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Showing posts with label TierLevels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TierLevels. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

MA - Rep. Dwyer supports sex offender reforms

Original Article

05/14/2013

READING - Last week, the Joint Committee on the Judiciary held a hearing in which testimony was offered for legislation that has been filed to address inherent problems in the sexual offender classification system in Massachusetts.

State Representative James Dwyer has jointly field a legislative package with Rep. Shaunna O’Connell of Taunton known as Child Sexual Predator Prevention Act. The two legislators want to send a strong bi-partisan message that the Commonwealth has no tolerance for child sexual predators.


The legislative package providers for:
  • A minimum 25-year sentence for the first offense of raping a child (Current statute does not provide for a minimum sentence for a first time conviction)
  • A 40-year sentence for the second offense
  • A life sentence for the third conviction.
  • Requiring level 1 and 2 predators to have their information posted online (Current federal law requires that level 2 offenders be listed online, but the Commonwealth has failed to meet the federal requirement)
  • Requiring agencies that oversee children and developmentally disabled persons to communicate with the sex offender registry board

Rep. Dwyer and Rep. O’Connell are pursuing this aggressive legislation in response to the reported crimes of [name withheld] who allegedly assaulted babies and toddlers and now faces 100 sexual abuse charges. Joining the legislators in offering testimony were members of the law enforcement community.



Tuesday, April 30, 2013

MO - House endorses sex offender legislation

Original Article

04/30/2013

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) - Missouri House members have approved legislation (PDF) that would make changes to the sex offender registry.

Sex offenders would be grouped into three tiers with each considered to have a different risk of committing another offense. Eventually, people could file a petition in court and ask to be removed from the registry. How long they would need to wait before filing a petition would vary depending on their tier.

Part of the legislation also seeks to increase the penalty for incest, child rape and child abuse resulting in death. Another portion adjusts the definition of rape to include instances in which a woman has become incapacitated because of the actions of a third person.

The legislation approved 101-52 on Monday now goes to the Senate.



Thursday, April 25, 2013

NM - State sex offender act modified

Original Article

04/25/2013

By Laura London

Lawmakers amended the state’s Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act during the Legislature’s 2013 session, closing some loopholes and clarifying issues.

HB 570 (PDF): Sex Offender Tiers, Registration & Information, effective July 1, was discussed at the New Mexico Association of Counties legislative update April 10 at the Socorro County Annex.

HB 570 makes many changes to SORNA, including redefining “out-of-state registrant” to mean anybody who establishes a residence in New Mexico while required to register as a sex offender in another state, according to the summary of the bill included with its fiscal impact report, which is posted on the Legislature’s website.

District 15 Sen. Daniel Ivey-Soto said the bill cleans up some legal equivalency issues regarding out-of-state sex offenders who move to New Mexico. He explained New Mexico has certain specified crimes that will get a person on the sex offender registry, as do all other states. However, if another state’s specified crime doesn’t really have an equivalent under New Mexico law, an offender listed on that state’s registry may not have to register in New Mexico.

Ivey-Soto said HB 570 was partly inspired by the case of [name withheld], who had to register as a sex offender in California but not in New Mexico.

According to the New Mexico Supreme Court opinion filed in [name withheld]'s case in December 2012, [name withheld] had been convicted on a misdemeanor statute in California for “annoying or molesting” minors due to his inappropriate touching of several boys, and he had to register as a sex offender. [name withheld] then moved to New Mexico in 2006, and in 2008 was charged with failure to register as a sex offender in Las Cruces.

The district court in Las Cruces denied [name withheld]'s motion to dismiss the charge, according to background information included with the Supreme Court opinion, but the state Court of Appeals reversed the district court’s ruling. The Court of Appeals held that the California “annoying or molesting” statute was not equivalent to New Mexico’s criminal sexual contact of a minor law under SORNA; therefore, [name withheld] was not required to register upon moving to New Mexico.

The Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals’ decision in December and sent the case back to district court, stating in its opinion there was not enough record of [name withheld]'s actual conduct to determine whether it would have been considered a registrable offense in New Mexico.

And so, we dealt with some of the equivalency issues,” Ivey-Soto said. “We also dealt with the time frame for having to register if you move here from another state.”

Ivey-Soto said the bill requires offenders to register for the same amount of time as required in their old state, or for as long as they would have to register had they been convicted in New Mexico — whichever time period is longer.

And part of this, of course — all the states are competing so that no one is a haven for sex offenders,” Ivey-Soto said. “So part of it is we want to put as many disincentives as possible.”

For offenders moving to different addresses within New Mexico, Ivey-Soto said the law tightens up the period of time they have to update their registration with law enforcement. They previously had 10 days to update any changes in their information with the local sheriff’s department; now they have five days.

Ivey-Soto said the bill also expands the list of information law enforcement has to collect from sex offenders, as well as standardizes the list so all sheriff’s departments collect the same information. He said that previously different sheriff’s departments were collecting different details according to what each considered relevant.

HB 570′s fiscal impact report states sex offenders must provide the sheriff’s department not only a current address, but the physical and mailing address, as well as the address of every place where the offender habitually lives; the names, email addresses, monikers or other self-identifiers the offender uses on social networking sites; telephone numbers; professional licenses; license plates or other identifiers, plus descriptions of any vehicle owned or primarily operated by the offender, including aircraft and watercraft; name and address of any school or institution of higher education the offender attends; and copies of the offender’s passport and immigration documents.

Ivey-Soto said the bill also clarifies that a sex offender’s place of business — if the business has contact with children — must be posted along with the offender’s other information on the state’s sex offender registry website.

Ivey-Soto said the law should save money for the state, as well as time for sheriff’s departments, since it directs the state Department of Public Safety to send a first-class letter to each sex offender’s last known address two weeks prior to their reporting deadline. He said this will hopefully increase compliance by reminding offenders of their reporting deadline.

The other thing it will do, if you move — guess what — the letter gets returned,” Ivey-Soto said. “And that’s a whole lot cheaper than sending a squad out to knock on everybody’s door … and we can identify a lot quicker who may have absconded.”


Monday, April 22, 2013

OH - Ohio Public Defender’s Office says sex offender registry doesn’t improve public safety

Original Article

04/12/2013

Ohio will begin tracking arsonists this summer through a new registry similar to the one used to track sex offenders.

A law passed last year by the General Assembly will require people convicted of arson-related offenses to register at their local sheriff's office each year for at least 10 years. Failing to register will be a felony.

Supporters tout the measure as a tool for law enforcement. Critics argue, among other points, that the registry will be a burden for sheriffs already charged with keeping the sex-offender registry.

"The sex-offender registry has been around for a long time, and the research that's out there says that it has no positive impact on the public safety," Amy Borror, spokeswoman for the Ohio Public Defender's Office, told The Plain Dealer. "And, if anything, it might have a negative impact on public safety because it creates this administrative burden."

