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Deviant Sexuality and Crime

Deviant Sexuality and Crime. Pat Hinkle, MA, LPC, LMFT (W) 913-438-2100 (W & C) 913-927-2402 pat@HinkleAssociatesLLC.com. Deviant Sexuality Specific to Crime. Who are the “typical” offenders? What are the dynamics of these typical offenders?

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Deviant Sexuality and Crime

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  1. Deviant Sexuality and Crime Pat Hinkle, MA, LPC, LMFT (W) 913-438-2100 (W & C) 913-927-2402 pat@HinkleAssociatesLLC.com

  2. Deviant Sexuality Specific to Crime • Who are the “typical” offenders? • What are the dynamics of these typical offenders? • Does the environment play a role, i.e. opportunity, trauma exposure, abuse • What is victimology, and what role does that have?

  3. Paraphilia • DSM-IV-TR paraphilias "are characterized by recurrent, intense sexual urges, fantasies, or behaviors that involve unusual objects, activities, or situations and cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning," (p. 535).

  4. Fantasy defined • sexual fantasy, also called an erotic fantasy, is a deliberate fantasy or pattern of thoughts with the goal of creating or enhancing sexual feelings; it is mental imagery that an individual considers erotic

  5. Which scene appeals to you?

  6. 8 Paraphilias, According to DSM-IV-TR • Exhibitionism • Voyeurism • Fetishism • Frotteurism • Pedophilia • Sexual Masochism • Sadism • NOS (telephone scatologia, necrophilia,etc)

  7. Conclusion • Lesson Objectives… • Identified “typical” offenders, per lens of Criminal Justice System • Discussed dynamics of typical offenders • Discussed role of environment opportunity, trauma exposure and abuse • Discussed victimology, affect of choices regardless of their quality, when the “perfect storm” presents

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