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Man who raped teen girls is latest cleared <br />for release as MSOP changes course <br />Convicted in 1980s, Dwight Walton would be the eighth offender to earn conditional release. <br />By Chris Serres Star Tribune <br />July 11, 2016 — 1:51pm <br />A man convicted of raping two teenage girls in the 1980s, and who admitted to more than a dozen other <br />female victims, has been approved for conditional release from the Minnesota Sex Offender Program <br />(MSOP), the latest in a string of violent offenders deemed capable by state judges of living in the <br />community. <br />Dwight Walton, 52, will be released to a halfway house in Minneapolis. <br />Walton was convicted in 1986 of raping a 13 -year-old girl, whom he grabbed from behind and threatened <br />to shoot if she made any noise. The next day, Walton sexually assaulted a 19 -year-old girl using a knife, <br />threatening to stab her if she did not cooperate. After serving prison time for those offenses, he broke <br />into a woman's apartment, then fled the scene after she awoke and screamed, according to court <br />documents. Walton later admitted to sexually assaulting 15 adolescent and adult females, all of whom <br />were unknown to him except one. <br />Because of his multiple violent offenses and stranger victims, Walton scored high on actuarial models that <br />estimate the odds that a sex offender will reoffend, court records show. One recent test put him at a <br />moderate -to -high risk for committing another sexual offense. <br />Even so, a panel of state judges last month approved Walton's petition for provisional discharge, ruling <br />that he had shown significant progress in treatment and was capable of adjusting to society. The panel <br />noted that Walton volunteers in the community, mentors other MSOP offenders, attends support groups <br />and has visited family members in Minneapolis without incident. All four clinicians who reviewed Walton's <br />case and offense history supported his petition for discharge. <br />Though Walton will be subject to a high degree of supervision, his discharge reflects a continued <br />softening of attitudes among state officials toward detainees at MSOP, which faces federal court orders to <br />demonstrate it runs a functional treatment program with a clear path toward release. The program <br />confines about 725 rapists, child molesters and other offenders at secure treatment centers in Moose <br />Lake and St. Paul. <br />A year ago, U.S. District Court Judge Donovan Frank in St. Paul declared the MSOP unconstitutional <br />because it detains offenders indefinitely while depriving them of access to the courts and regular risk <br />evaluations, among other legal safeguards. Though Frank's ruling is now under appeal, the state has <br />been releasing offenders at an unprecedented clip. Since the start of 2014, courts have approved eight <br />offenders for provisional discharge, compared with only two in the program's prior 20 -year history. <br />"Three years ago, [Walton] would never have gotten anywhere," said Warren Maas, president of the <br />Minnesota Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers. "The federal [court case] certainly has <br />brought pressure on the entire MSOP bureaucracy to be less obstructive." <br />Walton is expected to be released to a 58 -bed halfway house, at 2825 E. Lake Street in Minneapolis, <br />operated by the Volunteers of America, a nonprofit. The facility, which has round-the-clock staff, <br />specializes in helping prisoners restore community ties and obtain employment in the community. Under <br />conditions of his discharge, Walton will be required to attend outpatient sex offender treatment and to <br />look for work in the community. <br />