Advertise your website below and on the left of our blog today

  • Is that a Sexual Predator hiding behind that badge? (08/16/2013)
  • Click for more info
  • Click for more info
  • Click for more info
  • Click for more info
  • Click for more info
  • Click for more info
  • Click for more info
  • Click for more info
Support us today by using the donation links on the left
Showing posts with label RegistrationFee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RegistrationFee. Show all posts

Thursday, May 2, 2013

MI - Michigan Senate OKs annual sex offender (extortion) fee

Original Article

This is nothing but extortion!

05/02/2013

LANSING - Registered sex offenders living in Michigan would have to pay an annual fee under a measure (SB-221, PDF) that has passed the Republican-led Senate.

The bill passed on a 33 to 2 vote Thursday. Registered sex offenders must currently pay a onetime $50 fee, but this bill would require that they pay $50 annually.

Republican Sen. Rick Jones of Grand Ledge is the bill’s sponsor. He says $20 of each fee would go to local law enforcement and $30 to the state.

The bill only applies to registered sex offenders who are out of prison. People that prove that they are indigent can get a fee waiver.

He says neighboring states like Indiana and Illinois already charge annual fees.

The bill now heads to the House.


Sunday, March 24, 2013

MI - ACLU, other groups object to Michigan bill pushing annual sex offender fee

Original Article

03/24/2013

By Alanna Durkin

A bill to require the more than 40,000 people on Michigan's sex offender registry to pay an annual fee is igniting a debate over who should bear the costs for operating and maintaining the state's system used to track offenders.

Registered sex offenders already are required to pay a one-time $50 fee, but some lawmakers want to charge them $50 every year to cover the $600,000 a year cost to operate the database. The state says the move could bring in about $540,000 more in revenue each year.

Sex offenders "put themselves onto this registry by their actions," said Republican Sen. Rick Jones of Grand Ledge, who is sponsoring the legislation that is headed to the Senate floor, but not yet scheduled for a vote. "Therefore, they need to pay a fee to maintain it."
- Using that mentality, why don't you also charge all prisoners daily fees for maintaining the prisons they are being housed in?

But opponents, which include the American Civil Liberties Union, say it's merely a feel-good measure that ignores experiences in other states where the promise of more revenue falls well short of expectations and is an overly burdensome cost for registered sex offenders who already struggle to find housing and jobs.

"They have paid their dues ... this is a burden that we just keep piling on," said Shelli Weisberg, legislative liaison for ACLU of Michigan. She argues that the state is not asking offenders to pay for something that benefits them, but something that is intended to protect citizens. Therefore, the state should pay for it.

Michigan State Police Trooper Amy Dehner, who also is a state police legislative liaison, said the one-time fee covers only about 10% of maintaining the database. As people move and change jobs frequently it can be difficult and labor intensive to track those on the registry.
- Well, that is your problem!  The politicians are passing unconstitutional laws which force ex-offenders into homelessness and joblessness, and force them to move all the time, so the state should be paying for it (i.e. The tax payers).

And if the offenders don't pay for the registry, those costs come out of the state police's operating budget, and ultimately hit the taxpayer, Dehner said.

"We can't expect taxpayers to offset or pay for tracking and oversight of these offenders," she said.
- Sure you can!  If it's the tax payer who wants the laws, then they should help pay for the costs to implement them.

Republican Gov. Rick Snyder supports the legislation because the current one-time fee doesn't adequately cover the costs, said Snyder spokesman Kurt Weiss in an email.

If offenders don't pay the fee, they would face misdemeanor charges under the bill. Offenders would have the chance to prove they are unable to pay and receive a 90-day waiver. Offenders would either have to prove in court that they are indigent, are receiving food assistance from the state or living under the federal poverty level, Dehner said.
- This is pretty much extortion, which is a crime.

Other states are looking to increase their fees as well in an effort to deal with the mounting costs of their sex offender registries.

In Idaho, a bill passed in the House this month would boost sex offenders' annual fee from $40 to $80.

But some states have come across a big hurdle: getting offenders to pay.

Illinois' law recently changed to allow towns and counties to charge a $100 annual fee, up from $20 in the hopes that it would generate hundreds of thousands of dollars for the state. But the Illinois Sherriffs' Association said last year that many local agencies found collecting the fines difficult to enforce and many weren't actually bringing in more revenue.

In Massachusetts, a 2011 audit of the state Sexual Offenders Registry Board showed that the agency failed to collect an annual $75 fee from more than 40% of offenders and granted fee waivers for another 40%.

Shannon Banner, spokeswoman for the Michigan State Police, said as of this month only about 950 offenders on the registry have not paid their registration fee, out of more than 40,000 offenders.

But the ACLU also points to a ruling in Wisconsin court case earlier this year that said imposing fees on registered sex offenders, when it was not a law at the time of their conviction, is unconstitutional.

The judge wrote that "to be sure, the State has a non-punitive purpose for wanting to collect money for such a purpose, but to single out only individuals who have prior convictions for sexual assaults as the sole source of funding can only be seen as punitive."

That case is now on appeal to the federal 7th Circuit Court of Appeals.

If the bill in Michigan goes into law, it won't be the first change to Michigan's sex offender registry this year. One of the first bills Snyder signed this session expanded the public sex offender registry to include more people who commit certain crimes against minors, like possessing child pornography.



