Archive for January, 2009

Iowa : Sex Offenders Banned from Public Places

WCF Courier (Iowa) : Sex Offenders Banned from Public Places.

DES MOINES — Sex offenders would be restricted from loitering or being present — rather than residing — near places where children play or gather under changes being proposed by state public safety officials.

Ross Loder, lobbyist for the state Department of Public Safety, told a legislative panel his agency is working with justice department officials to craft legislation that will comply with new federal sex-offender requirements — including a provision to repeal Iowa’s 2,000-foot residency restriction and convert to presence and loitering restrictions that focus on where offenders are while they’re awake instead of while they’re asleep.

Among the provisions would be language to shift the focus from restricting where sex offenders can reside to establishing exclusion zones where they could not be present without permission or loiter within 300 feet of a restricted area, he said.

Aside from the claim that the requirements deter offenders from registering their addresses, authorities said it is addresses only a small portion of sex crimes against children. Only 1.5 to 2.5 percent of molestation cases involve a stranger, Ferguson said. In the vast majority of cases, the perpetrator is family member, step-parent or friend of the family, he said.

Aside from the obvious Constitutional abridgment of rights which comes from banning a group of citizens from any presence in a public place, they go on to admit that 97 - 98% of sex crimes against children come from family and acquaintances. So the proposed legislation could have absolutely no affect on over 98% of these crimes.
Soon in Iowa, if you are a sex offender and you walk your dog through a park or library or school grounds, or if you take that short-cut through the park to get home, or you jog past that daycare center….you’re going to prison!

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Juvenile Sex Offenders Can't Live Near Schools

File this one under the “stupid” category:

montanasnewsstation.com : House endorses more limits for young sex offenders.

HELENA, Mont. (AP) - The House solidly endorsed a bill Friday that would prevent juvenile sex offenders from living near schools, public parks, or daycares.

The measure was endorsed 91-9. Before moving to the Senate, it must still pass one more largely ceremonial reading in the House.

The bill would extend the same limitations in place for adult sex offenders to juveniles rated most likely to re-offend.

Republican Rep. Ray Hawk of Florence (idiot) is the bill’s sponsor. He says the need for it came to his attention when he learned a juvenile offender was living within 30 feet of a school playground in his district.

The bill is House Bill 55.

So if I have this correct, juvenile sex offenders can attend the school, but they cannot live near it. Okay, I got it! Sounds like typical inane government.

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Court Links

This is a reference resource for links to:
Individual State Courts
Individual State Courts of Appeals
United States District Courts
United States Courts of Appeals

Individual State Courts & Courts of Appeals (the best compilations found of links to state courts)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_court
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Courts_of_the_United_States

United States District Courts and United States Courts of Appeals (includes a map search to find your district court)
http://www.uscourts.gov/index.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Courts_of_the_United_States
us_court_of_appeals_and_district_court_mapsvg2

Federal Court Blogs:

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MI State Law Kills Man

mlive.com (Grand Rapids) : Man found dead in cold was turned away from shelters in past because he was sex offender.

GRAND RAPIDS — A man found dead on the streets Monday had tried in recent weeks to gain admittance to at least one of two Heartside missions, but was denied a bed because he is a registered sex offender.

Officials say its possible Thomas Pauli might be alive today except for a state law prohibiting him from establishing a residence even for one night within 1,000 feet of a school, in this case, Catholic Central High, also located in the Heartside district.

“It’s heartbreaking. I have a hard time even talking about it,” said Marge Palmerlee, executive director at Degage Ministries.

There are no exceptions to the so-called Megan’s Law, which sets boundaries and restrictions for those on the list.

Added Shaffer, “These men and women are clearly ‘The Scarlet Letter’ folks of our day. And where do they go? I have no answer.”
Mr. Pauli was convicted of second-degree criminal sexual conduct in 1991, over 17 years ago.

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Court: State Must Release Sex Offenders

whotv.com (Iowa) : Court Says State Must Release Sex Offenders.