The registry has been around for almost 20 years and has been public for more than 15. The Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children Act, enacted by Congress in 1994, required convicted sex offenders to record their address with local law enforcement. Megan’s Law, added in 1996, allowed the information to be given directly to the public. The Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA), passed in 2006, set registration standards that widened the reach of registration for the entire nation.

PolitiFact Ohio knew the subject could be an emotional one. We asked Borror how the claim is supported that the registry does not improve public safety.

She referred us first to the website of the Public Defender's Office, which links to a number of reports, and to a special issue of the peer-reviewed journal Criminal Justice and Behavior, from May 2010, which was dedicated to sex offender issues.

Criminal Justice and Behavior published 10 academic studies related to sex offenses, focusing on the question of whether public policies concerning sex offenders enhance the safety of children and communities.

The journal found that the subject is consistently one of the leading policy issues on legislative agendas. It concluded, however, that "sex offender policies are often inconsistent with empirical evidence about sex offender risks, recidivism, reintegration and supervision...."

"Legislators cite the news media and the views of their constituents -- not research evidence -- as their primary sources of information about sex offenses and offenders," the journal said.

One of the published studies, by criminologists with the University of Massachusetts, Lynn University and the Colorado Division of Criminal Justice, focused on Ohio and Oklahoma, two of the first states to meet federal guidelines set by SORNA. Those guidelines classify offenders into one of three categories determined by solely by convicted offense. (Previously, judges determined what risk offenders posed and assigned them to one of three registration categories.)

Drawing on data from more than 28,000 cases in Ohio and from other research, the study’s conclusions "shed doubt on the public safety utility of the SORNA classification system." It found that a disproportionate number of offenders were classified as high risk, placing greater burdens, perhaps unnecessarily, on law enforcement personnel and budgets.

"From a public safety perspective," the study found, the SORNA classification guidelines hurt the ability of the system "to effectively discriminate between those who pose a substantial risk to society and those who pose minimal risk," and also contradict evidence about the risk of repeat offenses for both adult sex offenders and juveniles.

Another report, from the Minnesota Department of Corrections, studied sexual offenders who were jailed for failing to register with local law enforcement agencies. It found that the failure to register was not a predictor of repeated crime, other than future failure to register.

An analysis of adult arrest data from 1990 to 2005 in South Carolina found that sex offender registration laws did have a deterrent effect on first-time adult offenders, but no effect on juveniles and no effect on recidivism.

Borror also pointed us to a 2009 study from the state of New York’s Office of Mental Health that specifically compares a risk-based classification system (which Ohio used to have) to the offense-based registration system, which Ohio has now.

It concluded that the current system "falls short of increasing public safety," citing five earlier studies that found registration and notification laws were "ineffective methods of reducing sexual victimizations."

It also noted there is evidence that such laws actually lead to more criminal behavior by aggravating the factors linked to it -- an unintended consequence of reducing or denying employment, educational, social and housing opportunities.

"Although well intended, such laws have done little (if anything) to increase public safety and may in fact be lowering it," the study said.

(A 2007 report by the non-government organization Human Rights Watch detailed the harassment of registered offenders because of online community notification.)

We looked further and found a 2008 report (PDF) funded by the U.S. Justice Department examining the original Megan's Law in New Jersey.

"Despite widespread community support for these laws," it said, "there is virtually no evidence to support their effectiveness in reducing either new first-time sex offenses (through protective measures or general deterrence) or sex re-offenses (through protective measures and specific deterrence)."

"Given the lack of demonstrated effect of Megan’s Law on sexual offenses, the growing costs may not be justifiable," it said.

Another study (PDF), by J.J. Prescott of the University of Michigan Law School and Jonah Rockoff of Columbia Business School and the National Bureau of Economic Research, examined data from 15 states over more than 10 years.

They found that registering sex offenders does reduce sex crime, especially among victims with a personal connection to offenders, most likely because of better police monitoring. They also found, however, that making the registry information available to the public has the opposite effect and increases crime.

"There is little evidence of a decrease in crimes against strangers," the study said. "We also find evidence that community notification deters crime, but in a way unanticipated by legislators. Our results suggest that community notification deters first-time sex offenders, but may increase recidivism by registered offenders by increasing the relative attractiveness of criminal behavior. This finding is consistent with work by criminologists showing that notification may contribute to recidivism by imposing social and financial costs on registered sex offenders and, as a result, making non-criminal activity relatively less attractive."

"We regard this latter finding as potentially important, given that the purpose of community notification is the reduction of recidivism," the authors concluded.

The federal Government Accountability Office evaluated the effects of SORNA in a report issued earlier this year.

The GAO noted that law’s purpose is to protect the public from sex offenders, but found "analysis of the act’s effect on public safety has been limited."

Positive effects included "improved monitoring of registered sex offenders" and better information sharing between law enforcement agencies.

Negative consequences found by the GAO included a lack of consideration of the risk of repeating sexual offenses in classifying offenders; a disproportionate increase in the workload of law enforcement agencies, and increased problems for registered sex offenders to find work or housing.

What conclusion can we draw about Borror’s statement for the Ohio Public Defender’s Office, that research shows the sex offender registry has no positive impact?

We found that research has been done generally on the effectiveness of sex offender registration and notification laws.

We found that studies indicate the laws have no clear effect on recidivism, or repeat offenses, which is their intended target, and are ineffective in assessing and managing risk.

Although there is some indication that registration and community notification may deter first-time adult offenders, the studies find that the deterrence doesn’t extend to juveniles -- and that community notification likely increases repeat sex crimes and other crimes.

With that information needed for clarification, we rate the statement Mostly True.


Saturday, April 20, 2013

MT - Gallatin County officials react to new sex offender law

Original Article

04/18/2013

By JODI HAUSEN

A new law may have some convicted sexual offenders undergoing renewed scrutiny.

Gov. Steve Bullock signed House Bill 335 (PDF) into law this week, allowing prosecutors to have undesignated offenders re-evaluated for possible placement on the state’s tiered sexual offender system.

Gallatin County Attorney Marty Lambert said he plans to review about 50 undesignated offenders.

Yes, I’m going to take a look at that list to see who’s appropriate for designation,” he said. “You bet. Particularly those with more of propensity to reoffend.”

The state adopted a three-tier system in 1997 for judges to assign offenders as Level 1, 2 or 3 based on a psycho-sexual evaluation.

Level 1 offenders are a low risk to reoffend, Level 2 moderate and Level 3 high. Level 3 offenders are also deemed sexually violent predators and a threat to public safety.

People sentenced before the 1997 law or in states without a tiered system have no designation and are treated as Level 1.

The new law will allow prosecutors to decide whether an undesignated sex offender should be listed at a higher level and be more closely monitored. Officers said they do regular address checks on offenders, particularly Level 3 offenders who are required to update their registration in-person every 90 days.

Bozeman Deputy Police Chief Rich McLane said there are 26 registered sex offenders in Bozeman. Of those, six are Level 1, six are Level 2 and 14 are undesignated.

