
Female Sex Offenders: Double Standard?
Many Say They Don't Get Treated As Harshly As Men
CBS News, HAMMONTON, N.J., USA, June 15, 2006
Are all sex offenders treated the same? Does the public take the cases as
seriously when the offender or alleged offender is a woman? Many people are
asking those questions after several highly-publicized scandals involving female
teachers and male students.
As Susan Koeppen observed on The Early Show Thursday, the
majority of sex offenders are men, but it's the women who get a lot of the
attention.
When a beautiful teacher seduces a student, some people think, "What's the
harm?"
But Koeppen spoke with one student who says his "affair" with a teacher left him
devastated.
"I'm still trying to battle back," Jason Eickmeyer told Koeppen. "This happened
in 2003, and it's 2006, and I still can't get it out of my mind."
At 15, reports Koeppen, Eickmeyer was a champion wrestler, with dreams of going
to a Division I school. But he says all that changed his sophomore year at
Hammonton High in Hammonton, N.J., when, he says, he caught the eye of
26-year-old gym teacher, Traci Tapp.
"She asked me my name," Jason says, "and I said, 'Jason Eickmeyer,' and she
said, 'Oh, so the rumors are true.' And I said, 'What rumors?' And she said that
she thought I was pretty cute.
"It kinda fired me up a little bit, being 15 years old, that's what you wanna
hear from a beautiful teacher like that."
Jason says their relationship quickly escalated from hallway flirtation to a
sexual encounter at the teacher's home. Jason says he was in love.
"Our dreams were to be together forever and produce the blonde hair, blue-eyed
children," he says.
He says he began skipping classes to be with Tapp, and she told him to keep
their affair a secret.
But it didn't stay that way for long.
"People always saw me together with her, every day," he tells Koeppen.
Jason says teachers as well as students knew about the relationship, but no one
stepped in.
When Jason finally told his mother about the relationship, she reported it to
his guidance counselor, who immediately called police.
"It hurt. I mean, he's my baby, he is my youngest son," says Tina Eickmeyer.
Two years after the alleged affair began, Tapp was arrested.
Tina says she's "disgusted" that nobody stepped in to stop the relationship
before it was brought to her attention. "If it had been a male, definitely, he
would have been arrested right away," she contends.
Koeppen says: "We contacted the principal of the high school and the
superintendent of Hammonton schools, but neither would comment. This case raises
the question: Does our society have a double standard when the alleged
perpetrator is a woman?"
"We just don't take it seriously," asserts psychologist Dr. Richard Gartner, who
adds such cases are often the subject of jokes.
But Gartner stresses this is no laughing matter, noting that victims of female
sex offenders can suffer severe emotional scars, including depression, anxiety,
addiction to drugs and alcohol, and sexual dysfunction.
Says Gartner: "This can interfere with trust; this can interfere with
self-esteem. It can go beyond love relationships there can be all kinds of
authority problems, because this is an authority that abused him."
Once an under-reported crime, cases of female sex offenders now make regular
headlines, Koeppen says. But do the punishments fit the crimes?
"The reality is that they're just not going to be sentenced to the same kind of
lengthy prison sentences that the men get," laments Tony Rackauckas, the
District Attorney of Orange County, Calif.
He says he sees this double standard in the courtroom all the time.
One example: middle school teacher Sarah Bench-Salorio, convicted last year of
sexually assaulting 11-, 12-, and 13-year-old boys. She faced more than 60 years
behind bars. The judge gave her six.
"If she was a male teacher, I don't think she'd ever see the light of day
again," Rackauckas says.
Tina Eickmeyer couldn't agree more, asserting, "There is a double standard;
women can get away with it."
She says her son's relationship with his teacher took a devastating toll: His
grades plummeted, he quit the wrestling team, and he was even suspended from
school.
"It got to the point," Jason says, "where I didn't care if I graduated anymore,
I didn't want to see anybody in that school, I didn't care about going on to
wrestle, because all I could think about was her."
Charged with sexual assault, Tapp eventually pleaded guilty to "offensive
touching," and walked away with no jail time at all. Her punishment? She was
barred from teaching in New Jersey public schools, and had to pay a $225 fine.
"If she was a male teacher and I was a female student," Jason insists, "she
would have been put away with maximum penalties. Three years of my life has been
taken away because of a relationship, and I don't think justice was served at
all."
The Eickmeyers say they plan to sue the school district for emotional damages,
claiming the staff knew about the affair, but did nothing.
Koeppen says CBS News contacted Tapp, who declined a request for an
interview, but denied having a sexual relationship with Jason.
The Early Show co-anchor Hannah Storm asked Koeppen what
the allure is for female teachers who seek make student sex partners.
"Experts say many of these women were sexually abused as children," Koeppen
says. "In some cases, these women say they were unpopular as teenagers, and
these relationships make them feel cool and attractive."
What are the warning signs for parents that might indicate their child is having
a relationship with a teacher?
"If your child is spending a lot of time with a teacher, male or female, outside
the classroom," Koeppen says, "that's a major red flag. Look into it."
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