Miami sex offenders form outcast colony

Published: May 3, 2009 at 8:10 PM

MIAMI, May 3 (UPI) -- A growing colony of sex offenders says members are being forced to live as outcasts under a Miami causeway because of strict sexual predator laws.

In 2006, there were seven convicted rapists and child molesters who had registered with Miami-Dade County officials as living in tents and shacks under the Julia Tuttle Causeway connecting Miami Beach and the mainland. Now there are 65 men and one woman among the colony, The Miami Herald reported Sunday.

They say they're forced to live there because of a county ordinance prohibiting sex offenders from living within 2,500 feet of where children congregate -- leaving nowhere in the county to live except the airport, the Everglades or under the causeway, the newspaper said.

"People call this place a camp, like it's pretty and fun," Osvaldo Castillo, 29, who was convicted of molesting a 6-year-old boy, told the Herald. "It's not fun at all. We are living like animals and trying to make the best of it."

"Now, we gotta be our own city," added Juan Carlos Martin, convicted of exposing himself to a 15-year-old girl. "Every attempt we've made to fight this has failed, so we have to make this work."

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
'Voodoo Child' named top guitar riff (30 min)
Corn was up, other grains lower on CBOT (39 min)
COL BKB: West Virginia 73, Texas A&M 66 (41 min)
UPI NewsTrack Business (53 min)
UPI NewsTrack Health and Science News (58 min)
British turn to online Xmas shopping
Police: Robber overdressed for weather
fark
If you're in the market to buy millions of pounds of dead carp, the state of Utah has one heck of...
Not news: Man falls for exotic beauty while on vacation. News: She confesses she's a dude on their...
Tiger Woods condition upgraded from "serious" to "typical celebrity drunk driving accident"
Tow truck drivers tell cops they thought cars they towed from Best Buy last night belonged to patrons...
Indiana police called to two separate Toys 'R Us stores because customers were fighting over robotic...
Family's Thanksgiving dinner winds up with four people shot to death, lots of leftovers