But it’s “not an exact science as to how they are designated in the first place” and keeping track of them is really more critical, he said.

It’s more important to know where they’re at, where they’re living and that they are complying with court conditions and not re-offending,” McLane said. “It’s not going to change what we do, but it’s going to change the public’s perception of the offender.”

The Gallatin County Sheriff’s Office monitors 46 sexual offenders, 26 undesignated.

Sheriff Brian Gootkin said he likes the new law because it will make offenders more accountable.

In Belgrade, where officers monitor 40 sex offenders, 25 undesignated, Sgt. Dustin Lensing also welcomed the change.

It will be a useful tool because it will be good to get a handle on where they should be designated so we know how much of a risk they pose to the public,” he said. “Obviously, it’s our concern if there’s someone out there who is undesignated and should be designated at Level 3 and that person isn’t getting the stringent monitoring they should.”

Bozeman therapist Fred Lemons provides sex offender treatment and called the new law great.

The law could remove stigma from an undesignated offender who receives a low-risk, Level 1 designation, he said.


Friday, April 12, 2013

CA - Seeking smarter rules for sex offenders

Janice Bellucci
Original Article

04/11/2013

By Gale Holland

Janice Bellucci of Reform Sex Offender Laws believes offenders should go to prison. But after they get out, she wants them to have a chance to lead stable lives.

Janice Bellucci is a mother of two, the wife of a pastor and a former Girl Scout leader active in volunteer work.

She lives in a gated community an hour's drive north of Santa Barbara, with needlepoint pillows on the sofa and a vegetable garden in the backyard. She is also the public face of an organization advocating for the closest thing to an untouchable caste in our society: California's 88,000 registered sex offenders.

A former aerospace lawyer, Bellucci is the president of the California chapter of Reform Sex Offender Laws, a national group of offenders, family members, psychologists and attorneys registered as a nonprofit.

The California branch holds meetings every other month, closed to the media, to discuss offenders' rights and legal actions she is taking. Bellucci believes sex offenders should go to prison for their crimes. Her target is the crazy quilt of state and local laws regulating their conduct after they get out.

These laws bar offenders from moving near parks and schools, leaving them with comparatively few places to live. Almost all of San Francisco, and most of San Diego, is off-limits, she says. Some ordinances forbid offenders to even visit county parks and beaches.

Bellucci also wants to give some sex offenders a way off the registry. California is one of four states where sex offenders register for life, regardless of the seriousness of their crimes.

Bellucci has brought a professional sheen to the sex offenders' fight, writing talking-point memos, testifying before agencies and taking cities to court. And she's had some success: After she sued, a court stopped Simi Valley from requiring sex offenders to post signs on their front doors warning trick-or-treaters away on Halloween.

She casts her cause as a civil rights movement. During a conversation at her home, Bellucci referred to those on the list as "registrants" rather than sex offenders, and she quoted Gandhi and the Constitution.

"People don't like to hear me say it, but it's like how the Jews were treated in Nazi Germany," she said. "First they were told they were different, then they ended up in concentration camps."

No doubt this preposterous characterization is objectionable. Sex offenders are shunned for their conduct, not their status. And their conduct is often unspeakable.

But even a state advisory board acknowledges that post-release restrictions on sex offenders have gone too far. In an August 2011 report, the California Sex Offender Management Board said that one-third of the state's registered sex offenders are homeless, partly because of the housing limits.

There is no evidence that residence limits make children safer, the report said. "To the contrary, the evidence strongly suggests that residence restrictions are likely to have the unintended effect of increasing the likelihood of sexual re-offense," the report went on.

A particularly boneheaded example of overkill is the pocket park in Harbor Gateway. The park is being built not to serve families but to drive registered sex offenders out of a nearby apartment building, my colleague Angel Jennings reported.

I have no doubt Harbor Gateway needs a park. But what kind of a society builds parks not for children, but to chase sex offenders away?

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Peter Espinoza put the issue on hold in March by ordering officials to stop enforcing restrictions on how close sex offenders can live to parks or schools. Bellucci argues the limits are unconstitutional, and Espinoza, in an earlier ruling, agreed.

Bellucci, 61, doesn't have a sex offender in the family, although she currently represents some in civil challenges. She came to the cause by chance. The man who installed her water purifier wrote a book about his years on the registry. She read it and was aghast.

The man, [name withheld], had molested a child more than 30 years earlier, when he was a raging alcoholic, Bellucci said. [name withheld] went on to build a business and become a civic activist. He was physically attacked by a vigilante who found his name and address on the registry, she said.

His case helped convince her that lifetime registration was wrong. Bellucci has stories about Everymen who wind up on the registry: the "Romeo and Juliet" cases of two teens, one underage, in a sexual relationship; the guy who urinates behind a bar or moons a crowd. Nobody seems to know how many fit this category.

Assemblyman Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) has proposed a three-tiered registry that would enable lower-level offenders with otherwise clean records to get off in 10 to 20 years. Bellucci is lobbying for its passage.

"Sex offenders come from all walks of life," she said. "Some grew up in the ghetto, some grew up in Beverly Hills. They're like everybody else."

Really? I don't think so. Some undoubtedly made mistakes, but others are hardened offenders whom law enforcement would do well to track and monitor.

Just this week, [name withheld], 58, a registered sex offender, was arrested on suspicion of the home-invasion killing of an elderly San Bernardino woman. [name withheld]'  previous conviction was for sodomizing a child under age 14.

I don't see the purpose of the public registry. For this story, I went on the Megan's Law website for the first time and found several sex offenders in my neighborhood. It made my skin crawl, but is it useful to know exactly where they are or what they did? I am well aware sex offenders are in our midst, and I don't need the details to protect myself and my children.

Bellucci is convinced sex offenders can be rehabilitated. She cited a study of 2008 data by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation showing than of those who returned to prison, about 2% had committed another sex offense. Banishing them from normal society makes them more likely to repeat their crimes, she believes.

"We all do so much better when we have stability," Bellucci said. "It's ridiculous all the challenges that get thrown in front of sex offenders."

But we've all heard of the priests, Boy Scout leaders and teachers who molested multiple children before finally getting caught. The state corrections department acknowledges it can say with only 75% accuracy who is likely to commit a sex offense again, although it hopes to increase the odds with better assessments.

Bellucci is undeterred.

"The people I'm focused on already paid their debt to society," she said. "All I want for them is peace."


Monday, April 1, 2013

MO - Public Safety or Endless Punishment? Should sex offenders be listed on a public registry for life?

Original Article

04/01/2013

By Virginia Young

[name withheld] fears he will forever occupy a shameful sliver of cyberspace known as the sex offender registry.

Type in his name in the state’s search engine, and you can see where he lives and works, the cars he drives, along with the crime he committed more than a decade ago: Possession of child pornography — then a misdemeanor.

The registry, [name withheld] said, has cost him jobs, prompted neighbors to distribute fliers about him, and led to his arrest on a trespassing charge last fall when dropping his teenage son off at school.