Tuesday, March 12, 2013

MI - Michigan sex offenders may pay yearly fee under proposed bill

Original Article

03/12/2013

LANSING - People on Michigan's sex offender registry would have to pay a yearly fee under a bill a Senate panel will debate this week.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is expected to take up the bill Tuesday. It would require offenders who are not in prison to pay an annual $50 fee instead of a one-time $50 registration fee.

Sen. Rick Jones of Grand Ledge is the bill's sponsor. He says offenders have "put themselves in this special club, so they need to pay a membership fee."

The Senate Fiscal Agency says it would increase annual revenue from fees from $160,000 to $700,000. It says it costs the state $1.2 million to operate the registry each year, $600,000 of that is used to maintain the database.

See Also:


Friday, March 8, 2013

ID - Increasing Sex Offender Fees (State sanctioned extortion?)

Original Article

03/07/2013

By Brittany Cooper

Twin Falls - Idaho's sex offenders could soon pay more annually to register. It's a bill making its way through the Idaho State Legislature and if passes, would double the fee from $40 to $80.

Staff Sgt. Doug Sugden is in charge of registering all 215 sex offenders in Twin Falls County.

Sgt. Sugden says, "they come in, we do the 4 p's, paperwork, prints, picture and pay me."

The county uses Offender Watch, an electronic service used to provide sex offender information.

"Name, age, social security, date of birth, where they live, mailing addresses, phone numbers, vehicles if they're in school, what time of crime they committed," adds Sugden.

Twin Falls is just one of nine counties in the state to have this service.

The next closest county? Bannock.

"None of the other counties around me have it, but it would be nice if they did because it would save a lot of time for me and for them that matter."

The smaller counties still track sex offenders' movement by paper.

"If somebody is not already in that system, you have to re–enter all that information to make sure you have everything you need."

While some sex offenders are discouraged by the $80 fee, Sugden says it could be worse.

"There are states where it costs a heck of a lot more to register...by not having to do mailings and published in the paper, it actually saves the offender money. Because they're not having to pay for mailings, we make it available and accessible on the internet."

Twin Falls paid for the electronic service through a grant and money from the sex offender registry.




See Also:


Friday, February 22, 2013

IN - Sex offenders will have to pay $50 (extortion fee) in order to register

Original Article

It's extortion, plain and simple!

02/22/2013

By Megan Reust

FORT WAYNE (WANE) - Starting April 1, sex offenders in Allen County will be required to pay a fee to register and change their addresses. Allen County Sheriff Ken Fries and deputies asked the County Commissioners to consider imposing the fee.

A new state law allows each county within the state of Indiana to impose a fee for sex offenders to register and update their addresses. Commissioners approved the county's request Friday morning.

Registering sex offenders takes manpower. Right now, the county has three full-time employees who work on keeping several sex offender registries up to date. Now, Allen County will be able to start charging sex offenders for the service they use.
- For a "service they use?"  First, it's not a "service" and they are not "using" it, it's forced upon them, which is not a fee, it's extortion!

"It is an expensive process and we thought it would be best with the budget constraints that we have now if we did try to generate a little bit of money to cover some of our costs," Corporal Jeff Shimkus explained.
- Then force the tax payers to pay for it!  They are the ones who wanted the laws!

Sheriff Ken Fries told County Commissioners imposing these fees would help cover some of the funds associated with maintaining various databases.

"I think any little bit of help that will get it off the backs of the taxpayers or the squeeze of tax caps is going to be beneficial," Allen County Commissioner Therese Brown said.

Commissioners approved the county's request. Starting in April, offenders will have to pay an annual registry fee of $50. And $5 every time they change their address.

"At this point last year if we collected everything we would had been looking at about $20,000 to about $21,000. So, it's a drop in the bucket but it is a little bit of cash that could help," Shimkus said.

So, what if sex offenders can't afford to pay the $50 up front?

"We will register offenders whether they can pay the money or not. That's not the issue. We'll still register the offenders and keep them compliant so there won't be any criminal charges filed, but if they don't pay these fees, we'll be looking at some kind of civil issue later on down the road."

Commissioners don't believe imposing these fees violates offender's civil rights.
- Well of course not, but if the shoe was on the other foot, then I'm sure they would.

"As a condition of their sentence to be carried out for whatever length of time and I suspect based on what level of infraction that they had committed that this is a requirement that we don't believe this is going to be an infringement of their civil rights," Brown said.
- It's additional punishment, which is called an ex post facto law and is unconstitutional, or extortion, which is a crime.

If offenders don't pay, they could be taken to small claims court and ordered to pay up.


ID - Committee OKs sex offender registry bill that doubles registration (extortion) fee

Original Article

02/22/2013

BOISE - A bill that doubles the fees charged to sex offenders and creates a statewide electronic offender registry has cleared a House committee.

The House Judiciary, Rules and Administration Committee voted Thursday to send the measure to the House floor. It would boost sex offenders' annual registry fee from $40 to $80 and raise about $150,000 annually.

Those dollars would be used to fund an electronic network designed to track sex offenders' addresses as they move to new communities across the state.

Some of Idaho's biggest counties are already plugged into an electronic registry that tracks offenders, but many smaller counties still track movement on paper.

