Haitian victims testify of abuse by Colo. man
By DAVE COLLINS
The Associated Press
Tuesday, December 21, 2010; 2:56 PM
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Now a resident of Eagle, Colo., Perlitz founded the school in 1997 when he lived in Fairfield County, Conn. Authorities said he began abusing the children in 1998 before the school was built.
Another victim said Perlitz started abusing him on his 14th birthday in 2004. He said he struggled with feelings of shame and thought about suicide, especially when he read the Bible.
"I am here today to tell the truth. Because of the truth I can find justice," he said. "He hurt us a lot."
Character witnesses were expected to testify on Perlitz's behalf later in the day.
Perlitz was arrested last year and pleaded guilty to travel with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct, a crime that carries up to 30 years in prison.
Prosecutors have asked the judge for a prison sentence of nearly 20 years, saying Perlitz preyed on some of the world's most vulnerable: Haitian street children with little or no family support or education.
Authorities said Perlitz enticed the impoverished children into sex acts by promising food, shelter, money, electronics and other items of value, and then threatened to withhold benefits and expel them if they spurned his advances.
More:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/21/AR2010122103624.html
Douglas Perlitz talks about his missionary work with Haitian street
children in a 2004 interview in Fairfield, Conn. (AP)Defense downplays threats by Perlitz against two federal prosecutors
Michael P. Mayko, Staff Writer
Published: 11:33 p.m., Sunday, December 19, 2010
NEW HAVEN -- Lawyers for Douglas Perlitz downplayed threats and disparaging remarks he and a younger brother made against two federal prosecutors in telephone conversations recorded last summer at the Wyatt Federal Detention Center in Rhode Island.
Instead, David Grudberg and William F. Dow, III, Perlitz's lawyers, blamed the heated comments on emotion and frustration stemming from the defendant's arrest, detention and eventual conviction for sexually abusing homeless Haitian boys in a program he established to help them.
"The fact remains, however, that the (criminal justice) process often is taxing and frustrating, especially for those in custody," said Grudberg, who will try to convince U.S. District Judge Janet Bond Arterton that Perlitz deserves much less than the nearly 20-year sentence prosecutors are demanding. "This frustration and emotion often leads parties affected by the process to vent in any number of ways -- against their lawyers, against the justice system or against the prosecution...it is vital to differentiate between expressions of frustration and a genuine plot to do harm."
But prosecutors say Perlitz and his brother did more than vent -- they threatened and belittled Assistant U.S. Attorney Krishna Patel's heritage -- knowing their conversations were recorded and would get back to her. However, neither Perlitz nor his younger brother, who lives in Colorado, were charged with any criminal offense related to the alleged threats.
More:
http://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Defense-downplays-threats-by-Perlitz-against-two-909519.php