At 25, my life basically was over,” said [name withheld], now 36.

[name withheld], however, sees hope in proposed changes to the registry that legislators are debating in Jefferson City.

A diverse smattering of groups — from law enforcement officials to victims advocates — have argued that the current registry, which requires most offenders to register for life, is too much of a blunt instrument.

They’re all lumped into one category and they all get a life sentence,” said Rep. Don Phillips, R-Kimberling City.

Phillips, a retired highway patrolman, is sponsoring a bill that would keep minor offenses off the registry and allow nearly a third of the roughly 14,000 people on the registry to petition for removal from the list within the next 20 years.

A more far-reaching proposal, sponsored by Rep. Dave Hinson, R-St. Clair, would give all offenders on the list a chance to petition for removal from the list eventually. How long they have to wait would be determined by individual “risk assessment reports” done by mental health professionals.

Both bills have made it out of the House Crime Prevention and Public Safety Committee, leaving Republican legislative leaders to decide which bill to present to the full House.

Some lawmakers have qualms about loosening requirements for the registry. Rep. Kenneth Wilson, R-Smithville, and a former police chief, said he “spent a career defending the public, and I think we’ve absolutely ignored a segment of our public, that being the victim.”

The proposals come at time when states across the nation are taking hard looks at their registries.

Most are moving toward more stringent requirements to comply with federal guidelines, said Wayne Logan, a professor at Florida State University’s law school.

There is a lot of flux right now,” said Logan, author of the book, “Knowledge as Power: Criminal Registration and Community Notification Laws in America.”

Logan said research into the effectiveness of public registries is limited, and offers mixed results.

One recent study showed that while registries can serve as a deterrent, Logan said, they can also promote recidivism by making life too difficult.

They can never get out from that shadow,” he said.

Eleven years ago, [name withheld], a former Marine, had gotten in the habit of downloading large files of heavy metal music at work from the then popular file-sharing service called Morpheus.

But one day, a human resources officer at his company summoned him to a conference room where two detectives were waiting.

He was informed that images of children in sexual acts had been found on his computer. [name withheld] claimed it was accidental. The images, he said, were embedded in the music files he downloaded and he had no knowledge of their existence.

But prosecutors didn’t buy his story. [name withheld] was charged twice — once in St. Louis County and once in St. Charles County, where police found different images on a disc that he had brought home from work.

[name withheld] pleaded guilty in both instances in exchange for probation and suspended imposition of sentence. The crime, he was told, would never go on his record.
- They always tell you this to get you to plead guilty, even if you are innocent.  Never do this, take it to jury trial.

I was young,” [name withheld] said. “I was naïve. I was scared.”

He now wishes he would have fought the charges.

Daniel Pelikan, the St. Charles County judge who presided over [name withheld]'s case, wrote in his order that “although the defendant did not intend to download and transfer the images to the compact disc, the discs were in the defendant’s custody and control.”

A few years later, new state and federal laws required [name withheld] to register as a sex offender.

Kim Kilgore, a St. Louis County assistant prosecutor who has specialized in sex crime cases for the past 10 years, said one of the images depicted a 4-year-old. And, she pointed out, they were found in a secret, password-protected file. Kilgore also said that according to a Hazelwood police report, [name withheld] admitted downloading the images.

I don’t have a problem with him being on the sex offender registry,” she said.

But should he be on it for life?

I think it’s a hard decision,” she said. “As a mom, why not? As a prosecutor, it’s very burdensome for the state to maintain a registry.”

TRIMMING THE LIST
To winnow the registry’s rolls, both bills (HB-462 and HB-589) in the Missouri House would group sex offenders into three tiers. But they would use different criteria.

Phillips’ bill would rely on the severity of the criminal charge.

People who fall in the least serious tier — convicted of crimes such as second-degree endangering the welfare of a child — could petition to get off the registry after 10 years. The second tier — those convicted of crimes such as second-degree statutory rape — could seek removal after 25 years.

The third tier would include people convicted of crimes such as forcible rape and sexual trafficking of a child. They could never get off the registry, unless they were juveniles when convicted. In that case, they could petition after 25 years.

The requests would be filed in the circuit courts where offenders were convicted. To be considered for removal, they could have no additional convictions or pending charges for sexual offenses or felonies, and they would need to have completed probation and parole, as well as a sex offender treatment program.

The Missouri Highway Patrol, which manages the list, calculated that Phillips’ bill would allow the immediate removal of about 631 people dubbed “Romeo and Juliet” offenders — generally older teenagers who had consensual sex with a minor. They would be exempted from registering if the victim was at least 14 years old and the offender was not more than four years older than the victim.

The patrol says an additional 1,111 offenders could petition immediately for removal. Over the next five years, 284 more people would be eligible. Over 20 years, 2,480 more could apply.

At a hearing in February, Phillips’ bill drew support from groups as diverse as the Missouri Sheriffs Association, the American Civil Liberties Union of Eastern Missouri and Missouri Kids First, a statewide organization that works to prevent child abuse.

This is a very thoughtful response,” said Emily van Schenkhof, who lobbies for Missouri Kids First. “It really does protect children but highlights a public policy problem” with the registry.

Under the bill, juveniles convicted of sex crimes would still have to register but would not be part of the public list on the Internet.
- Nobody should be a part of an online shaming hit-list, it should be taken offline and used by police only!

County sheriffs lined up behind the bill, saying they have limited resources to track the growing list of offenders. Phillips’ bill “would make it easier to concentrate on the more dangerous offenders,” said Andrea Luntsford, a detective with the Boone County Sheriff’s Department.

MENTAL HEALTH TESTS
The alternative approach — Hinson’s bill — would use mental health exams to determine where offenders should fall in the three tiers. People deemed low-risk could apply to get off the registry in five years. Even people in the most serious tier would be eligible after 25 years, instead of facing lifetime registration.

Supporters of Hinson’s bill said it would inject science into the process and provide more meaningful information to the public, which has become numb to the registry because it includes so many people who are not real threats.
- Inject science?  If you did that in the first place, then you'd not have the registry or residency laws, since science & many studies show that they do not do what you think they do.

Sister Mary Ann McGivern, who represented the Missouri Association for Social Welfare at a recent legislative hearing, said many people on the list are unlikely to pose a risk. Some exposed themselves or peeked through windows, she said. Others possessed child pornography or had sex with a younger girlfriend when they were 18.

The registry is “a lifetime punishment for a set of behaviors most of us don’t understand,” said McGivern, who is a Sister of Loretto from St. Louis.

Critics said a new state bureaucracy would be needed to handle the risk assessments required under Hinson’s bill. A fiscal note said the cost to the state was “unknown but considered to be significant, exceeding $100,000 per year.”

Also, the state would no longer be in compliance with the federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act, so Missouri stands to lose federal grants. Those grants have provided $637,905 over the last three years. Much of the money funded grants to sheriffs to buy items such as digital cameras and computer equipment.