Boise resident [name withheld], a registered sex offender, said the measure would create a financial burden for recently released or unemployed offenders.

See Also:



Wednesday, February 20, 2013

IN - Allen County considers fees for sex offenders

Original Article

02/20/2013

By Kevin Leininger

Money would help pay cost of maintaining registry

Sex offenders living in Allen County could soon pay for their crimes in more ways than one.

The Allen County Commissioners on Friday are expected to consider an ordinance that would require sex offenders to pay an annual $50 registration fee, most of which would be used to offset the cost of maintaining the county's registry of sexual and violent offenders. A $5 fee would also be imposed each time an offender changes address.

Had the fees been in place last year, the county would have received about $21,000, according to Sheriff Ken Fries.

As The News-Sentinel reported in 2009, county police are unable to track the whereabouts of the hundreds of registered sex offenders living here. At the time, there were about 650 such offenders who, because of multiple moves, produced 1,794 addresses. But police were able to verify only 1,127 of those addresses, in part because the number of offenders living in the county had increased 26 percent in the previous three years.

About 440 registered offenders live in Allen County now, Fries said. State law requires police to maintain up-to-date photographs and addresses of registered offenders, which are also included on a registry open to public scrutiny. Offenders whose whereabouts are unknown could pose a threat to the public, police say.

Ninety percent of the money collected under the ordinance would go to the county's sex and violent offender administration fund. The remainder would go to a similar state fund. Offenders who fail to pay could face a fine of $100 plus court costs.

Commissioner Therese Brown said the proposal is also in response to concerns expressed by some County Council members last year that the Sheriff's Department had requested $1.6 million more than originally budgeted but was not doing everything possible to generate additional revenues.

"This should have been done a long time ago. That's why I went to the county attorney (to request it)," Fries said. "Anything that brings in revenue helps." Adoption of local sex-registry fees was authorized by the state four years ago, Brown said.

Although many recently released offenders have little money, Fries said no exceptions will be made for inability to pay the fees. "We might give them a week or two, but they might have to ask their families or others for help," he added.
- No exceptions?  What about those who are homeless and broke due to your unconstitutional laws?  If this is true, then you can expect to see a lot more people winding up back behind bars because they cannot afford the extortion fee.


Friday, February 8, 2013

MI - Law would require registered sex offenders to pay annual fee

Original Article

Requiring ex-sex offenders to continually pay a fee and other ex-felons do not have to is pretty much extortion.

02/07/2013

By RINA MILLER

The more than 40,000 registered sex offenders in Michigan may soon be required to pay an annual fee.

They currently pay a one-time $50 charge, but most offenders will be on the registry for 25 years to life.

State Senator Rick Jones says the database costs Michigan State Police about $1 million a year to maintain. He's working on a bill that would require sex offenders to pay $50 or $100 a year.
- I don't buy this.  How does adding records to or changing records in a database cost $1 million per year?

"I want to keep troopers on the road," Jones says. "This is not too much to ask sex offenders to pay a dollar or two dollars a week."
- When many of them are homeless and jobless due to the online registry and residency laws, then it's too much to ask.

Jones believes he'll get almost unanimous support for the bill.

"The only ones who object are the offenders," he says. "We hope that the sex offender list helps keep them out of trouble. We hope that it keeps children away from them and keeps them out of prison. Therefore, this is simply a fee that they will be paying for that service."
- So why don't you force all other ex-felons to pay some fee for your service?

"It's legal in many other states", Jones says. "It's working. It will work here."

Ohio and Illinois each charge registered sex offenders $100 per year; Indiana charges $50 annually.



Thursday, February 7, 2013

LA - Suit dismissal paves way for new sex offender ordinance

Original Article

Ex-offenders in this state need to contact their lawyers now, or the ACLU to get law suits started. This is clearly extortion, and/or unconstitutional.

02/06/2013

By Theresa Schmidt

The rules are about to change for Lake Charles sex offenders. The lawsuit challenging the city's controversial registration fee was dismissed after the sex offender who filed it moved to Kentucky.

Now that the sex offender who challenged the ordinance has moved, the wheels are in motion to enforce the ordinance. It increases sex offender registration fees and imposes other prohibitions.

Assistant City Attorney Chris John says soon letters will be mailed putting sex offenders on notice. "It's a process that's going to have to take place and we're still working out the details, but obviously they're going to be sent letters to notify them of the effective date and then they'll be given a reasonable time period for compliance. I would envision about sixty days before this actually goes into effect," said John.

First the fee was to go up to $600, compared to the state fee $60. And the ordinance severely restricted how close sex offenders can get to places with children. As a compromise the fee was reduced to $400 and the other prohibitions made more practical. "You couldn't really drive down any city street without being in violation," admits John, "so the amended ordinance, the one that's in effect now, deals with a residence and not necessarily just physical contact as far as the distance."
- This is nothing but pure extortion!  No other criminal is forced, UNDER DURESS, to pay a huge fee which many cannot afford in the first place, due to the very laws being passed.  The laws force people out of homes and jobs, and since they do not have a job, how are they going to pay for this?  The tax payers wanted the laws, so make them pay for it!  Our suggestion is, when anybody goes to re-register, when forking over the extortion fee, put UNDER DURESS next to your signature.

