SAN FRANCISCO
– Residents of Soledad say they are insulted by the state’s plan
to move sex predator Brian DeVries to a trailer on the grounds of a
nearby prison.

This isn’t the appropriate location for him,

said Noelia Chapa, city manager for the Monterey County town of
13,000 along Highway 101.

He needs to go back to Santa Clara County. We don’t want to be
the dumping ground here.

SAN FRANCISCO – Residents of Soledad say they are insulted by the state’s plan to move sex predator Brian DeVries to a trailer on the grounds of a nearby prison.

“This isn’t the appropriate location for him,” said Noelia Chapa, city manager for the Monterey County town of 13,000 along Highway 101. “He needs to go back to Santa Clara County. We don’t want to be the dumping ground here.”

State officials, under pressure from the superior court judge who granted DeVries’ release in February, chose the spot after months of debate over where to house the first graduate of the state’s post-prison sex offender treatment program.

Chapa said the city will petition the same judge today to stay his order releasing DeVries by Sunday. If that fails, the city attorney will explore other options, Chapa said.

In a seemingly last-minute move, the state Department of Mental Health announced Wednesday that DeVries would be moved – at least temporarily – to a trailer at the edge of the Correctional Training Facility, a medium-security prison less than five miles from Soledad.

“We’re a small community, and we’re just getting over the stigma of being a prison community,” Soledad resident Bobbie Reynolds said at this week’s city council meeting, where members voted unanimously to try to block DeVries’ relocation. “It will have such a negative impact, it will be unbelievable.”

DeVries’ lawyer, public defender Brian Matthews, said he understands the community’s fears.

“The thing they should know is that Brian has done the state-of-the-art treatment program, all the doctors have approved his release and he’ll be more heavily supervised than any person has been in the state of California,” he said. “He’s much less dangerous than your average serious sex offender who gets out and doesn’t get treatment or supervision.”

The move must take place before Sunday to be in compliance with Judge Robert Baines’ order, but as of early Thursday the trailer had not yet been purchased, said department spokeswoman Nora Romero. It also was unclear whether the Global Positioning Satellite device DeVries needs to wear to monitor his movements could be programmed in time.

All the treatment providers for DeVries’ mandatory therapy, drug testing and physical exams are located in San Jose, which means – at least until he gets a driver’s license and a vehicle – DeVries will be commuting.

“There’s no room for error,” Chapa said. “If something happens, it happens and it’s not going to be something minor.”

DeVries, 44, molested at least nine young boys in New Hampshire, Florida and San Jose before serving his last term in prison. To help demonstrate his intent to reform, DeVries was castrated in August 2001. DeVries said the surgery took away his ability to get sexually aroused.

He was sent to Atascadero State Hospital in 1997, after finishing his last prison sentence. He’s been locked up – in the hospital or in prison – since September 1993.

The state expects to spend at least $180,000 a year on his housing and treatment. DeVries expects to cover the rest of his expenses by selling his paintings or handmade jewelry. He’s also working on a novel.

“It’s a hard thing to know that you’re a hated person and to know that the things you do are hateful and hated by others,” DeVries told The Associated Press last month. “There’s no justifying my life. There’s no ‘poor me’ in it. I’m not a sympathetic character.”

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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