Hinson countered that sex offenders would shoulder the cost of the mental health appraisals, which he estimated would likely be “no more than a couple hundred dollars” apiece.
- And that's a couple hundred dollars many of them do not have, due to the laws you are pushing!

He also pointed to a study that estimated the current sex offender registry costs the state and local governments nearly $5 million — for example, by sending people who fail to register back to prison.
- In many cases we've seen, people get more time in prison for failure to register than the original crime.

To fight for Hinson’s approach, some offenders and their families have organized a group, St. Peters-based Missouri Citizens for Reform, and hired a lobbyist.

This is the only crime in America that’s punished endlessly,” said Sharie Keil, a member of Citizens for Reform.


Friday, March 1, 2013

OR - Mix of emotion at hearing for sex offender bills

Original Article

These are good bills, and thank you to all who attended the hearing.

02/28/2013

By Anna Canzano

SALEM – There was a mix of emotion Thursday as Oregon lawmakers heard testimony about a pair of bills that would overhaul how sex offenders register and are supervised.

The first proposal, House Bill 2552, concerns juvenile offenders. The bill would allow those who committed a sex crime before age 16 from having to report as a sex offender under certain circumstances.

The second bill, House Bill 2549, would mandate that all sex offenders be classified by their risk level to society. For instance, a Level 3 sex offender would be classified the most dangerous; Level 1 would the least likely to re-offend.

Currently, Oregon does not classify sex offenders; Washington does have a ranking system.

Surprising fallout of House Bill 2549? It would also provide relief to certain sex offenders. If passed, those convicted of serious crimes -- such as first-degree rape and sodomy -- can ask to be taken off the state registry within as few as five years after they're done with probation or parole.

Connie Hollon was behind the original law in 2006 that put a portion of Oregon’s sex offender registry online. She finds the proposal disappointing.

It saddens me,” Hollon said. “This is a bill … by a few select proponents that have their own agenda.”

This is also a crime that doesn’t walk away from the victim,” she added.

Others spoke in staunch support of the bills. Ken Nolley, president of Oregon Voices, said the current laws are actually creating an unjust culture.

The very laws we’ve passed to protect our community is actually destroying families … in many, many cases,” Nolley said.

Both bills were heard by the House Committee on Judiciary. The judiciary committee did not hold a vote on either bill.



Monday, February 25, 2013

RI - State Rep. pushes new sex offender bill

Original Article

02/25/2013

By Chris Raia

Rep. Palumbo calls for offense-based tier system

PROVIDENCE (WPRI) - A state Representative has introduced a bill that would create a much more rigid sex offender registry in Rhode Island.

State Rep. Peter G. Palumbo (D - Cranston) has been actively pushing bills that increase transparency of convicted sex offenders, and he is working now to enact a comprehensive sex offender registration and notification act (SORNA).

SORNA would create an offense-based tier system, classifying offenders according to the risk they pose to their environments. It would also make sex offender information public via a notification website with search capabilities and a function that enables users to receive email alerts when sex offenders commence residence, employment or school attendance within the state.

"As long as there is one sex offender out there that we cannot account for, there is the potential for great harm, the potential for another victim," said Rep. Palumbo.
- True, but what about all the other ex-felons who are not on some online shaming list like murderers, gang members, drug dealers, DUI offenders, etc?  Based on the facts, they are more dangerous than ex-sex offenders who have one of the lowest recidivism rates out there.

Currently, local law enforcement agencies are responsible for provide notification on the whereabouts and activities of registered sex offenders. SORNA would give that responsibility to one central agency: The R.I. State Police.

"By making one central agency... responsible for this process will free up local law enforcement resources and save communities money," said Rep. Palumbo.

Supporters of the bill include Attorney General Kilmartin, Rep. John DeSimone (D - Dist. 5, Providence), Rep. Raymond Johnston, Jr. (D - Dict. 61 - Pawtucket), Rep. John Carnevale (D - Dist. 13, Providence) and Rep. Donald Lally, Jr. (D - Dist. 33, Narragansett).


MA - Sex offenders’ $1.2M tab

Original Article

02/25/2013

By Erin Smith

The state’s most dangerous sex predators ran up a $1.2 million taxpayer-funded legal tab last year by quietly using an obscure provision in state law that lets them hire public defenders to go behind closed doors and argue to keep their identities and whereabouts secret, a Herald review found.

Since 2003, when the state ordered the most dangerous, or Level 3, sex offenders be posted on a public website, convicts have flooded the Committee for Public Counsel Services with requests for lower, laxer classification. Since then, the public defenders’ office has had to shell out skyrocketing sums for lawyers to take those cases before the Sex Offenders Registry Board.

Last year alone, the bill to represent indigent convicts cost taxpayers $1,228,065. That’s up a hundredfold from $11,293 in 2002.

These sex offenders have already been criminally convicted in court. Now we’re handing them taxpayer-funded lawyers so they can attack our laws? It’s ludicrous,” said Laurie Myers, a longtime advocate for tougher laws for the state’s roughly 11,100 sex offenders. “This is an administrative hearing. If you get a traffic ticket, no one gives you a free lawyer.”
- Everybody is entitled to free legal counsel if they cannot afford it, based on the bill of rights!  That is part of the Miranda rights.

What’s more, the legal tab could rise even higher under a bill filed recently by state Rep. Brian Mannal. The Barnstable Democrat wants the registry board to contact all sex offenders requesting reclassification or removal from the online registry and inform them of their right to a hearing and a free, taxpayer-funded lawyer if they’re deemed indigent.

The classification system is key to public safety — making the difference between “high-risk” Level 3 offenders who must have their names, mug shots, crimes and addresses posted on the Web; “moderate-risk” Level 2 offenders, whose names are available only upon request from the board or local police departments, and “low-risk” Level 1 sex offenders, whose identities are available only to law enforcement and certain state agencies.
- The public registry (hit-list) should be taken offline and used by police only for all tier levels.  It's nothing more than a phone book for vigilantes to use to look up, harass and in some cases murder ex-sex offenders or an innocent person.

Unlike parole hearings for second-degree murderers, critics point out, hearings before the Sex Offender Registry Board are held behind closed doors and without notice, or input, from victims or their families.

The board does not report how many Level 3 offenders successfully got their classification knocked down to Level 2, nor how many Level 2 offenders got reclassified as Level 1. As a result, it’s impossible to determine how many of these sexual predators have gone on to commit new crimes.
- Sex offender does not equal sexual predator!

The Committee for Public Counsel Services said they’re just following the law by representing convicts in their classification appeals.

The Legislature obviously recognized that this was an important enabling issue. This isn’t something that CPCS has unilaterally decided is a good idea,” said Lisa Hewitt, general counsel at CPCS.

Rep. Mannal, a criminal defense attorney, defended his bill, saying, “I think for the folks that go through this process — while it’s not a criminal proceeding — it will have a lasting impact on their lives. Someone who doesn’t have a legal background could find themselves unmatched in this environment.”