Officials say it costs at least $150,000 a year for LCPD to monitor sex offenders and enforce the laws offenders are to comply with. The city officials ask, "why should the public have to pay?"
- Well, either the public asked for them, or politicians looking to exploit ex-offenders, fear and children to help themselves look better, so those who wanted the laws should pay for them.  This is like having all motorists pay a huge fine yearly because a couple people broke the law, which I'm sure would be fought in court, and so should this!

Said Deputy Police Chief Mark Kraus, "To supervise them costs taxpayers of Lake Charles money. Simply put, the people who have committed these sex crimes should pay for those sex crimes-- not the grocer, or the football coach or the school teacher who's already stretched to the limit."
- Come on, you could also say that the job of patrolling the streets to "protect" people from crime and stuff cost money as well, but you aren't forcing the tax payers for pay for all that!  This is no different!  And how do you expect homeless and jobless ex-offenders to pay for it?  In the end, tax payers are going to pay for this, so you are basically increasing what they have to pay.  If an ex-offender cannot pay, someone has to.  Think about it!

City council member John Ieyoub is the one who originally proposed the ordinance. "So this extra money was to help supplement the cost to all the manpower and all the resources that we use to track the sex offenders in our city and ultimately make it a safer place," said Ieyoub.
- So to be fair, are you also going to force all other ex-felons to fork over some extortion fee to pay for the police salaries as well?



Wednesday, February 6, 2013

ID - House to Debate Doubling Sex Offender (Extortion) Fee to Support Electronic Registry

Original Article

02/05/2013

BOISE — An Idaho House committee has agreed to introduce a bill that would double the fees charged to sex offenders to help pay for a statewide electronic registry.

The bill pushed by the Idaho Sheriff's Association was introduced Tuesday in the House Judiciary, Rules and Administration Committee.

Some of Idaho's biggest counties — including Ada, Canyon and Kootenai — are already plugged into an electronic network tracking addresses and movement of sex offenders on probation or parole. But many smaller counties still track and exchange sex offender movement on paper.

Sheriff's Association lobbyist Michael Kane says doubling the $40 annual fee offenders now pay would raise about $150,000.

The money would be enough to bring all Idaho counties online and link Idaho's network into a similar database shared by 35 other states.

See Also:


Thursday, January 10, 2013

UT - Utah DMV is harassing ex-sex offenders who are trying to renew their licenses?

Posted elsewhere, and here so others can see the harassment of ex-sex offenders who are trying to get their licenses renewed.

So, as I have done over the last few years when I move: I update my drivers license. No big deal, just go online and fill out the information, or mail it in if you don't have internet access.

Went to do it this year, and the online system said, "No record found. Verify your information." Tried a few times to no avail. Giving up I wrote a letter and mailed it in.

State law says there is no need to get a duplicate, as long as their system shows the correct address.

So, in December, I completed my semi-annual registration as I always do. The officer told me that my address on my drivers license did not match up to my new address in the state's database. I responded that I followed procedure, and would call them.

First call, the guy is clueless. Few days later I call again, wondering if my driver's license is valid.

The woman looks a little and then says, "Oh, I'm showing here you are a registered sex offender."

Me: "What does that have to do with my drivers' license?"

Woman: "Well, you cannot update your address online if you are a registered sex offender."

Me: "That's not in the registry law or the drivers license law, is it? In fact, I know it is not. I've updated it online before."

Woman: "It's a new policy with the Division of Motor Vehicles, you'll have to update your address in person."

Me: "I already do that when I register my new addresses with law enforcement, why must I do it again."

Woman: "That's the new policy."

Me: "Let me guess, I'll have to pay the $20.00 for a duplicate, rather than just update the information in the system."

Woman: "That is correct."

Me: "Well, I already have to pay to get a new license each year, plus give law enforcement $25.00 per year, and then the the State Registry $100.00 per year (which I have never paid). So, if I move a lot I now have to pay you guys each time? Let me talk to the person in charge, because I guarantee you that is not in the laws."

I get transferred to a voice-mail and leave a rather pointed message about suing the s*** out of the state again. No response yet.


Friday, January 4, 2013

FL - OPPAGA finds sex offender registration is rising

Original Article

01/03/2013

By Bill Cotterell

The number of sex offenders registering with police has risen four times faster than Florida's population, but state and federal law enforcement agencies have dramatically cut the number who get away, says a new legislative study of rules imposed since the rape and murder of a little girl horrified the state in 2005.

However, homeless and transient sex offenders take up a lot of police time and paperwork, and about one-fourth of offenders who comply with registration laws can't afford the sign-up fee or lack documentation to verify their arrests. In addition to transient sex offenders, many of the addresses listed by those registering turn out to be jails or homeless shelters, the report said.

The Legislature's Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability did a statewide review of how the 2005 Jessica Lunsford Act has worked. The law, named for a 9-year-old Homosassa girl who was kidnapped  raped and murdered, requires life sentences for anyone assaulting children under 12, and a 2007 revision added new rules for those classified as predators.

All offenders are required to check in with police every six months, and those classified as predators have to check in every 90 days -- updating identification, addresses, phone numbers phone and e-mail addresses, work locations and other data.

"The number of registered sex offenders residing in Florida communities has grown by 28 percent, from 18,607 in 2005 to 23,813 in 2012," the OPPAGA report said. "During this same time period, the state population grew by roughly 6.5 percent."

