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Criminal Achievement, Criminal Career Initiation, and Detection Avoidance: The Onset of Successful Sex Offending

NCJ Number
241969
Journal
Journal of Crime and Justice Volume: 35 Issue: 3 Dated: November 2012 Pages: 376-394
Author(s)
Patrick Lussier; Jeff Mathesius
Date Published
November 2012
Length
19 pages
Annotation
This study tackles one of the key aspects of the criminal career, the age of onset.
Abstract
In criminology and related disciplines, age of onset has become an important theoretical concept with growing policy and practical implications for criminal justice decisionmaking. The authors claim here that the age of onset, as measured with criminal justice data, provides a distorted view on the actual onset of offending. The authors further argue that age of onset based on official data of offending does not take into consideration the offender's ability to avoid and/or delay detection. To illustrate this, the authors examine the onset of sex offending in adult male sex offenders. Official data, police data, and victim's account were analyzed to compare and contrast the official and actual age of onset. On average, it was found that there is a gap of about 7 years between actual and official age of onset in sex offending. For the most part, while the actual age of onset does not vary across sex offender types, it does for the official age of onset, suggesting differential investment in detection avoidance across offenders. Further, the findings show that close to 20 percent of sex offenders have already desisted or are in the process of desisting by the time they are first charged for their sex crime. Abstract published by arrangement with Taylor and Francis.