Meanwhile, state Rep. Brad Jones (R-North Reading) has filed a bill to get taxpayers off the hook for paying convicted sex offenders’ legal fees.

After you’ve been convicted and the taxpayer has paid for your incarceration, now we’re going to have the taxpayer pay to say you’re not at risk of re-offending?” Jones said. “I think that’s an unjustifiable expense and it’s something that’s ballooned exponentially.”

See Also:



Sunday, February 10, 2013

MT - Bill would grant courts ability to designate sex offenders

Original Article

02/08/2013

HELENA - The Montana State Legislature's House Judiciary Committee heard a bill that would give district courts authority to rank sex offenders by likelihood of committing another offense.

The state already requires that registered sex offenders to be designated as a tier 1, 2, or 3 offender. But not every sex offender in the state has a designated tier. Specifically those convicted before 1997, or out of state. House Bill 335 (PDF, Videos) would allow district courts to assign tiers to these offenders.

"In Montana, a therapist looks at this offender and they use statistical tools to tell whether this person is likely to reoffend or not. Those statistical tools are not based on the type of offense that you've committed," says State Prosecutor Ole Olsen of the Montana Attorney General's Office. "It's based on your comparison, what your history is like, what your psychological makeup is like compared to other populations."

No one spoke in opposition of the bill.



Tuesday, January 29, 2013

MI - Michigan may expand online sex offender registry to include more crimes involving minors

Original Article

01/29/2013

By Jonathan Oosting

LANSING - More sex offenders may soon be popping up on Michigan's online registry.

The state Senate today unanimously approved a bill that would expand the online registry to include certain additional crimes involving minors.

Lawmakers previously overhauled the Michigan Sex Offender Registry Act in 2011 to come into compliance with the federal Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act, which required the state to separate sex offenders into three tiers and mandated specific reporting requirements for each.

Under current law, the Michigan State Police must post online registry data for all Tier II and Tier III offenders convicted of crimes such as rape or creation of child pornography.

Senate Bill 44 (PDF), now headed to the House for consideration, would also require the state to post data for Tier I offenders convicted of a single crime involving minors.

Specific offenses that would be added to the website include knowingly possessing child pornography, indecent exposure when the victim is a minor, unlawful imprisonment or restraint of a minor and surveillance of a minor who is undressed or wearing only undergarments in a situation where he or she has a reasonable expectation of privacy.

"It was brought to my attention that there are some people in Tier I who could be a danger to children," said Sen. Rick Jones, R-Grand Ledge, who sponsored the legislation. "Certainly somebody that has committed one of these acts and been convicted should be on the list so parents and grandparents can protect their children from somebody who happens to be in the area."

Jones introduced a similar bill last session. It too was approved by the state Senate, but it failed to see a vote in the House during a busy lame-duck session. Citing today's unanimous Senate vote, Jones said he expects his bill to reach the governor's desk this time around.


Friday, January 4, 2013

MA - A murder occurs and instead of punishing just the murderer, Massachusetts punishes the scapegoat (ex-sex offenders)?

Original Article

01/04/2013

By George Brennan

Less than a decade after a Falmouth murder case shined the spotlight on the need for reform of the state's Sex Offender Registry, a monitoring program sparked by the outrage no longer exists — a victim of budget cuts.
- As usual, a murder occurs, so they go after ex-sex offenders instead of murderers!  That is like punishing all thieves for something a serial killer has done.  Yeah, doesn't make much sense, does it?  Sex offenders are nothing more than today's scapegoat!

Now, in the wake of an alleged sex abuse case at an unlicensed day care center in Wakefield, there is a renewed push to reform how sex offenders are classified. [name withheld], whose wife ran the day care business, had previously been classified as a Level I sex offender for a 1989 conviction of assault on a child.

In her inaugural speech Wednesday, Senate President Therese Murray, D-Plymouth, who represents the Upper Cape, said the state's sex offender laws will be one of her legislative priorities.
- Yes of course, she is trying to get elected, or just elected, so what better way to appeal to the sheeple?  This just goes to show you that no matter how many laws you pass, if a person is intent on committing a crime, they will.  These laws are useless and just used by politicians to help them get elected, or to help them look "tough" to the ignorant public.

"With the start of this new session, we will re-examine the criteria for sex offender registration to ensure that we are doing all that we can to protect our children and their families," Murray said after being elected to her fourth term in the Senate's top job.
- No matter what you do, it won't prevent children from being harmed, period!

It was Murray who in 2004 worked with Barnstable County Sheriff James Cummings and Cape and Islands District Attorney Michael O'Keefe after [name withheld], a registered sex offender who had failed to notify law enforcement of his moves as required by law, killed 20-year-old [name withheld] of Falmouth.

Murray pushed for $275,000 to bring a pilot program to the county that made sure sex offenders were classified before leaving prison, Cummings said Thursday. Inmates in state prison were sent to the Barnstable County Correctional Facility in Bourne for the last six to nine months of their sentences, Cummings said, where hearings were held by the Sex Offender Registry Board to classify them as Level I, II or III sex offenders.

While they were still in jail, the sheriff's office and local police teamed up to check out the address where the offender planned to live, Cummings said. They also did periodic checks to make sure the offender hadn't moved without letting law enforcement know, he said.

Officers and sheriff's deputies also checked in with employers periodically, he said.

"It was a great program, and we wanted to expand it, but (the) administration cut funding," Murray said Thursday.

With the funding cut in 2008, the sheriff still holds hearings at the jail for inmates sentenced to Barnstable County, but no longer has the resources to take in all Cape sex offenders from other jails, he said. The department can no long afford to do the routine checks, Cummings said.

"We pretty much had a thumb on where they lived and worked," he said. "We don't do that anymore either."

Murray said she would like to see funding for that program restored and to tighten up controls that allow suspects like [name withheld] to slip through the cracks.

"You have to fund it," she said. "It's a public safety issue. We put money in other areas. We need to put money into this."

Murray would also like the criteria for each level to be reviewed because she doesn't believe [name withheld] should ever have been classified as a Level I. The Sex Offender Registry Board also should have the ability to review allegations brought against a sex offender, even if it doesn't result in a court conviction, she said.
- It doesn't matter what someone classifies an offender, it will never be enough.  If they commit another crime, politicians will say, "See, the program isn't working and he/she shouldn't have been a tier 1," just like this politician is now screaming about.  They will not be satisfied until all criminals are in prison for life and never let out, but even then I'm sure they'll find something else to be dissatisfied about.

The state Department of Corrections also must begin review of sex offenders earlier to ensure that none are released before they are classified, something that's already required by law but isn't always being done because of a backlog of cases, Murray said.

Charles McDonald, a spokesman for the Sex Offender Registry Board, said the agency has cut the classification time in half and only a "small number" are released without being classified.

Classifications have to be able to withstand judicial review, he said.

