Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Guest Blogger, LG: Children's Author Arrested for Child Pornography

Children's author K.P. Bath--author of The Secret of Castle Cant (2006) and Escape from Castle Cant (2007) (I've read neither)--has been arrested and convicted on child pornography charges.

Yes, you read that right.

Children's author K.P. Bath has been arrested and convicted for child pornography!

According to The Oregonian, Bath collected photos of children being raped, sodomized, and tortured. That seems almost to go beyond child pornography. Assistant U.S. Attorney Gary Sussman noted that Bath "had collected thousands of photographs and more than 125 videos of child pornography." Bath also, according to The Daily Beast, worked in a children's library.

Once your stomach stops churning, read on.

Bath's first two Cant books seem to have garnered decent reviews--at least according to his Amazon.com author page. His publisher, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, dropped Bath and his next book, Flip Side, upon his arrest in April 2009. Disturbing as it is that he wrote children's books (popular or not), I find it even more disturbing that he was a "Homework Helper" in the library. Though no one has thus far come forward saying that Bath molested or touched them, and library officials were quick to say that he was never alone with children, it's easy to imagine that something, somewhere might have happened. Although, it seems that Bath never made face-to-face contact with children in any kind of sexual manner.

Big sigh of relief.

But this post is not to debate the sickness of pedophiles or the horrifying concept of one writing books for children. The question that immediately sprung to my mind? What is a publisher's role when it comes to authors' pasts? Private lives? Legal convictions?

With this thought in mind, I immediately shot an email off to several colleagues in publishing who could find out whether or not their houses legally vet authors. According to my sources at Simon & Schuster and Macmillan, manuscripts are vetted as necessary, not authors (unless, as I was told in one instance, an editor suspects an author of lying about his or her credentials). Publishing houses are concerned with copyrights and content, not personal legal woes unrelated to the material.

LBFYR obviously did the right thing by dropping Bath from their list when the first arrest was made. In this instance, even a legal vetting wouldn't necessarily have uncovered details about child porn. But what a children's author with a violent past? Someone convicted of assault? What about other books? Reality TV producers do background checks on everyone who could be a potential cast member or show character, especially after the horrific "Megan Wants a Millionaire" / Ryan Jenkins murder scandal of 2009.

To quote an anonymous source at S&S: "Gotta watch the company’s back, at the end of the day."

Indeed.

When it comes to adult books, there are many authors with a history of violence, drug abuse, and legal woes--look at the majority of memoirs and 'hood lit. Not to mention the fact that refusing to publish a book based on an author's past would be discriminatory. And denying publication of a great book because of its author would just be ludicrous. Sometimes a shady past can even be a selling point for a publisher.

But when it comes to children's literature, should publishers be more careful?

Winston Ross at The Daily Beast phrased it perfectly:

What’s unexplained is how a guy who writes books designed to educate and illuminate the lives of grade schoolers spent a healthy portion of his free time consuming sexually exploitive images of them.
It's truly baffling.

It looks like Bath will spend the next 6 years in prison, followed by a great many years as a registered sex offender. Thank God.

What do YOU think?

Should Little, Brown Books for Young Readers pull all copies of Bath's books from libraries, shops, and online seller?
Don't forget to check out LG's blog, "Big Girl, Bigger City"!

7 comments:

  1. But when it comes to children's literature, should publishers be more careful?
    I really wish this hadn't happened but what, exactly, could Little Brown have done differently? In Britain there has been talk of making anyone who goes to a school have a background check (article). But even if we did that here in the US, the articles mention no prior arrests, so I doubt it would have turned up on a background check.

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  2. That's an excellent point, strangerface (it was very weird to just type that lol). Even if they make everyone get a background check, with prior convictions, you won't be able to predict anything of future behavior. Plus, I'm sure here in the U.S. it'd become a huge issue of privacy and just cause.

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  3. Should they pull the books? The books didn't do any harm, why should they suffer? Would it be a sign of good faith it they donated net proceeds (including Bath's cut; I'm sure they could negotiate that) to the Children's Defense Fund or like? Yeah.

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  4. This confirms everything I thought about mustaches

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  5. Hah, sorry it's the OpenID, Danielle. You can still call me Emily. :D

    It'd be awesome of LBBFYR to give further proceeds of the two books they did publish to the Children's Defense Fund, though I'm not sure how they'd go about doing that from a legal standpoint because I doubt the author would agree to it?

    Art, haha!!!

    --Emily

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  6. I don't think that LB could do anything different - they were in the dark as much as everyone else. What's telling is that he sought children out so exclusively - presumably that is - ... I read somewhere that's one sign of a pedefile. It would be nice IF the publisher was granted access to the personal computers and houses ... but when warned they would just hide and erase things ... As for pulling all the books ... hummm - I don't know - the only problem with leaving them there is that it's one more way that HE will get to children b'c of the books that he wrote. Sure the books didn't do anything wrong - but he may still introduce himself to children b'c he is the author ... that's a decision for the publisher - but they may want to wash their hands of him.

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  7. It would be illegal for a publisher to ask for access to one's private computer. Technically, the author is a freelancer not an employee. They don't have the right to ask for that kind of access.
    Maybe they could add something to their indemnity clause to protect them from aberrant, devious behaviors. I have seen a clause in a film contract that asked my author not to participate in "indecent or inappropriate behavior involving a minor" and to be 100% honest- I wanted it struck. This story gives me pause because to be honest- he probably was someone's client to have multiple book deals with LBBFYR- he could have been my client. We don't know anything outside what's on the page and what they tell us. How would you feel if your employer had open access to your computer? Pretty violated. I think its tough to judge a whole industry on the behavior of one pretty sick individual.
    My question is- why didn't the tutoring place do a background check? They dealt with him a lot closer to home and on a pretty frequent basis. Shouldn't there have been some alarms raised there too? We deal with clients maybe for a couple of hours a week or month or however long.
    For those in publishing- even your most favorite client/author- How well do you really know them?
    - Tara

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