Pop culture media (especially police procedural dramas in this case) feature endless examples of characters with various conditions eventually culminating in a scene with low 2nd-rate acting where there's a shivering, tearful exposition about how they tried to be good, but the "urges" were too powerful and other such nonsense.
This sadly echoes the entire way we approach the nature of any sexual violence. Constantly reinforcing the idea that some preternatural urges come along causing you to "lose control" basically gives people the exact excuse they need to decide at a certain level of arousal all the rules go away. I don't doubt some people report that from their perspective, but its a farcical ego defense mechanism. It is a rationalization for dominating another person (sex is the instrument, not the real goal). The way these kinds of programs leave the rationalization hanging there without thorough rebuttal is just shameful.
Even journalistic media, who long since have let selling contentious drama override editorial diligence, happily present psychological profile data without any sense of responsibility for clarifying what connection that has.
Some of this thread drift could be considered pedantic, sure. There's also the issue that most sexual violence threads, its based around a few court rulings towards the end of the case and so the drip of updates is limited. It's not a moving narrative like some other threads where the discussion stays grounded in things that happened very recently. By contrast these discussions sprawl out into the ether. I think this particular thread will sit somewhere in the middle. If drips start coming about the investigation into how this happened, then there will be page-long digressions about the inner workings of the corrections system and "pedantic" discussions about what counts as "appropriate monitoring."
Neither kind of discussion is wrong.