- Associated Press - Saturday, May 31, 2014

The Portland (Maine) Press Herald, May 27, 2014

As the number of children diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder has soared, a nationwide effort is gaining ground to spread the word about the likelihood of their wandering off from a safe environment.

Of the over 500,000 children on the autism spectrum, about half are prone to wandering. This behavior has been linked to the deaths of dozens of children with autism since 2008. One such tragedy - involving a New York City boy found dead in a river three months after he walked away from school - has spurred the U.S. government to fund GPS tracking devices for children with autism spectrum disorders.

But while the effort to expand families’ access to tracking devices is a worthy one, it shouldn’t overshadow the lower-tech strategies for preventing and responding to wandering by children with autism: collaboration, education and sharing information. Though safety can be enhanced by technology, it shouldn’t depend on technology.

This year, the Justice Department agreed to cover the cost of GPS tracking devices for children with autism. Distribution will be managed by local law enforcement agencies. Sen. Chuck Schumer, who initiated the push for federal coverage, said he’ll continue to press for legislation to secure long-term federal funding for the devices.

GPS might have saved Avonte Oquendo, a Queens boy who had a severe form of autism and couldn’t speak. It’s also highly probable, though, that stricter school safety protocols would have helped. Videotaped surveillance footage indicates that a security guard saw the 14-year-old leave the building last Oct. 4 but didn’t stop him.

And it’s far from clear whether tracking devices would have made a difference for Jaden Dremsa. The Waterboro 15-year-old’s body was recovered May 17, nine days after he told his family he was going for a walk; state officials concluded that he drowned in a nearby lake after hitting his head. But GPS units aren’t waterproof, and they’re not always reliable in wooded or rural areas. What’s more, some experts have said, wearing a tracking device might seem unnecessary and stigmatizing to young people like Jaden Dremsa, who had a high-functioning form of autism.

Maine’s autism community is pioneering efforts to educate families and the larger community about wandering. Through the Autism Society of Maine, federal probation officer Matt Brown - father of a boy with autism - has trained several thousand Maine law enforcement officials in searching for people with the disorder.

Brown also encourages parents to tell local police that they have a child with autism and offer specific information, like how their child might behave when approached. He’s hoping this data can be put into electronic form so it can be more easily shared in the field by officers from different agencies.

Making GPS units accessible to more families can’t hurt, but there are other ways to ensure the safety of children with autism, and the advent of electronic tracking devices should encourage more - not less - creative thinking on this issue, which is so urgent to so many families.

The Telegram & Gazette of Worcester (Mass.), May 30, 2014

For all the problems and injustices that plague American courts, the system does still manage to reach the right conclusion much of the time. Never was that more evident than in Federal District Court in New York, when a former member of the computer hacking collective known as Anonymous was lauded by prosecutors and allowed to walk free.

Hector Xavier Monsegur, 30, who could have faced 20 or more years in prison, was instead sentenced to time served and freed, after prosecutors described his extraordinary cooperation in helping disrupt hundreds of cyber attacks and leading to the arrest of eight people.

Monsegur was first apprehended in June 2011, and immediately agreed to cooperate with authorities, primarily to avoid losing custody of two cousins for whom he was a foster parent.

Over the next three years, Monsegur helped the government avert many attacks, saving millions of dollars and preventing potentially catastrophic problems with infrastructure.

In court this week, he assured a judge that he is a changed man, one who is “ready to move on” with his life.

No one but Monsegur can truly know whether that is the case, but his help to the FBI is obvious, and prosecutors would not have sought leniency if they had harbored any doubts about the value of that work or the sincerity of his convictions.

Monsegur’s case is a reminder of the power of good, and the opportunity for redemption. We wish him well.

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