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- <text id=93TT0258>
- <title>
- July 26, 1993: Burn Thy Neighbor
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 58
- Burn Thy Neighbor
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Where can a child molester go after serving time? Not home
- </p>
- <p>By DAVID VAN BIEMA--With reporting by David S. Jackson/Seattle and Ratu Kamlani/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> The neighborhood in which Joseph Gallardo's house burnt down
- isn't posh; despite abutting Seattle's Volvo-saturated suburbs,
- Snohomish County runs more to pickup trucks. But it is still
- a community, with lots of children and loving, anxious parents--which is presumably why someone lit the match.
- </p>
- <p> Gallardo is not home today; the arson was committed to prevent
- his return after an enforced 33-month absence. Still, the cars
- cruise by and people shout out. "Freak!" yells one girl. "Finish
- the job," adds a man--meaning, burn Gallardo. Voreen Siders
- and some friends stand 50 yards from the house's embers. They
- are emphatic: they would never set the blaze. But none pretends
- to be sad. Nearby hangs a notice featuring a long-haired, mustachioed
- Gallardo, 35, with a description:...VIEWED AS AN EXTREMELY
- DANGEROUS UNTREATED SEX OFFENDER WITH A VERY HIGH PROBABILITY
- FOR RE-OFFENSE...HAS SADISTIC AND DEVIANT SEXUAL FANTASIES
- WHICH INCLUDE TORTURE, SEXUAL ASSAULT, HUMAN SACRIFICE, BONDAGE
- AND THE MURDER OF YOUNG CHILDREN. The sheet--not a wanted
- poster, since Gallardo has served his time--was distributed
- by the sheriff's office. Siders gestures at a gaggle of radiant
- grade-school girls. These are his type, she remarks. Another
- car passes: someone yells, "Let him burn!"
- </p>
- <p> Several things were illuminated by firelight last week: that
- Gallardo was not welcome; that someone would commit a new crime
- to stress that; and that it is hard to write good law accommodating
- the popular belief that once a sexual predator, always a sexual
- predator.
- </p>
- <p> In 1986, Gallardo's girlfriend discovered him engaged in oral
- sex with her 10-year-old daughter; but she declined to file
- charges, and the case was dropped. Then in 1990, deputies responding
- to another complaint at the house (owned by Gallardo's father)
- found what Snohomish County sheriff's office spokesman Elliott
- Woodall describes as "a lot of very disturbing material of a
- cult nature, a satanic nature and a pornographic nature, all
- oriented toward young females." They reopened the statutory-rape
- case involving the 10-year-old, and Gallardo pleaded guilty
- in 1991.
- </p>
- <p> He was a model prisoner at the Twin Rivers Corrections Center,
- with two exceptions: first, he opted out of a program for sex
- offenders--since he would not be in jail long enough to complete
- it. More alarming was the art he drew in his cell--"pornographic
- pictures of children," says Janet Barbour, Twin Rivers superintendent,
- "and pictures showing violence being done to children."
- </p>
- <p> Elsewhere, this might have had no official consequence. But
- in 1990, Washington responded to a rash of gruesome sex crimes
- with the bold and much debated Community Protection Act, addressing
- sexually violent predators. Its most controversial provision--that at the moment of their release, habitual, violent sexual
- offenders may be reincarcerated indefinitely for "treatment"--did not apply to Gallardo. But another clause permits local
- authorities to warn of a former "predator's" arrival in town.
- </p>
- <p> The sheriff's office decided to exercise that option. "This
- guy has got some real problems," says Woodall. "He's a threat
- to the neighborhood, and we want them to know." At a tense meeting,
- county officials could do little but advise parents to warn
- children about strangers. Of the fire, Woodall says, "This is
- the first time we've had someone break the law and burn down
- a house. Everybody's on a learning curve."
- </p>
- <p> The Washington State A.C.L.U.'s Jerry Sheehan says the law "generated
- exceedingly dangerous vigilante conduct ((and)) is likely to
- be found unconstitutional." Still, mass culture and some experts
- view violent sex offenders as irredeemable monsters. Rutgers
- University law professor emeritus Alexander D. Brooks thinks
- that longer sentences should reflect this. "To put men like
- this in institutions is rough on them," he says, "but you have
- to tip the scales in favor of women and children."
- </p>
- <p> Maria Gallardo believes the scales have been tipped enough against
- her younger brother. Beyond maintaining that he was "railroaded"
- into his 1991 guilty plea, she says of his violent drawings
- and writings, "He's plagued by nightmares. I was too, for a
- long time. He would write down the dream and how he felt during
- it, to see where this madness was coming from." It was self-therapy,
- she says; only the police "took it upon themselves to believe
- that they were things he wanted to do, or had done and just
- hadn't been caught." In that way, "they lit the fire of the
- people that lit the fire to my father's house."
- </p>
- <p> Joe has joined a brother in New Mexico. The neighbors there
- know everything, thanks to the media. But should Joe move again,
- only some 20 states require former sex felons to register, and
- few governments announce their presence. Gallardo could then,
- for better or worse, join a community where no one will be aware
- of his past.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-