I wrote back in March over at The Liberty Papers about criticisms of NBC’s “To Catch A Predator” Series. Today, Fox News is reporting that a prosecutor in Texas is refusing to prosecute any of the men nabbed when Chris Hansen and his cameras came to town:
A sting in which police teamed up with “Dateline NBC” to catch online pedophiles was supposed to send a flinty-eyed, Texas-style warning about this Dallas suburb: Don’t mess with Murphy.
Instead, it has turned into a fiasco.
One of the 25 men caught in the sting - a prosecutor from a neighboring county - committed suicide when police came to arrest him. The Murphy city manager who approved the operation lost his job in the ensuing furor.
And the district attorney is refusing to prosecute any of the men, saying many of the cases were tainted by the involvement of amateurs.
“Certainly these people should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, but the fact that this was all done for television cameras raises some questions,” said Mayor Bret Baldwin.
The story about the suicide points out many of the problems with the “Predator” concept that I raised in March:
Over four days in November, 24 men were arrested at a two-story home in one of Murphy’s newer neighborhoods after allegedly arranging to meet boys or girls there.
Some other suspects contacted Perverted Justice decoys online but never showed up at the house. Among them was Louis Conradt Jr., an assistant prosecutor from neighboring Kauffman County, who allegedly engaged in a sexually explicit online chat with an adult posing as a 13-year-old boy.
As police knocked at his door and a “Dateline” camera crew waited in the street, Conradt shot himself.
And NBC also managed to annoy the town:
As details of the suicide emerged, Murphy’s mayor, City Council and most of its residents learned for the first time that potential molesters were being luring to their city. Many were furious.
“They can chase predators all they want, but they shouldn’t do it in a populated area with children, two blocks from an elementary school,” said Lisa Watson, 33, who lives down the road from the sting house and has three children and another on the way.
Bryan Whorton, who lives with his wife and baby across the street from the house, said his neighborhood was put in danger. Cars sped up and down the street and police sprinted from hiding spots, guns drawn, to arrest suspects, he said. One suspect dropped a bag of crack, Whorton said.
“This is a family community. It didn’t look kosher at all,” he said.
That’s true of the whole concept of the show, quite honestly.


July 21st, 2007 at 6:43 pm
I am sorry that your town was selected for this unique and effectiv operation, but think whith this exposure how many pedophiles will dare enter your community to dephile and hurt your children. I wish my town would be known for capturing these monsters. What you need to questions is the politicians and prosecuting attornies who have the audacity to stand up infornt of a public forum and announce that they
will not prosecute these destroyers of children and their families. So far the public official who okayed this project has been fired. This man should have been hailed as a hero. Iim sure between having a love for children and his community, and has no close friends that are child molesters or murderers of children.He had no problem with secretly okaying this joint operation with the media and police work- ing togethr. I cappreciate what your town has done. It will save the spirit and/or lives of children everywher