OPPAGA said the number of predators almost doubled -- from 1,222 in 2005 to 2,400 last year.

But the number of registered offenders absconding from official supervision has fallen from 1,214 when the act was passed to 646 last year. The number of predators not reporting in edged up from 45 in 2005 to 47 last year, OPPAGA said.

Predators are distinguished from other offenders as those "who present an extreme threat to public safety, as demonstrated through repeated sex offenses, the use of physical violence or preying on child victims."

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement, which maintains a public registry of sex offenders, told OPPAGA analysts that several factors have contributed to the decline in numbers of criminals who abscond or otherwise lose contact with police.

"These factors include the department's hiring of absconder analysts to actively monitor the sex offender registry to identify absconders quickly," said the report. "In addition, FDLE and local sheriffs' offices are working with the U.S. Marshals Service to locate absconded sex offenders."

Sex-offense statutes also include restrictions on where offenders can live, requirements for electronic monitoring and prohibition of contact with children.

Tracking homeless, transient and indigent offenders with oft-changing addresses remains a chronic problem, even when they try to comply with registration laws, OPPAGA said. It said the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles processed 22,329 identification requests for sex offenders between Aug. 1, 2011, and July 31, 2012, and 23.3 percent of them -- 5,194 offenders -- either couldn't furnish required documentation or pay fees ranging from $25 to $54.25, depending on whether they wanted a driving license or other ID card.

Sheriffs' offices also reported that locating transient offenders "was a major impediment" in verifying addresses they provided. The report said some counties require transients to call police weekly, in addition to showing up in person quarterly or semi-annually, as required by their offense records.

FDLE Commissioner Gerald Bailey thanked OPPAGA for its analysis of the sex-offender registry.

"Despite the complexities and challenges of administering the system, Florida remains a national model," Bailey wrote in his reply to the OPPAGA report. "The Florida registry maintains a remarkably low percentage of absconded registrants; it has decreased from 4.37 percent in 2005 to 1.23 percent, despite the 65 percent increase in number of registrants."

See Also:


Friday, December 7, 2012

IL - Suit: Police refuse to register homeless sex offenders

Original Article

If this is true and the police are refusing to register them, then threatening to arrest them, that is a crime in-of-itself.  I hope these people win and get enough money, if any, to not be homeless anymore.

12/06/2012

Two homeless sex offenders are suing the City of Chicago for refusing to register them for lack of a permanent address, claiming their non-registration make them subject to arrest.

[name withheld] and [name withheld] claim they have been arrested or face arrest because Chicago Police refuse to register them as sex offenders because they are homeless. The suit, filed Thursday in U.S. District Court, claims state statute allows the city to register them, but police refuse.

The suit claims a sex offender is required to register at police headquarters and provide a current photo, address, list of schools attended, place of employment, phone numbers, e-mail address, IM and chat identities, and any Internet sites maintained.

By law, local law enforcement has the right to waive registration fees and make homeless sex offenders check in weekly, rather than provide an address, the suit said.

[name withheld] was released from prison Nov. 19, 2012, and attempted to register the next day, but Chicago Police refused because he did not have a permanent address, the suit said. He said he tried to register at his son’s address but it is too close to a park, and he was unable to find a homeless shelter that would take a sex offender.

Illinois State Police classified [name withheld] as a non-compliant sex offender on Dec. 3 and he is now subject to arrest, the suit said.

[name withheld] was released from prison in January 2011 and hospitalized a short time later following a mild heart attack, the suit said. He attempted to register upon release from the hospital, but was told Chicago Police do not register the homeless and he had three days to find a shelter and pay a $100 fee.
- This is extortion in my book.

He was unable to do so and was arrested in July 2011, the suit said. He remains in Cook County Jail.

The suit asks a judge to certify the suit as a class action, create procedures to register homeless sex offenders in Chicago, and award monetary damages.

A spokesman for the city Department of Law was not immediately available for comment.


Friday, October 12, 2012

LA - St. Tammany using eye-scanning technology to track felons, sex offenders

Original Article

10/10/2012

By Ashley Rodrigue

COVINGTON - Authorities in St. Tammany Parish are taking their operation into the future.

The St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office has new iris-scanning equipment that you’ve likely seen on crime television shows, but now it will be in your face if booked into the St. Tammany Parish Jail.

Six months ago, the jail installed two scanners that record the colored part of the eye of anyone booked on a felony, or any sex offender registered with the sheriff’s office. Four handheld scanners are also on the streets just to make sure those sex offenders are where they’re supposed to be.
- So you see here, they use it for anyone booked on a felony, or sex offender, but the last paragraph says sex offenders pay for it, not the other felons.

"The recidivism rate among sex offenders is probably the highest in all of the crime categories we watch, so we're taking the steps just to keep everybody honest," said Sheriff Jack Strain.
- Yet more lies by an ignorant sheriff who is just repeating the same lies he's heard elsewhere.  It has been proven and documented over and over that ex-sex offenders have one of the lowest recidivism rates of all other criminals, yet they continue to exploit ex-sex offenders with lies and extortion to appease the sheeple of the country.  And keeping people honest, really?  What about the Sheriff who is using lies and not honest facts?

