Sexual Predators Hidden in Federal Witness Protection Program, Report Finds

Some of them even committed their crimes while in the program, IG says.

— -- The U.S. government’s Witness Protection Program provides new identities and new communities for federal witnesses who may be at risk.

But what if some of those protected witnesses are also sexual predators? And are their new communities informed?

The Department of Justice Inspector General today released a scathing, and heavily redacted report, criticizing the Federal Witness Protection program for “not taking sufficient steps to mitigate threats posed” by sex offenders in the program, as well as sex offenders recently released from the program. Some of them even committed their crimes while in the program.

The crimes of some of those protected by the program include rape and sexual assault of children.

“We believe that the DOJ generally did not use adequate safeguards to protect and notify the public and law enforcement about the risk posed by sex offender participants in the Program.” the report states.

When the IG audit of Witness Protection began in July 2013, the report found, the Department of Justice didn’t even know how many sex offenders were in Witness Protection. Last year, DOJ identified 58 sex offenders who were in the program at some point.

Ten of those offenders were convicted of sexual offenses before they entered the program. Ten committed their crimes while in the program, and 38 were convicted of sex offenses when they were no longer in the program.

The DOJ won’t say how many people are in its program currently for security reasons, but since its inception in the early-1970s, there have been 8,648 witnesses under protection, mostly by the U.S. Marshals Service.

See the full report on the Witness Protection Program’s monitoring of sex offenders.