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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

CA - Seal Beach OKs sex offender ban for beach, pier and parks

Original Article

See Also:
Cypress relegates registered sex offenders to a particular part of the city

02/28/2012

By ROXANA KOPETMAN

SEAL BEACH – Sex offenders will be banned from this town's beaches, parks, jetties, pier and the adjacent parking lots under a new law given initial approval Monday night.

"We're sticking up for the kids," said Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas, urging the City Council to approve the ban that is modeled on a similar county law.

The Seal Beach City Council voted 5-0, without any discussion, to approve the law.

If adopted at the next meeting, Seal Beach would join a growing number of Orange County cities that have created similar laws targeting sexual predators. They include Huntington Beach, Irvine, La Habra, Laguna Hills, Lake Forest, Los Alamitos, Mission Viejo, Rancho Santa Margarita, Westminster, Yorba Linda and the county itself.

Fullerton was the first city in Orange County to bar sex offenders from loitering within 300 feet of parks, schools and daycare centers. County Supervisor Shawn Nelson and Rackauckas last April crafted the county law barring registered sex offenders from county parks, harbors, historic sites and beaches. Some of the city ordinances are modeled after the county's law but vary from it. Irvine, for example, passed a narrower version focusing on offenders who victimize minors.

The laws have been criticized as overly broad, unconstitutional and difficult to enforce.

In Seal Beach, there are 10 registered sex offenders, according to a staff report. Seven of the 10 live in the retired senior community of Leisure World, one lives in College Park East neighborhood and another one lives in the Hill neighborhood, north of PCH. The 10th offender is registered in the Oakwood Apartments but he no longer resides there, according to the staff report.

Called a "child safety zone," the new law would make it a misdemeanor for registered sex offenders to enter recreational areas where children gather. A first conviction would lead to a maximum of six months in jail or a fine up to $500 or both.

California has a number of measures to protect children from sexual predators, who are required to register their addresses with law enforcement.

The laws include: Jessica's Law (Proposition 83 PDF), a 2006 voter-approved act that requires, among other things, all registered felony sex offenders to be monitored by a GPS device while on parole and bans them from residing within 2,000 feet of any school or park where children regularly gather; Senate Bill 1128, a 2006 law that prohibits sex offenders from entering school grounds without written permission; Chelsea's Law, a 2010 law that includes increases in penalties, parole provisions and oversight for offenders who have attacked children.

1 comments:

  1. I've said it before and I'll keep saying it, Tony Rackaukus is a grandstanding idiot!  The man has no sense of reality or proportion and should be thrown out of office!
    No, I don't live in Orange County but I spend time there.  Given half a chance, I'll visit just about every park and beach in OC just to thumb my nose at this moron!
    "Difficult to enforce..."  Guess what!  The law is IMPOSSIBLE to enforce!  Catch me if you can and then cringe as I give you a dose of whoop-ass in court!!

    ReplyDelete

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