The scan, if done on someone arrested before, includes a full criminal record and full face picture for deputies to access in the blink of an eye.

Soon, the technology will be with detectives on warrant round-ups to make sure the right person is arrested every time.

"Many times, not often, not daily, but it certainly is a possibility that an offender can try to mislead law enforcement and move," said Strain.

The ACLU says it doesn't understand the need for this new technology and calls it intrusive. But one defense attorney we talked to says he doesn't see the difference between a picture of your eye and your thumbprint.
- So what if TSA asked you to bend over so they can perform a rectal examine?  Yeah, it's pretty much the same thing.

"The government has held in court cases over and over again that the law enforcement have a right to fingerprint anybody that they arrest, that they have a right to take a DNA swab in most states," said Marion Farmer.

All of the pictures recorded go into a national database for only law enforcement to access. Almost 4,500 have been taken in St. Tammany so far, about 300 of those from sex offenders.

The cost of the devices, which runs around $3,000 a piece, is covered by fees collected from the sex offender registration program.



Thursday, July 5, 2012

LA - Lake Charles man files suit against the sex offender registration ordinance

Original Article

07/05/2012

By Theresa Schmidt

LAKE CHARLES (KPLC) - Sex offender [name withheld] has filed a new lawsuit challenging the sex offender registration ordinance passed by the Lake Charles City Council. The original ordinance approved by the council sought to require sex offenders to pay a $600 registration fee.
- Requiring ANY fee in order to remain in compliance, is extortion!

[name withheld] had sued earlier but says the suit was dismissed without prejudice and he didn't oppose because he thought there was going to be a compromise and the matter resolved-- but he says it hasn't been so he has filed a new lawsuit.

Basically [name withheld] says the ordinance is unconstitutional. Also he says the registration fee and rules pertaining to residency heap on additional punishment. He says he thinks the $400 registration fee is aimed at raising money for the Lake Charles Police Department.

Apparently letters were sent out to known sex offenders in Lake Charles over the last several days. [name withheld] received a letter saying the ordinance takes effect July 18 and that he is to contact one of the police officers named in the letter to update his sex offender registration status. The letter says, "Failure to contact and schedule an appointment will subject you to arrest for Failure to Register."

The letter goes on to say, "If you have registered since January 1, 2012 and paid the Louisiana state $60 fee you are still required by law to register and pay the Lake Charles Police Department an initial registration fee of $400."


Saturday, June 23, 2012

IL - Illinois’ sex-offender fee generates little money

Original Article

Charging someone a fee for a service they do not want, or face prison time, is basically extortion!

06/22/2012

By DAVID MERCER

CHAMPAIGN — When the Illinois Sheriffs Association pushed two years ago to raise by tenfold the annual fee law enforcement agencies charge registered sex offenders, Executive Director Greg Sullivan hoped he was about to generate hundreds of thousands of dollars for a new statewide tracking system.

That hasn’t happened.

The General Assembly and Gov. Pat Quinn in 2010 changed state law to allow towns and counties to charge a $100 annual fee, but only a relative handful of local agencies have taken advantage.

Most agencies, Sullivan said Friday, have had enough trouble collecting the old $20 annual fee, much less 10 times that amount.

If they’re not collecting the fee now, why raise it?’’ he asked.

The tracking system, Offender Watch, now lacks the $450,000 a year Sullivan had hoped to raise to pay for it. The system now lacks most of the money that was intended to run it — last year, the annual fees raised only $13,000 — and Sullivan fears he may have to shut the new system down.
- Good, we do not need an online shaming hit-list in the first place, but, this shows that police and others will use FEAR to attempt to motivate people to send in their cash!

Illinois has almost 15,300 registered sex offenders, according to Tracey Newton of the Illinois State Police. About 4,400 of them are in Cook County.

The higher fee, under the new law, is divided between the local agency and the state, including $30 of every $100 collected for the new tracking system. The system, according to Sullivan and the AG’s office, is far more sophisticated than other state law enforcement data systems.

But even the old standard Illinois fee of $10 — low compared with many states — has been seldom collected. Local agencies opt instead to allow offenders to register — and get them into the system — rather than turning away those who claimed they couldn’t pay, according to Cara Smith, deputy chief of staff for Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan.

We just found a lot of agencies that weren’t collecting across the board,’’ she said. “And they want to know where these guys are.’’

Streator in central Illinois became the latest town to enact the higher annual fee when the City Council agreed this week.

If it’s there, we might as well take advantage of it because we have the administrative expense of (keeping the registry) anyhow,’’ Streator Mayor Jimmie Lansford said.

But he acknowledged many of the 50 registered sex offenders in the town of 14,000 may not be able to pay, or may just decide not to. And the law, he acknowledged, has no real punitive teeth for those who don’t pay.

We may get some money, we may not get any,’’ Lansford said.

If Mt. Vernon in southern Illinois is any indicator, the result will likely be some, but not much.

The small town raised its annual fee at the beginning of the year and has so far collected $1,300 from its 56 registered sex offenders, police Chief Chris Mendenall said. Under the law, just under $400 of that belongs to the city, a tiny sliver of the police department’s annual $5 million budget.

Compliance isn’t real high,’’ Mendenall said.