Murray said a small working group is already looking at possible reforms, noting that the Patrick administration, House Speaker Robert DeLeo and Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr, R-Gloucester, are all on board with making changes.

The registry board supported a comprehensive bill filed by Gov. Patrick in 2012 that would have allowed the posting of Level II offenders and the release of Level I offenders upon request, McDonald said. He's hopeful some of those reforms will be considered this year.

Cummings said he was pleased to hear Murray once again leading the charge for tighter controls on sex offenders, though he acknowledged being frustrated that it takes high profile incidents like the Wessner murder and the alleged abuse of babies in Wakefield to trigger change.

"It's like crisis management seems to be the way government works," Cummings said.

Having Murray behind it will help, he said. "That's where the money is going to come from."

O'Keefe, the district attorney who is president of the state association of district attorneys for the coming year, met briefly with Murray during a visit to the Statehouse on Thursday.

"We haven't seen any proposals or discussed any details, but that would be a welcome initiative that she's undertaking," O'Keefe said.


Thursday, December 20, 2012

PA - Adam Walsh Act takes effect today

Original Article

12/20/2012

By Jennifer Harr

The registration provisions of the Adam Walsh Act kick in today, requiring additional reporting time for some, and new registration for others.

Signed last year to strengthen the existing Megan’s Law reporting and other requirements for sex offenders, the new act bases how long offenders have to report on a tiered system, adds new offenses for which people must report and in some cases, will require those already sentenced – and not covered under Megan’s Law – to undergo an assessment and being reporting addresses to state police.

Fayette County Assistant District Attorney Linda Cordaro, who acts as the county’s sex assault prosecutor, said there are many changes, all aimed at protecting potential victims. Included among them are a tiered system that puts offenses into three categories.

The lowest reporting time is for the first tier, and is 15 years. That tier includes charges like unlawful restraint of a minor, luring a child to a motor vehicle, indecent assault and interference with custody of children.

Tier two offenses require a 25-year registration, and include institutional sexual assault, promoting prostitution of a minor, sexual abuse of children. Tier three registrants do so for life, and have been convicted of offenses like kidnapping and rape.

Under Megan’s Law, offenses were divided into two categories, requiring either 10-year or lifetime registration.

The 10-year registrants who are still within their registration period will be reclassified under the Adam Walsh Act, and their reporting time will retroactively increase dependent upon what tier they fit into, Cordaro said.

If a person has been convicted or has pleaded guilty to an offense that required registration under Megan’s Law, and are still under the supervision of the court, and they haven’t successfully completed their super or incarceration, then they are going to fall under the requirements of the Adam Walsh registration, which is a lengthier registration period,” she said.

Uniontown attorney Thomas W. Shaffer recently argued a motion to have a client who pleaded no contest to indecent assault removed from probation so that his client was not retroactively forced into registration under the Adam Walsh Act.

The man, sentenced to one year probation in February, was previously not required to register under Megan’s Law, a provision specifically noted in his plea deal, Shaffer said.

However, the man received notice that he was going to have to register under Adam Walsh, a move Shaffer contended is a constitutional violation.

He said that retroactively increasing registration time – or forcing someone to register who previously did not have to – is tantamount to punishing someone twice for the same crime, and precluded.

This act is penal, it’s not procedural,” Shaffer said.



Thursday, December 13, 2012

GA - Georgia sex offender tracking falls off

Original Article

12/12/2012

By Andria Simmons

An estimated 258 dangerous sexual predators are not being monitored as closely as they should be because Georgia’s system of classifying sex offenders based on their danger to the community is seriously backlogged.

Such sexual predators, who are considered likely to commit more sex crimes, are required under a state law passed in 2006 to wear a GPS monitor the rest of their lives and update their sex offender registration twice yearly. Although they are listed in the publicly available registry, the GPS monitoring requirement makes these violent sexual predators accountable for their whereabouts, providing greater assurance that they will stay away from areas where children gather.

Officials on the special state review board said the classification process has been hindered because their analysts who investigate cases were stretched too thin.

Five analysts at the Georgia Bureau of Investigation are currently slogging through 4,300 pending cases while also getting anywhere from 120 to 150 new cases a month, and officials can’t say how long it will take to eliminate the backlog.

At this point, we’re just trying to catch up and keep up,” said Cindy Ledford, assistant special agent in charge of the Georgia Information Sharing Analysis Center of the GBI.

The backlog has alarmed some advocates of child and adult sexual assault victims.

To know something like this is happening is … very disheartening and puts you in a mindset of second-guessing what’s the sense of even coming forward,” said DeQuanda Sanders, who founded the Georgia-based nonprofit Saving Our Children and Families (Facebook) to help victims of child abuse. “For an offender to get out and not have their sentence fit their crime, it really is a disservice to the victim.”

When state lawmakers in 2006 passed the sex offender bill it was considered one of the toughest in the nation (PDF). The law prohibited registered sex offenders from living or working within 1,000 feet of any place where children gather, such as churches, schools, swimming pools and parks. Some of those restrictions have since been eased after several lawsuits filed by civil rights groups challenged the constitutionality of the law.

But part of the bill that still stands required sex offenders to be classified as either a Level 1, Level 2 or Level 3 Sexually Dangerous Predator by a specially appointed board called the State Sex Offender Registration Review Board. The classification system helps local law enforcement focus on monitoring those sex offenders who pose the greatest danger.

  • Level 1 means the convicted sex offender has a 4 to 13 percent chance of committing another sex crime.
  • Level 2 indicates there’s about a 34 percent chance the sex offender will strike again.
  • A Level 3 Sexually Dangerous Predator designation means there’s a 65 percent chance or greater that the offender will commit more sex crimes — and it is this level of offender that requires GPS monitoring and twice-yearly registry updates, said Tracy Alvord, executive director of the Sex Offender Registration Review Board.

Sexually dangerous predators make up only about 4 to 6 percent of convicted sex offenders in Georgia. Based on that percentage, Alvord estimated that about 258 of the 4,300 backlogged offender cases are probably sexually dangerous predators.
- From the data we've been gathering, which is a little out dated, predators account for less than 2% of all sex offenders in the state.  We will be updating this spreadsheet again, in the next day or so.

A recent incident in Fairburn illustrates the need for keeping closer tabs on convicted sex offenders.

Bobby Wilcox checked the list of sex offenders in his area in October and recognized one as a volunteer at his children’s Bear Creek Middle School. The man had apparently lied about his name and address to fool school officials. After Wilcox alerted the school, the man was arrested for violating the terms of his probation.

You may think you live in a nice area, but you just never know,” Wilcox said. “A lot of people get complacent and think things like this won’t happen. They do all the time.”

Research has shown only a small percentage of sex offenders pose a high risk of reoffending, and those offenders are responsible for most of the nation’s sex crimes, said Dr. Julie Medlin, a psychologist who specializes in treating sex offenders and operates four treatment centers in metro Atlanta.
- We have many more studies, here.

