March 23, 2021

Story one man

Fugitive sex offender William Zuerstel, who was once arrested with a young girl, is back in Wichita. Zuerstel served four years in prison for lewd and lascivious behavior after police found him having sex with a 14-year-old girl he’d met on Facebook. Police say the girl was a student of his, and Zuerstel took her to his home and showed her what he did with the young girl he had at his house. They also say he was using his nephew’s gun. He will face a judge on Wednesday.

Sexologist Karen Graham said sexual predators like Zuerstel are concerned about the potency of the sex they are committing.

Find information on how to treat potency problems can be found here: https://potency-shop-dubai.com/

“I think the potency is in the intimacy of the human sexual act,” Graham said. “We tend to get very scared of sex. We tend to equate sex with blood, we think it has a lot of violence, and therefore, for these people, a sexual act where they have an interaction where they take it to a very violent level, they feel very empowered, a sense of power and potency.”

Graham said because of that, these sex offenders tend to have sex with many women and children. They are not looking for commitment.

But Graham warned sex offenders that what they are doing is illegal.

“Because of the fact that people are making so much money from these sex offenders, people are now being trafficked as sex offenders,” Graham said. “You can get people paid to do sexual acts, people are now being pimped out to people that are interested in sex. It is a marketplace for sex offenders, and that is going on right now.”

The bottom line is that people should keep their eyes open.

“Talk to someone, talk to your parents, talk to your babysitter, talk to the teacher, talk to your school counselors,” Graham said. “Somebody should know if there’s a stranger that’s coming to your house. Somebody should know that you’re going to your friend’s house.”

She said sex offenders should be thinking about sex, not violence. Sex offenders can be charged with anything up to life in prison if caught.

Sex offenders convicted of sex crimes must register with local law enforcement officials in Kansas. Sexual offenders must register for life in all states.