Crime & Safety
1 Sex Offender In Stillwater: 2020 Safety Map
Sex criminals and other convicted felons are required to register their address with the state of Minnesota.
STILLWATER, MN — Fall is a good time to take an inventory of who is living in your neighborhood. Stillwater has one registered sex offender living in the city, according to the Minnesota Department of Corrections.
Per DOC: "Joshua Reger was found in possession of child pornography."
Here is where sex offenders are registered as living across Washington County and Dakota County. Pins on the map represent the areas where offenders convicted of sex crimes live. Roll your cursor over the pins, and you will see more information pop up.
Find out what's happening in Stillwaterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Minnesota requires people convicted of certain offenses, including the ones listed below, to register for the state's public database:
- Criminal Sexual Conduct and Felony Level Indecent Exposure
- Kidnapping and False Imprisonment
- Soliciting a minor to engage in prostitution or sexual conduct
- Using a minor in a sexual performance
- Possession of pictorial representations of minors
See the full list of offenses included here.
Minnesota's offender database can be accessed here.
Find out what's happening in Stillwaterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Law enforcement officials and researchers caution that the registries play a limited role in preventing child sexual abuse and stress that most perpetrators are known to the child.
The U.S. Department of Justice, which oversees the National Sex Offender Public Website, estimates that only about 10 percent of perpetrators of child sexual abuse are strangers to the child.
The Justice Department estimates 60 percent of perpetrators are known to the child but are not family members but rather family friends, babysitters, child care providers and others, and 30 percent of child victims are abused by family members. Nearly a quarter of the abusers are under the age of 18, the department estimates.
The Association for the Treatment of Sex Abusers, a nonprofit organization for clinicians, researchers, educators, law enforcement and court officials involved in sexual abuse cases, cautions that children do not face a heightened risk during the Halloween season: "There is no change in the rate of sexual crimes by non-family members during Halloween. That was true both before and after communities enacted laws to restrict the activities of registrants during Halloween. The crimes that do increase around Halloween are vandalism and property destruction, as well as theft, assault, and burglary."
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