10 Things You Didn't Know About Susan Collins

February 2, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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1. Susan M. Collins was born on Dec. 7, 1952, in Caribou, Maine, the northeasternmost U.S. city.

2. Her parents, Donald and Patricia, each served as mayor of the city of Caribou. Her father also represented the area as a state senator.

3. While Collins was a student at Caribou High School, the school would close for three weeks every September so she and her classmates could help the community harvest potatoes.

4. When she was 17, she visited Washington, D.C., for the first time with the Senate Youth Program. During her visit, she met her idol, Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, who in 1950 stood up to Sen. Joe McCarthy with her "Declaration of Conscience" speech.

5. Collins graduated magna cum laude with a B.A. from St. Lawrence University in 1975.

6. After college, she worked for Maine Republican Rep. William Cohen for 12 years in his Washington office. In 1987, she returned to Maine to serve as secretary of professional and financial regulation in the cabinet of Gov. John McKernan.

7. In 1992, President George H. W. Bush appointed Collins as New England regional director for the Small Business Administration.

8. Running as a Republican in 1994, she was the first woman in Maine's history to earn a major-party nomination for governor. She lost the general election.

9. Collins has never been married and has no children.

10. Collins has held her Senate seat since January 1997 and has never missed a vote. She's the ranking member of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

Sources:

  • susancollins.com
  • collins.senate.gov
  • The Nation
  • WhoRunsGov.com
  • Diane DuBois, Director of the Caribou Public Library
Tags:
Susan Collins,
Republican Party

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She is queer

Bobby of TX 10:14PM December 20, 2010

She supports putting juvenile sex offender on the National Internet Registry, Adam Walsh's 'MURDER' Law?

Collins says, "I think it's important to remember that this law serves a very important purpose as far as protecting our children."

Thursday, January 7, 2010

New findings on juvenile sex offending

Sexually Violent Predator laws have so colored our perceptions that we often ignore a more typical type of sex offender -- the kid next-door. Indeed, of known sex offenders against children, more than a third are other juveniles, according to a new study commissioned by the Justice Department.

Most of these young offenders are not pedophiles or sexual deviants. Rather, they are sexual experimenters, date rapists, and boys who commit sexual assaults as part of a group. Risk of sexual acting out increases sharply as boys enter puberty, and plateaus at age 14, according to the study. The overwhelming majority of youths apprehended for sexual misconduct -- an estimated 85-95 percent -- have no further arrests for sex offenses.

This suggests that new federal rules placing juveniles on public sex offender registries are counterproductive, as the broad majority of youthful sex offenders will mature out of offending and should not be stigmatized for life. Rather, says study co-author David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center, early sex education is a key to preventing youthful sexual misconduct.

Even as U.S. states get set to implement the registration and reporting requirements of the Adam Walsh Protection and Safety Act this year, under penalty of losing grants if they do not comply, a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee is receiving testimony about problems with the registry.

"There are some very compelling cases that ... don't rise to the threshold of a predator and shouldn't be on the register," Republican Representative Tonya Schuitmaker of Michigan, a member of the committee, told the Michigan Herald-Palladium. "Unfortunately, they get lumped in with the predators."

The newspaper cited as an example the case of a 17-year-old boy who perfectly illustrates the juvenile study findings:

Since committing his offenses between the ages of 12-14, he has not had any further problems. He successfully completed probation and 200 hours of public service work and he excels in school, where he plays several sports. Yet, when he turns 18 his name will be placed on a registry that will stigmatize him until his 40s.

Gloria Gillespie, a sex offender therapist, told the newspaper that the boy's offenses were exploratory, and he is not a predator at risk of committing new offenses.

ON A RELATED NOTE: For a judicial analysis of the punitive and stigmatizing impact of the federal reporting law (SORNA), see the Maine Supreme Court opinion in Maine v. Letalien. Eric S. Letalien was 19 years old when he was convicted of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl. He was sentenced to prison and placed on a public regist

Honest Opinion of NJ 10:04PM May 08, 2010

I think she "sandbagged" the Dems on Healh care?

Jim Erwin of MI 3:23PM February 04, 2010

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