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- <text id=93TT0870>
- <title>
- Jan. 11, 1993: The Devil's Disciple
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 11, 1993 Megacities
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 40
- The Devil's Disciple
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Westley Dodd may die at the end of a rope, but he leaves behind
- a controversial law against sex offenders
- </p>
- <p>By NANCY GIBBS - With reporting by John Snell/Portland and Miko
- Yim/Vancouver, Washington
- </p>
- <p> It takes a certain act of faith, the first time a mother
- and father let their children go out and play by themselves.
- Faith that sons and daughters will cross streets safely, that
- they will abide by their curfew, that they will remember not to
- talk to strangers. Faith that when they go to the park, someone
- like Westley Allan Dodd will not be there waiting for them.
- </p>
- <p> Westley Dodd is the man who shook the faith of enough
- people in the state of Washington to prompt legislators to pass
- the U.S.'s most unforgiving, possibly unconstitutional, laws
- against sexual predators. After his sentencing for the kidnap,
- rape and murder of three little boys in 1989, hardened
- reporters who covered the case sought counseling to help them
- handle what they had heard in court. A therapist who treated
- Dodd even said, "Wes ought to fry."
- </p>
- <p> In fact this week, barring a last-minute stay of
- execution, Wes will hang. He will be the first person executed
- in Washington since 1963 and the first hanged in the U.S. since
- 1965. While death-penalty opponents pleaded for leniency, Dodd
- vowed that he would sue anyone who sought to save him, and not
- many people were inclined to try.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout his years as a child molester, Dodd showed a
- gift for rebuking the justice system. With each arrest, he
- passed like a cold breeze through the court system and mental
- health institutions and wound up back where he had started:
- hunting children in public parks and devising new schemes to
- kidnap, mutilate, drown, strangle or suffocate them. Time and
- again, the courts reduced the charges, suspended the sentence,
- offered therapy over incarceration. "Each time I entered
- treatment, I continued to molest children," he told the court.
- "I liked molesting children and did what I had to do to avoid
- jail so I could continue molesting."
- </p>
- <p> Dodd says he molested dozens of children and never served
- a sentence longer than four months in jail. Once while
- baby-sitting for some friends, he molested their 10-year-old
- son. After one arrest in Seattle in 1987, he told police that
- his urge was "predatory and uncontrollable." His one-year
- sentence was suspended. In the summer of 1989, Dodd moved to
- Vancouver, Washington, and began stalking children. "I was
- getting bored--I didn't have a TV," Dodd told police. The
- park, he said, looked like "a good hunting ground." One day he
- selected 19 different children he considered killing: 15 boys,
- four girls. One by one, he ruled them out, often because they
- were with an adult. He returned the next evening, bringing
- shoelaces to tie up his victims and a 6-in. fish-fillet knife
- that he hid inside an Ace bandage drawn tight around his ankle.
- </p>
- <p> He came upon two brothers, Cole and William Neer, who were
- taking a shortcut through the park on their way home to supper.
- He tied them up, molested one, stabbed them both, then fled
- back to his apartment as police and ambulance sirens wailed in
- the distance. Dodd wrote about the thrill of it. "I was kind of
- afraid that I was going to get caught," he told the Oregonian.
- "And then as I watched the papers, I realized that the police
- didn't have any clues."
- </p>
- <p> Seven weeks later, Dodd found a four-year-old boy playing
- alone in an elemenschool playground. He coaxed Lee Iseli home
- with him to play some games. "When we got there, I told him he
- had to be real quiet because my neighbor lady didn't like
- kids," Dodd said. He then stripped off Lee Iseli's clothes, tied
- the boy to the bed and began taking Polaroid pictures as he
- molested the child. He later mounted the photos in a
- 4-in.-by-6-in. pink photo album labeled FAMILY MEMORIES.
- </p>
- <p> He paused at one point to make an entry in his diary:
- "6:30 p.m. Will probably wait until morning to kill him. That
- way his body will still be fairly fresh for experiments after
- work." Dodd began strangling the boy at 5:30 a.m. He revived the
- child twice before finally killing him and hanging the body in
- a closet and burning the boy's clothing, except the Ghostbusters
- underpants, which he kept as a trophy.
- </p>
- <p> Police were shocked at the pitiless confessions Dodd
- offered freely upon arrest. His crimes easily persuaded a jury
- to condemn him, but they had a far more incendiary effect on
- public sentiment toward sex offenders in general. As Dodd's
- story unfolded in court, pressure mounted on Governor Booth
- Gardner and state lawmakers to pass what became a uniquely tough
- law. It requires that convicted sex offenders register with
- police wherever they move; that authorities must let the
- community know about the felon in their midst; and, most
- controversial, that the state be allowed to lock up repeat
- offenders after they have served their sentences if they are
- thought to still pose a threat. Such pre-emptive imprisonment,
- which civil libertarians say is grossly unconstitutional, is
- being challenged in court.
- </p>
- <p> The legal system that treated Dodd far too gently until
- way too late now struggles to make amends. Unless the predator
- law is overturned, sex offenders in Washington will be either
- watched, or jailed, forever. It is ironic that for Dodd, who
- fought hard for the right to be hanged, that would be the worst
- possible punishment. The prospect of what amounts to a glamorous
- public suicide was vastly more appealing than a life spent alone
- in a cell the size of a parking space, crushed by boredom,
- without the least chance of freedom. For him, perhaps justice
- would have been better served by denying him his death wish and
- letting him wait, for a very long time, for death to come to
- him.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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