January 26, 2009–The Iowa Department of Corrections says it must immediately release more than a dozen sex offenders from prison. The move comes following a pair of Iowa Supreme Court rulings made last week.

Prison officials kept fifteen sex offenders locked up for not completing their treatment program. But the state’s high court ruled the department can only suspend an inmates’ “earned time” if their offense was committed after January 2001. The decision means the fifteen offenders have served their time.

Officials say all fifteen will be released in the next 48 hours.

desmoinesregister.com (editorial) : Constitution protects even sex offenders. The lesson in this sudden release of 15 inmates should not be obscured by the nature of their crimes: Constitutional rights belong to everyone, and Iowa’s courts deserve credit for recognizing that.

Every one of these people should sue the state!

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Judge Throws Out Sex Offender Residency Restrictions

LoHud.com (NY) : State judge throws out Rockland’s housing law for sex offenders.

A state Supreme Court judge sitting in Rockland today invalidated Rockland’s law restricting where sex offenders can live. Justice William Kelly, in an eight-page decision, found that state has specifically taken the responsibility for sex offenders.

Kelly also wrote the state law specifically empowers local probation officers to decide where sex offenders can live without any borders. He also cited a similar decision banning residency boundaries in New Jersey by a judge in the Garden State.

Kelly nullified Rockland’s 2007 law. As the first decision on the pre-emption issue, Kelly’s ruling becomes precedent and could nullify 80 similar laws across the state that establish some boundaries in which sex offenders cannot live.

In Rockland, for example, sex offenders were prohibited from living, working, and loitering within 1,000 feet of schools, day care centers, libraries or any facilities. Kelly’s decision would dismiss misdemeanor charges against up to 13 sex offenders living in prohibited areas.

Oberlander’s lawyer, David Goldstein, raised the legal arguments. He said the 1,000 feet or any boundary is arbitrary and meaningless as far as protecting the public.

“The state law of letting probation officers use their discretion is more effective,” Goldstein said. “The county law was an over-reaction with a nebulous 1,000-foot magical line.”

He said Kelly’s decision on the pre-emption issue has implications statewide and could overrule other residency laws.

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Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act

Why the Federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act Raises New Constitutional Questions.
Corey Rayburn Yung, John Marshall Law School, Chicago
Harvard Journal on Legislation, Vol. 46, 2009

Abstract:
In 2003, the United States Supreme Court issued its only two opinions regarding the constitutionality of sex offender registration and notification statutes. The two opinions, Smith v. Doe (”Smith”) and Connecticut Department of Public Safety v. Doe (”DPS”), upheld the Alaska and Connecticut registry and notification laws against Ex Post Facto Clause and due process challenges. Three years later, the federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (”SORNA”) was passed as part of the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act. The federal statute was very different from the state statutes that the Court reviewed. Most notable among the differences was the creation of the federal crime of “failure to register” which was punishable by up to ten years imprisonment. Despite the significance of the disparities between the state and federal laws, district courts across the country have virtually rubber stamped the criminal provisions of SORNA as constitutional. The district courts’ reasoning has been almost entirely based upon superficial, mechanical applications of the Court’s decisions in Smith and DPS. This article contends that most district courts have been severely misguided in reading the two Court opinions and the statutory provisions of SORNA. Consequently, this article concludes that either Congress should amend SORNA or courts should strike down portions of SORNA on Ex Post Facto Clause, due process, and Commerce Clause grounds.

Keywords: Sex Offenders, Registration, Notification, SORNA, Adam Walsh Act, Ex Post Facto, Due Process, Commerce Clause

To view the complete document, click the “download” link at the top of the link.

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VA Require State to Notify Sex Offenders of Laws

Virginia State Legislature : Bill summary as introduced:
Sex Offender and Crimes Against Minors Registry. Provides that the State Police shall publish on the publicly available Internet sex offender database and mail to all persons for whom registration is required the text of all general laws affecting such persons solely because of their inclusion in the Registry. The State Police shall publish and mail the text of all such laws upon their enactment, if such laws are emergency acts, or upon the adjournment of the reconvened session following the regular or special session at which such laws were enacted.

