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- "page_number": "5",
- "document_number": "452-1",
- "date": "11/12/21",
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- "full_text": "Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE Document 452-1 Filed 11/12/21 Page 5 of 43\n960\nN. Bennett and W. O'Donohue\nTABLE 1 General Definitions of Grooming\nAuthor(s)\tDefinition of Grooming (taken directly from reference)\nSgroi (1982)\t\"How does [the perpetrator] get the child to participate in some type of sexual behavior? Usually in a low-key, nonforcible fashion, possibly by presenting the activity as a game or something that is 'special' and fun. This always entails misrepresentation of moral standards, either verbally or implicitly. . . . Perhaps rewards or bribes will be offered.\"\nSalter (1995)\t\"The establishment (and eventual betrayal) of affection and trust occupies a central role in the child molester's interactions with children. The grooming process itself often seems similar from offender to offender, largely because it takes little to discover that emotional seduction is the most effective way to manipulate children.\"\nHowitt (1995)\t\"The steps taken by paedophiles to 'entrap' their victims and is in some ways analogous to adult courtship.\"\nLeberg (1997)\t\"The offender plans to make the victim less likely to resist, to make others unaware of what he is doing, or even to make them likely to help him, without their knowledge, to molest a child.\"\nGallagher (1999)\t\"Entrapment involves the use of an array of material, illicit and emotional 'inducements' to draw children into abusive situations and increases their difficulty in disclosing.\"\nBrackenridge (2001)\t\"The process by which a perpetrator isolates and prepares an intended victim.\"\nGillespie (2002)\t\"The process by which a child is befriended by a would-be abuser in an attempt to gain the child's confidence and trust, enabling them to get the child to acquiesce to abusive activity. It is frequently a pre-requisite for an abuser to gain access to a child.\"\nBerson (2003)\t\"Grooming involves a clever process of manipulation, typically initiated through a nonsexual approach, which is designed to entice a victim into a sexual encounter (Brown, 2001). The inhibitions of a child are lowered through active engagement, desensitization, power and control. It is often characterized as a seduction, involving a slow and gradual process of learning about a child and building trust. This also contributes to the difficulty in detecting the activity. Grooming is also a deceptive process in which a child is unprepared to interpret cues which signal danger of risk. Predators are skilled at gaining the cues of a child before luring them into interactions. The process of grooming through the formation of a close bond creates a victim who is more likely to comply with sexual advances.\"\nO'Connell (2003)\t\"A course of conduct enacted by a suspected paedophile, which would give a reasonable person cause for concern that any meeting with a child arising from the conduct would be for unlawful purposes.\"\nSpiegel (2003)\t\"Subjection is the process of predisposing a boy to sexual abuse by means of subtle or blatant interactions that lead to boundary diffusion and role confusion.\"\nCraven, Brown, and Gilchrist (2006)\t\"A process by which a person prepares a child, significant adults and the environment for the abuse of this child. Specific goals include gaining access to the child, gaining the child's compliance and maintaining the child's secrecy to avoid disclosure. This process serves to strengthen the offender's abusive pattern, as it may be used as a means of justifying or denying their actions.\"\nKnoll (2010)\t\"The process by which sex offenders carefully initiate and maintain sexually abusive relationships with children. Grooming is a conscious, deliberate, and carefully orchestrated approach used by the offender. The goal of grooming is to permit a sexual encounter and keep it a secret.\"\nDOJ-OGR-00006797",
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- "content": "960\nN. Bennett and W. O'Donohue",
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- "content": "TABLE 1 General Definitions of Grooming",
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- "content": "Author(s)\tDefinition of Grooming (taken directly from reference)",
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- "content": "Sgroi (1982)\t\"How does [the perpetrator] get the child to participate in some type of sexual behavior? Usually in a low-key, nonforcible fashion, possibly by presenting the activity as a game or something that is 'special' and fun. This always entails misrepresentation of moral standards, either verbally or implicitly. . . . Perhaps rewards or bribes will be offered.\"\nSalter (1995)\t\"The establishment (and eventual betrayal) of affection and trust occupies a central role in the child molester's interactions with children. The grooming process itself often seems similar from offender to offender, largely because it takes little to discover that emotional seduction is the most effective way to manipulate children.\"\nHowitt (1995)\t\"The steps taken by paedophiles to 'entrap' their victims and is in some ways analogous to adult courtship.\"\nLeberg (1997)\t\"The offender plans to make the victim less likely to resist, to make others unaware of what he is doing, or even to make them likely to help him, without their knowledge, to molest a child.\"\nGallagher (1999)\t\"Entrapment involves the use of an array of material, illicit and emotional 'inducements' to draw children into abusive situations and increases their difficulty in disclosing.\"\nBrackenridge (2001)\t\"The process by which a perpetrator isolates and prepares an intended victim.\"\nGillespie (2002)\t\"The process by which a child is befriended by a would-be abuser in an attempt to gain the child's confidence and trust, enabling them to get the child to acquiesce to abusive activity. It is frequently a pre-requisite for an abuser to gain access to a child.\"\nBerson (2003)\t\"Grooming involves a clever process of manipulation, typically initiated through a nonsexual approach, which is designed to entice a victim into a sexual encounter (Brown, 2001). The inhibitions of a child are lowered through active engagement, desensitization, power and control. It is often characterized as a seduction, involving a slow and gradual process of learning about a child and building trust. This also contributes to the difficulty in detecting the activity. Grooming is also a deceptive process in which a child is unprepared to interpret cues which signal danger of risk. Predators are skilled at gaining the cues of a child before luring them into interactions. The process of grooming through the formation of a close bond creates a victim who is more likely to comply with sexual advances.\"\nO'Connell (2003)\t\"A course of conduct enacted by a suspected paedophile, which would give a reasonable person cause for concern that any meeting with a child arising from the conduct would be for unlawful purposes.\"\nSpiegel (2003)\t\"Subjection is the process of predisposing a boy to sexual abuse by means of subtle or blatant interactions that lead to boundary diffusion and role confusion.\"\nCraven, Brown, and Gilchrist (2006)\t\"A process by which a person prepares a child, significant adults and the environment for the abuse of this child. Specific goals include gaining access to the child, gaining the child's compliance and maintaining the child's secrecy to avoid disclosure. This process serves to strengthen the offender's abusive pattern, as it may be used as a means of justifying or denying their actions.\"\nKnoll (2010)\t\"The process by which sex offenders carefully initiate and maintain sexually abusive relationships with children. Grooming is a conscious, deliberate, and carefully orchestrated approach used by the offender. The goal of grooming is to permit a sexual encounter and keep it a secret.\"",
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- "content": "DOJ-OGR-00006797",
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- ],
- "entities": {
- "people": [
- "Sgroi",
- "Salter",
- "Howitt",
- "Leberg",
- "Gallagher",
- "Brackenridge",
- "Gillespie",
- "Berson",
- "O'Connell",
- "Spiegel",
- "Craven",
- "Brown",
- "Gilchrist",
- "Knoll",
- "N. Bennett",
- "W. O'Donohue"
- ],
- "organizations": [],
- "locations": [],
- "dates": [
- "1982",
- "1995",
- "1997",
- "1999",
- "2001",
- "2002",
- "2003",
- "2006",
- "2010",
- "11/12/21"
- ],
- "reference_numbers": [
- "1:20-cr-00330-PAE",
- "452-1",
- "DOJ-OGR-00006797"
- ]
- },
- "additional_notes": "The document appears to be a court filing related to a case involving child sexual abuse. The table provides definitions of 'grooming' from various authors and researchers in the field. The document is likely part of a larger report or expert testimony."
- }
|