While a lot registered sex offenders across the state never paid the $10 fee when it was the maximum, a $100 fee would be genuinely out of reach for many, according to Amy Campanelli. She oversees the Cook County Public Defender’s Office suburban operations and sits on the state’s Sex Offender Management Board. Convicted sex offenders’ job prospects are usually dim, she said.

For our clients, who are indigent, that’s a lot of money,’’ she said.

Sullivan is skeptical of many sex offenders’ claims of indigence.
- Maybe they don't want to pay your extortion fee?

But the sheriffs association is now backing a new bill, sponsored by state Rep. Norine Hammond, R-Macomb, that would allow local agencies to set up payment plans for those who need them. For offenders who sign an affidavit saying they can’t afford to pay, payment through community service would be an option.


Monday, March 26, 2012

IL - Rep. Norine Hammond Passes Slave Labor Legislation

Slavery
Original Article

So if the state has made you homeless due to the draconian laws, they will now force you to do community service for $1 an hour?  That is called SLAVE LABOR!

Springfield - On Wednesday, State Representative Norine Hammond (R-Macomb) passed legislation out of the Illinois House that will allow indigent sex offenders, who can not afford to pay the $100 dollar registration and annual renewal fees, to instead perform 100 hours of community service.

This idea was brought to me by the Sheriffs Association who noticed that sex offenders were frequently claiming they were indigent in order to avoid having to pay the required registration fee,” Rep. Hammond said. “Because so many continued to have their fees waived, there was no money available to support the sex offender database and registration system. By requiring 100 hours of community service as an alternative, the thought is that many more offenders will be willing to pay the annual fees.”

House Bill 4670 (PDF) will allow sex offenders, who claim indigence in order to avoid registration fees, to complete 100 hours of community service within 90 days of their required registration date, if community service is available in the area. Currently, sex offenders are required to pay a $100 initial registration fee and $100 for each annual registration. If they can not afford to pay the entire amount at once, a payment plan can be established.

I am hopeful that this alternative will increase the incentive for sex offenders to pay the fees. Instead of simply being able to claim indigence and not having to face the penalties, they will now have a choice to do 100 hours of community service or pay the fine. I think a number of these folks will choose to pay the fee,” said Rep. Hammond.

House Bill 4670 passed the Illinois House and now heads to the Senate for further consideration.



Friday, December 23, 2011

IL - Registered sex offenders to pay fee

Original Article
Related: Many Sex Offenders Not Paying New Fee

12/22/2011

By eAdvocate - "Talk about rape, what are these fees doing to registrants and their families? Outrageous.."

Offenders must pay $100 annual registration fee beginning Jan. 1, 2012

MT. VERNON — Beginning Jan. 1, registered sex offenders in the city will be required to pay a $100 annual registration fee.

Jan. 1, 2011, the state passed a new law that amended the Sex Offender Registration Act that allowed law enforcement agencies to charge the fee,” explained Mt. Vernon Police Department Detective Eric Breeze, who administers the sex offender registry for the city. “I took over doing the registry in July this year, and took some training on the Act and the law that passed. I took that to the chief, and got it worked out. It will start the first of the year.”

Funds collected go to several agencies as defined in the Act.

The $100 is broken down between four agencies,” Breeze said. “Thirty dollars is kept by the Mt. Vernon Police Department; $10 is sent to the Sex Offender Management Board Fund, which is part of the state treasurer’s office; $30 goes to the Illinois State Police Sex Offender Registration Fund, since the State Police oversee all registration in the state; and $30 goes to the Illinois Attorney General Sex Offender Awareness Training and Education Fund.”

Breeze said discussions on how to use the local funds collected have included using the fee for costs associated with compliance checks, materials used in the office to maintain the registry, and possibly a donation to The Amy Schulz Child Advocacy Center, “which deals with forensic interviews with child victims of these types of crimes.”

The new fee directly affects the 44 adult registered sex offenders in the city limits and the six juvenile offenders. Breeze said there are five more registered sex offenders in the city, but are considered “inactive” since they are in jail at this time.

Under terms of the Act, convicted sex offenders who are required to register by law will be required to pay the $100 fee.

Depending on what the conviction is for, some sex offenders have to register once per year, others with more serious charges must register every 90 days, and ... those who become homeless must check in with us once a week,” Breeze said. “If they can’t pay the $100 all at once, they are required to pay throughout the year with quarterly registration.”

Breeze said in addition to enforcing the registration fee, he is also working on locating non-licensed daycares in the city limits.

We need anybody who has a non-licensed day care facility in their home to call and speak with us so we can have your address,” Breeze said. “We only have a list of licensed daycares to use to calculate the 500 foot radius from the property lines to make sure no offenders live within the area. We have no way to find out about unlicensed daycares unless they tell us.”

Breeze said all daycares do not require licensure, and under terms of the Sex Offender Registry Act, what makes an unlicensed daycare is outlined.

If they regularly take care of three or more children and only two of the children are their own, that’s an unlicensed daycare,” Breeze explained. “If anyone has a question about whether they are considered a daycare, they can call me for the definitions and types of daycares covered under the statute.”

