The typical pattern with newspaper investigations is alarming revelation, followed by official denial. So it's doubly alarming when the official reaction is suggesting the problem is even worse than reported.
That's what happened with regard to paroled sex offenders in California.
The Los Angeles Times reported that more than 3,400 parolees had removed or disarmed their GPS monitors since October 2011. The vast majority are high-risk sex offenders, the inmates most likely to be fitted with tracking devices as a condition of parole.
A day later, state corrections officials said the Times may have understated the problem.
The tampering problem coincides with the beginning of the state's realignment program, which shifted some inmates to county jails to comply with a federal court order to relieve crowding in state prisons. Among those who now serve their time in jail are parole violators.


