Skip to main content

Child molester gets probation after plea deal

Somehow... this does not seem like justice.
Source HERE
A 19-year-old former Fort Wayne man was ordered to serve two years of probation Monday in Allen Superior Court for molesting a young teenage girl.
Brayden A. Chayka, most recently of Linton, pleaded guilty to two counts of child molesting. Two other molesting charges were dismissed as part of a plea agreement.
Judge John F. Surbeck Jr. sentenced Chayka to four years in prison but suspended the term and ordered him to complete two years on probation. During probation, Chayka must reside in and obey the rules of a group home and follow special rules of probation designed for sex offenders, and he must register as a sex offender.
Surbeck granted Chayka credit for 67 days served in jail. Before being sentenced, Chayka apologized and told the judge he doesn’t want to hurt the victim anymore.
A probable cause affidavit alleged Chayka fondled, kissed and had oral sex with the girl at least four times in late December and early January.
Chayka’s mother found him naked in bed while the girl was dressing about 4 a.m. in mid-January.


Nor does this: (from the same source)

Molester on detention for failing to register
A 32-year-old Fort Wayne man was sentenced Monday in Allen Superior Court to 18 months’ home detention for failing to update his address on the sex offender registry.
Johnny Wise, of the 5200 block of Eastwick Drive, pleaded guilty last month to one count of failure to register as an offender. Judge Kenneth R. Scheibenberger sentenced Wise according to terms of a plea agreement – 18 months in prison. The agreement allows Wise to serve the prison term on home detention.
Wise was convicted and sentenced to prison in 2001 on one count of child molesting, and he was required to register with Indiana’s Violent and Sexual Offender registry.
A probable cause affidavit said Wise registered after he was released from prison with a River Run Trail address and later updated it to a Guthrie Street address but didn’t update it when he moved to Alvarez Drive in August. The Eastwick Drive address is Wise’s most recent address, according to court records and the registry.


Serving a sentence in the 'comforts' of home does not sound like much of a punishment. Given the internet, cable TV, a/c, ordering out for food, home shopping network. What is the point of "HOME DETENTION" please.. someone fill me in here. Just how is that justice? So he can't go out to the local bar. So sad for him. And what his neighbors get to feel better since he's not just living next door to them... now he's court ordered to stay there in the house? Is the state paying for everyone within window view of his home to install state of the art "keep your demented perverted eyes outta my house" custom steel blinds? Oh yeah.. I feel safer knowing hes not locked up behind bars, just sitting in his house all comfortable. No.. that's a great sentence. (insert sighs of sarcasm here). And then of course you have the first guy... PROBATION??? What the hell are the judges over in Indiana thinking? Trying to out due the idiot from Becker County???? I have to end this posting now- to go bang my head on a brick wall a few dozen times. I really wanna know how it feels to be as DAMN STUPID as these judges.

Categories: , , ,

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Florida Sex Offender Registry

Reading the news today, I was taken back to see that the Florida Sex Offender registry was being criticized. Having had the chance to look at it previously, I had always found it rather informative, and well organized. The issue that many are having with it now wouldn't be noticed by the occasional browser on the site. Which makes it even worse. A review of the FSR has found some rather unsettling statistics: The News-Press analyzed the Florida Department of Law Enforcement database of 36,306 sex offenders and found: • 9,205 of them are incarcerated • 7,037 have run away or can't be found • 824 have been deported; and • 516 are dead. Of the 15,573 sex offenders listed as released and not on parole or probation, only 11,355 of those actually live in Florida. Sex offender registries can only be usefully, and only fully do what they where designed to do when they are updated, maintained and monitored continuously. When you are relying on the SO registries to monitors how safe your...

This land is my land, this land is not your land...

I was reading the illegal immigrant news this morning... you know, all about the Spanish National anthem... and all about their big rally May 2... and I started thinking. Perhaps, just perhaps we need to stand up. It may be a really good time to remind everyone who's country this is. 12 million illegals... heh, I think we can beat that. The rough estimate is that the US has a population of 298,000,000, or close too it. Take away the estimated 12 million illegals, and we still have 286,000,000 give or take some. So, basically, if one were to be honest- a boycott by legal citizens would be more impressive. 12 million illegals, who can not legally vote verses 286 million citizens who can minus children and some criminals. My country. Not theirs. My taxes, my jobs, my political leaders. 286 million people should be able to remind law makers just who put them in office. 286 million people should be able to remind companies who buys their products. 286 million people should be able to si...

The Murder of Karen Tipton

A DOCTOR'S WIFE IS MURDERED, SPELLING TRAGEDY FOR TWO FAMILIES AS A YOUNG MAN’S LIFE HANGS IN THE BALANCE “48 HOURS MYSTERY” REVEALS NEW DRAMATIC DEVELOPMENTS IN A RIVETING LEGAL BATTLE THAT HAS PUT JUSTICE ON TRIAL In March 1999, Karen Tipton, a mother of two and the wife of psychiatrist Dr. David Tipton, was found stabbed 28 times in her Decatur, Ala. home. And for the last nine years Daniel Wade Moore, who was convicted of the crime, has been at the center of an unprecedented legal battle, one that has his life hanging in the balance. Moore, a former drug user, was only 24 when he was arrested for Tipton’s murder after he confessed to his uncle that he had been present at the scene of the crime. While being questioned by police, Moore stabbed himself with a penknife, a move that authorities believe stemmed from his feelings of guilt. Moore, however, says that he is not guilty, explaining that he was getting high on drugs at the time he confessed to his uncle and that he had a...