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Ask Amy: Voyeur son may be reoffending from home

By Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Dear Amy: I raised my son as a single parent. He was a very bright student studying abroad when he started practicing voyeurism. He graduated to taking photos of unsuspecting women in compromising situations.

He was arrested for this four times. I got him the best lawyer I could in hopes that he'd have a chance at living a promising life. The attorney's fees were enormous (and I am not rich). While awaiting trial, he was arrested again. After receiving a five-year prison sentence, I attempted once again to help him, by allowing him to stay in my home.

It has not been easy. He is rude, disrespectful, and does not contribute to the household. He has made no effort to reimburse me the over $10,000 I spent in legal fees. Sounds bad, right? It gets worse.

I recently upgraded the wireless network in my home. The system comes with security software. My son boldly asked if I was blocking porn!

Call me naive, but I decided to try to trust him. I clicked on one of the sites the software had blocked, and ... he is right back into the same stuff that got him locked up.

He now subscribes to a secure cloud server that allows you to upload and share pictures. I just discovered this site this morning.

 

As a condition of his parole, he is required to attend group counseling for sex offenders. (He barely escaped having to register as one.) NONE of this appears to affect this behavior. Somehow, against all odds, he was able to land a job that pays well.

I am at the end of my rope. I just want him to go away. I realize I cannot help him but feel that abandoning him completely would kick him right over the edge.

-- No Trust(fund)

Dear No Trust(fund): You need legal advice, and quickly (I am not a lawyer). No, you should not trust your son. Yes, he needs to be out of your house.

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