The city’s sex offender registry is online at [link withheld] under the sex offender tab. Photos and addresses of all registered sex offenders in the city limits are posted. Anyone who would like additional information about the registry, the new fee or the definitions of a daycare may contact Breeze at 242-0215. ..Source.. by TESA CULLI


Thursday, December 22, 2011

LA - Lake County City Council amends sex offender ordinance

Original Article

12/21/2011

By Lee Peck

LAKE CHARLES (KPLC) - Despite being passed in January a Lake Charles ordinance that would enforce some of the toughest restrictions on sex offenders has yet to be enforced. The ordinance restricting where sex offenders can live and increasing their registration fee from $60 to $600 with another $200 annually has been tied up in the courts for the better part of the year.

"I'm just asking that the council really considers what they are trying to pass," said [name withheld], registered sex offender.

[name withheld], 35, was convicted at 16 years old for forcible rape. He served his time and feels the added costs and restrictions are more punishment for a crime he's already done time for. He's challenging the ordinance and filed a lawsuit against the city earlier this year.

"I understand it is your job to protect the community and disadvantaged, but if you continue to take money out of the pockets of the mouths of not just the registered sex offenders, but my wife and my son and other people's families. You all are creating circumstances that we cannot breathe," said [name withheld].

The City argues the extra money is to offset taxpayer dollars for enforcement of compliance. After discussion the City Council amended the fees from the initial $600 to $400 and $100 annually. Changes were also made to certain notification provisions that might invade privacy of victims and the distance a sex offender can live from a school was changed back to 1000 feet rather than the original 1200 feet.

"I understand your family situation I really do. But if a person does not want to be in this type of dilemma then they need to make the right decisions on acts of that nature before it happens. Ignorance of the law does not excuse you of the penalty," said Rodney Geyen, Lake Charles City Councilman.

"What I did 20 years ago is not a factor in my life today. I was 16, I'm now 35. I will work with the council and I will work with the attorneys. I will help you all create this ordinance," said [name withheld].

With pending litigation the State Attorney General's Office has declined to rule on the case.

"Mr. [name withheld] based on these amendments made tonight is going to dismiss his suit without prejudice. We are not going to enforce that ordinance for 180 days and once that dismissal happens we can submit the amended ordinance to the Attorney General's Office for an opinion of the constitutionality."

Based on the decision of the Attorney General's Office [name withheld] could refile his lawsuit in the future.


Wednesday, December 21, 2011

IN - County considering (extortion) registry fees for sex offenders

Original Article

12/21/2011

By SOPHIA VORAVONG

Sex offenders would front the cost to have their photos, home and work addresses and other information on Indiana's Sex and Violent Offender Registry under a measure Tippecanoe County Sheriff Tracy Brown wants to adopt.

The idea itself is nothing new. Indiana legislators in 2007 amended a law to allow sheriff's departments to charge administrative fees, and a handful of counties -- Clay, Floyd and Gibson, among others -- were quick to pass ordinances to begin collecting.

Brown said he wanted to wait and see whether ordinances in other counties faced legal challenges or other issues before bringing the proposal to Tippecanoe County Commissioners in the next few months.

Fees aren't meant to generate revenue but rather pay for general registry upkeep costs, Brown said. Indiana law allows counties to charge a one-time fee up to $50, plus $5 for each address change.

"Maintaining the registry is a huge responsibility for sheriffs in Indiana," Brown said. "We want it to be accurate. We want it to be accessible and available to the public. Doing so helps keep the community's children safe."

Brown will have to take his idea before Tippecanoe County Commissioners to see whether an ordinance can be drafted. The sheriff said he expects that commissioners will want to hold a public hearing before voting.

He's asked county attorney Dave Luhman to look over the state's legislation and wording. Luhman said the proposal is in "the very early stages."

As of Tuesday night, Tippecanoe County had 201 offenders on the registry.

It's maintained locally by one person, Detective Jason Morgan.

In addition to updating the registry when an offender comes in annually, Morgan is tasked with doing address and home checks on a regular basis and making sure that offenders are registered.

"It's an enormous amount of work to maintain the database," Brown said. "Basically, this would put the mechanisms in place so that we can recoup the personnel costs. ... This was something the General Assembly put in place to give local units a way to recoup the costs of maintaining the registry."

Under the law, 10 percent of all fees go back to the state. Counties keep the remainder.

Several sex offenders in Tippecanoe County contacted by the Journal & Courier either didn't return messages seeking comment or declined to comment.

Kimberly DuBina is the Indiana representative for Reform Sex Offender Laws. She's an advocate for Hoosier sex offenders.

At 17 years old, her son was charged and convicted of a sex crime in 2005 for what began as a consensual teenage relationship. He received an 8-year prison sentence and must register for life as a sex offender.

DuBina said the registry fees are unfair and negatively impact an offenders' family, too.

"Most registrants are forced to pay fines, probation costs, polygraph fees and therapy/counseling costs," she said. "For the majority of the registrants, this is nearly impossible for them to do, because they are so stigmatized by the registry, that most employers will not hire them."

"It is nearly impossible for registrants to obtain employment and/or housing. Additional fees and/or fines will invariably place even further hardships on the registrants and their families. If a registrant is unable to pay the costs and/or fines, they will be at risk for violating their probation or parole stipulations, thus increasing recidivism rates."

DuBina said she also believes the fees are a human rights violation and violate ex post facto laws for punishing an offender after his or her sentence is complete.

"First and foremost, we must consider the families and the children to whom these fines and fees will harm," she said.