The Atlantic

The Puzzle of Housing Aging Sex Offenders

States are grappling with how to care for a growing population of registered offenders in long-term care facilities.
Source: Kai Pfaffenbach / Reuters

When state officials finally released William Cubbage from the Iowa Mental Health Institute in 2010, they predicted he was too sick to hurt anyone again. But the octogenarian only became an even more notorious sex offender.

Between 1987 and 2000, Cubbage was convicted in four separate cases of assault. Then, a year after his release, he molested a 95-year-old woman in a nursing home. Neither the home’s patients nor their families had been notified of his history. The woman’s relatives were unable to sue, when the Iowa Supreme Court ruled the state was not legally liable. The state took Cubbage back, and in 2016 he was in the news for allegedly trying to grope a care worker during a bath.

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