“…As described above, offenders against children and teens tend to differ from other offenders, and these differences may affect sentence severity. For example, compared with other offenders, victimizers of juveniles are more likely to be related to their victims, less likely to use weapons, more likely to be employed, and less likely to be recidivists-all of which might ordinarily reduce sentence severity, regardless of the victim's age (Erez and Tontodanato, 1990;Steffensmeier and Motivans, 2000;Steffensmeier, Ulmer, and Kramer, 1998). Data from the Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities offer information on sentence severity that can be used to assess whether offenders against juveniles receive unusually lenient sentences.…”