The backlog in classifying sex offenders is a consequence of a well-intended law that the state had inadequate resources to swiftly implement, Alvord said. The board meets only once a month and is composed of volunteers who are law enforcement officials, medical professionals and victim advocates. Up until July, the board had only three analysts to gather offenders’ criminal histories.

Sometimes they pass legislative acts that we have to play catch-up on,” said Chief Steven Land of the Hazelhurst Police Department, who is also vice chairman of the Georgia Sex Offender Registration Review Board. He said no one realized the number of sex offenders who would have to be classified.

Former state Rep. Barry Fleming (R-Harlem), who was House majority whip when the law was passed, said the sex offender classification system may be backlogged, but it’s still an improvement over prior years when no risk assessment was required.

The situation is getting better, but you couldn’t take years and years where this law hadn’t been implemented and catch up with it overnight,” said Fleming, who has been re-elected to return to the House in January after leaving office in 2008.

In order to classify an offender, the Sex Offender Registration Review Board looks at the person’s history. That review process requires analysts to gather court documents, victim-witness statements and investigative reports for cases that can be years if not decades old, in counties that have different methods of record-keeping.

The biggest obstacle to increasing the volume of classifications was the time it took analysts to obtain those documents.

Up until July, analysts were also hampered by working for a civilian state agency — the state Department of Human Resources — because some local law enforcement agencies were reluctant to send them sensitive police records, said GBI spokesman John Bankhead.

House Bill 895 (PDF), passed by the General Assembly this year, remedied that by transferring the three analysts to the GBI effective July 1. The GBI has also dedicated two more analysts to help with the caseload. Now, the analysts are able to gather the necessary records at a faster clip, Bankhead said.

Medlin, who served on the Sex Offender Registration Review Board prior to the start of the classification system, said one solution to the backlog might be to start classifying sex offenders as soon as they’re convicted, so judges can lock up high-risk offenders longer or require more intensive psychological treatment.
- And you'd have to re-evaluate them when they come out of prison/jail as well.

It would be much more effective, so much more timely and would make so much more sense,” Medlin said.


Monday, December 10, 2012

OH - Ohio court's sex offender ruling clarifies some laws

Original Article

So when is the sex offender moral panic and witch hunt going to stop? Every single year politicians are passing more and more laws to further punish, demonize, exile and ostracize ex-sex offenders, been doing it for many years now, and wasting tons and tons of tax payer money, and we wonder why we are about to jump off the cliff?

12/10/2012

By Jona Ison

CHILLICOTHE — Recent Supreme Court decisions likely will result in some changes to past classifications and sentences for sex offenders.

The decisions were released along with several other Ohio Supreme Court decisions as part of a year-end transition process. The decisions clarify some issues regarding the changeover from Megan’s Law to the Adam Walsh Act regarding sentencing and classifications of sex offenders.

In one case, the court’s decision clarified that any sex offense committed between the July 2007 repeal of Megan’s Law and the January 2008 effective date of the Adam Walsh Act shall be classified under Megan’s Law. An earlier ruling by the court had determined the law under which offenders are classified is determined by when the act was committed, not when the conviction occurs.

In a different case, the court ruled that when offenders are classified under Megan’s Law and violate address notification rules under that law, the offender must be sentenced under the penalty provisions of Megan’s Law, not the Adam Walsh Act.

However, another case ruling determined any indictments charging a violation of notification requirements of the Adam Walsh Act of offenders classified under Megan’s Law continue to be valid. The court reasoned the indictments were valid because the two laws have identical address change notification requirements.

Ross County Prosecutor Matt Schmidt said the rulings “seem consistent” with past rulings. As the state moved from Megan’s Law to Adam Walsh, there was a flurry of changes back and forth.

It’s created a massive headache,” Schmidt said.

At first, all offenders were re-classified under the Adam Walsh Act (which carries a three-tier classification), but then a court ruling determined that was unconstitutional. As a result, those offenders had to be reverted back to classification under Megan’s Law.

The Megan’s Law classification system requires a sexual classification hearing and the judge determines the classification of the offender, such as sexual predator.

The new rulings, however are unlikely to create such a large issue.

Pike County Prosecutor Rob Junk (Facebook) anticipates his office will see some motions filed on past cases, but not an overwhelming amount.

I’ll imagine we’ll see a few,” Junk said.

Cases where any of the issues are present will not automatically be altered. Defendants will need to file a motion for a change.

It’s not our jobs to hunt them down and inform them of the changes in the law,” Junk said.

Sex offenders seeking more information about the rulings and how to file something in their case can contact their individual attorneys or the Office of the Ohio Public Defender at 800-686-1573 or visit www.opd.ohio.gov.


Thursday, October 25, 2012

PA - More sex offenders to be on Centre County books when new law takes effect in December

Original Article

10/23/2012

By Matt Carroll

BELLEFONTE — Centre County officials are moving to update the county’s system for registering sexual offenders ahead of a new state law set to take effect in December.

The bill, signed into law in December 2011 by Gov. Tom Corbett, will bring Pennsylvania in compliance with the federal Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006.

The act is named after Adam Walsh, who was abducted from a Florida shopping mall and later found murdered. After his death, Walsh’s father, John Walsh, became an advocate for the victims of violent crimes, hosting the television show “America’s Most Wanted.”
- Adam's death was never proven to be done by a known or unknown sex offender, or even if sexual abuse was involved.  It was a brutal murder.  And they claim Ottis Toole, a known serial killer / liar, was the person who killed Adam, by his confession, but he recanted.  The Adam Walsh act targets ex-sex offenders and not all those who have harmed children in some form, so ex-sex offenders are the scapegoat.

The bill will result in a greater number of registered offenders in Pennsylvania and will require some offenders to report in more often, county commissioners heard at a meeting Tuesday morning.

It’s a revamp of Megan’s Law,” said Andy Andrews, the county’s central booking coordinator. “They are adding more information, making more public information available and broadening the number of people who need to register.”
- So since the original intent of the Adam Walsh Act was to punish people who harm children, when are we going to see a registry for abusive parents, baby sitters, family members, drug dealers, DUI offenders, and all other people who harm children?

Andrews said there are about 23,000 registered sexual offenders in the commonwealth. The number is expected to jump to 84,000 under the new system.

The new bill closes loopholes in Megan’s Law regarding homeless and out-of-state offenders. It also requires some juvenile offenders to register for the first time, Andrews said.

County officials will also be processing some existing offenders more often. The bill calls for a three-tier system. The most serious offenders must report in every four months, while others must report every six months or once a year, Andrews said.

The county’s central booking center is in the Centre County Correctional Facility. The booking center has been, and will continue to be under the new law, where sexual offenders register in the county.

The county is seeking a $1,598 grant to purchase a new computer, digital signature pad and webcam to facilitate the system upgrades.

Commissioners Chairman Steve Dershem said the existing booking center is largely funded by fees collected through criminal proceedings.