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Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE Document 397-1 Filed 10/29/21 Page 38 of 43
294 — S. Craven et al.
Gollwitzer and Schaal (1998, cited in Ward & Hudson, 2000) suggest that it is through
automatic goal-dependent action plans that these SUDs manifest. Ward and Hudson (2000)
propose that there are two such action plans: offence scripts and mental simulations. Offence
scripts manifest as a result of associations that have developed between situations and
behaviours; subsequently, in the presence of certain cues, offence scripts may be activated
without any conscious awareness. This is a possible explanation of continued offending and
relapse following treatment.
Automatic goal-dependent action plans can be activated regardless of whether an
individual has committed any previous sexual crimes. This alternative involves mental
simulation. Mental simulation is where an individual plans out in detail how he would commit
an offence. As with offence scripts, the presence of certain cues may activate this implicit
planning, resulting in the enactment of the individual’s fantasies. The notion of im-
plicit planning may provide a possible explanation why the majority of victims know their
abuser, because the cues that activate the implicit planning are more likely to be present within
the family or in relation to children in the immediate locality (i.e. the places where an individual
spends the majority of his time).
It is reasonable to suggest that the fundamental human need to belong may present one
possibility to further understand offenders’ ability to identify a victim and groom the
environment and significant others. Research has shown that a need to belong can affect very
basic cognitive functions, e.g. attention and encoding of social information (Pickett, Gardner
& Knowles, 2004). Pickett et al. found a positive relationship between a need to belong and
sensitivity to social cues. Sexual offenders often come from neglectful, violent and
dysfunctional backgrounds (Craissati, McClurg & Browne, 2002). This environment is
unlikely to provide an abundance of opportunities for emotional closeness and thus offenders
are likely to have a need to belong. In addition, a need to belong is related to low self-esteem
(Pickett et al., 2004) and research to date suggests that child sex offenders typically have low
self-esteem (Marshall, Anderson & Champagne, 1997). This is supportive of the idea that a
need to belong facilitates offenders’ identification and access to a victim, because of the
associated increased sensitivity to social cues. Children may be approached because the
offender perceives them to be less threatening than peers. Alternatively, offenders may be able
to identify vulnerabilities in other people because they themselves are vulnerable and thus
recognize these signs in others. This explanation would relate to offenders that commit
offences following implicit planning. Offenders using explicit planning may also have a need
to belong and the associated increased sensitivity to social cues, as a result of a need to belong
to the family of community in order to groom and subsequently abuse a child. It is therefore
suggested that, in the presence of a motivation to sexually abuse a child, a need to belong
often facilitates the identification of a victim and grooming of the environment and significant
others.
Grooming the child
Grooming the child is the most commonly recognized form of sexual grooming. In addition to
a desire for sexual gratification, there may or may not be a relational aspect to the grooming
process, depending on the offender’s motivation to abuse. Sexual grooming has been
considered by some to be analogous to adult courtship (e.g. Howitt, 1995). In addition,
Herman (1981) and Christiansen and Blake (1990) talk about sexually abusive fathers
adopting the role of suitor towards their daughter. In the case of intrafamilial abuse, the
offender promotes the child in place of the mother (Leberg, 1997). Alternatively, the offender
may interact with the child on the child’s wavelength (van Dam, 2001). Wilson (1999) found
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| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00005905.jpg |
| File Size | 985.2 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 95.2% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 4,116 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 17:04:39.317676 |