Nowhere to go, Miami sex offenders live under bridge
MIAMI (Reuters) - Alejandro Ruiz and his neighbors served their time for sex crimes but found themselves sleeping under a Miami highway bridge because laws meant to keep them away from children leave them nowhere else to live.Aw, poor babies.
Their dismal tent camp, tucked under an overpass on a causeway linking Miami and Miami Beach, reeks of human waste and garbage. But it is the official home of a group of sex offenders caught in a dilemma echoed across the United States.
"Where are we supposed to go? The way they label you, sex offender, nobody wants you around," Ruiz said.
Cities and states have enacted a hodgepodge of laws to keep sex offenders away from victims. In the Miami area, such laws ban them from living within 2,500 feet of schools, playgrounds and other places where children might gather.
Listen to this whining:
"I am not a monster. I am not a leper," said Kevin Morales, 40, who was convicted of lewd and lascivious conduct with a 15-year-old relative.Yes, you are a monster, an animal and I don't want you any where near children.
Then the Reuters moonbats do their best to justify this sick behavior.
In the United States sex offenders can range from rapists and pedophiles to youngsters convicted of illegal but consensual relationships with minors.Hey Reuters, since the minors are underage there can be no consensual sexual relationship. Get it? That's what age of consent means, you morons!
So once again, you are either stupid or lying to your readership. Or both.
I got a real good idea where these creeps and disgusting creeps can go. Let the Reuters editors take some home with them and let these predators have "consensual relationships" with their minor children.
Reuters, documenting their stupidity every day.
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