’s Law. Megan's Law is named after Megan Kanka, a 7-year-old New Jersey girl who was raped and murdered by a convicted child molester who was her neighbor. Megan was murdered in 1995. At the time of her murder the local police department was not allowed to release sex-offender information to the community. Megan's case caused a movement in the protection of children. On May 8, 1996, President Clinton signed a federal law allowing public access to information about sex offenders. Most states now have a sex offender registry on the Internet which lists offenders and their crimes. This is now a tool parents today can utilize to protect their children. Today a list of sex offender sites can be found on the FBI’s website, http://www.fbi.gov/hq/cid/cac/states.htm.
Many years ago I received a call from a father who wanted me to conduct background checks on his daughter’s teachers and the parents of his daughter’s friends. I was surprised at first by the request, and then I thought about how logical the request was. We read every day about children being victimized by people in positions of authority. Most parents don’t take the next step and check out the people who are in contact with there children. I advised the client that the background investigation probably would not yield anything criminal. But the client explained that he was paying for something priceless – piece of mind. The next time his daughter spent a night at her friend’s house he knew who was having contact with his daughter. He explained he has spent money on extra airbags for his car, special software for his computer, and even bought a more expensive television that offered parental controls so he could limit the channels his daughter could watch. After I completed the investigation I called him and gave him the results. The father of one of his daughter’s friend had been convicted two years prior for aggravated assault. Another one of his daughter’s friends had parents who were going through a divorce. The thing that made this case significant was that there were allegations of abuse. I asked him what he was going to do with this new information. He said he would not bar his daughter from contact with the families in question but would make sure he was present when they visited or would have his daughter’s friend’s play at his house. This is one case where a father’s instincts may have saved his daughter from harm.
Not all parents need to hire a private detective. There are steps parents can take to protect their children,
such as:
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