This is as it should be. With the litany of laws being imposed upon sex offenders, at minimum, the State must be held responsible for notifying registered sex offenders of the new laws when they are enacted. It is unfair to assume that every registered sex offender will research (or even understand) new bills and laws which may apply to them.

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GA Continues to Show its Obsession With Sex Offenders

GA Continues to Show its Obsession With Stripping Away All Constitutional Rights from Every Sex Offender.

Georgia General Assembly : Senate Bill SB 14 - Local Boards of Education; no person on the national/state sex offender registry shall be eligible for election/service on board…

Summary
A BILL to be entitled an Act to amend Code Section 20-2-51 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to election of county board of education members, persons ineligible to be members or superintendent, ineligibility for local boards of education, and ineligibility for other offices, so as to provide that no person who is on the national or state sex offender registry shall be eligible for election to or service on a local board of education; to repeal conflicting laws; and for other purposes.

Section1 “(e) No person who is on the National Sex Offender Registry or the state sexual offender registry shall be eligible for election to or service on a local board of education.”

Granted: it is very unlikely that a sex offender would be elected to such a position, but isn’t it the right of the electorate to decide? And doesn’t a sex offender have the right to run for election?

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Sex-offender Law is Unaffordable, Doesn't Improve Safety

LATimes : Revisit Jessica’s Law -The sex-offender statute is unaffordable and doesn’t improve safety. If it can’t be dropped, it should be rewritten.

Of all the ill-considered ballot initiatives approved by California voters over the years, few can match Jessica’s Law for sheer self-destructiveness. The measure, billed as a way to protect children from sexual predators when it appeared on the ballot in 2006 as Proposition 83, is worsening the yawning state budget gap amid zero evidence that it’s protecting anyone – in fact, according to a state panel, it may be threatening public safety.

This page warned that the initiative would be an expensive mistake, but that didn’t stop 70% of voters from approving it. That may be because sexual predators are nobody’s idea of a good neighbor, and voters thought that forcing sex offenders to wear GPS tracking devices for life and forbidding them to live within 2,000 feet of schools and parks would keep them at bay. What they didn’t consider were cost and practicality.

(Again, note the improper use of the phrase, “sexual predator”. According to the law, “predators” are defined as the worst sub-group classification of sex offenders. Most sex offenders are lower-tier, lower-risk “sex offenders”, yet the media continues to use the term “sexual predator” in an effort to scare the reader.)

Among its many failings, the measure doesn’t distinguish between criminals who are at high risk of re-offending and those who aren’t. That means a teenager convicted of having sex with his underage girlfriend, as just one example, is subject to GPS monitoring and residence restrictions for the rest of his life, even if he never commits another crime. It also fails to specify what agency is responsible for monitoring those thousands of former inmates, or to devote money to pay for it.

State corrections officials announced Jan. 12 that they are now monitoring all 6,622 paroled sex offenders with GPS devices, after Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger set aside $106 million in last year’s budget for the program. Where the state will come up with the money while facing a $42-billion shortfall over the next 18 months is an open question. What’s more, the state will monitor sex offenders only for as long as they remain on parole — after that, it’s up to municipal agencies, none of which have the staff, equipment or spare funding to do the job.

The expense might be worthwhile if Jessica’s Law were actually reducing sex crimes. Yet research has found no connection between where a sex offender lives and the likelihood that he’ll offend again, nor is there any evidence that GPS monitoring lowers recidivism. Further, it’s very hard for parolees to find homes that aren’t near schools or parks, leading to a 12-fold increase in the number of homeless sex offenders since the law was passed in 2006. A lack of stable housing only increases the odds that an ex-con will return to crime — or as the state Sex Offender Management Board put it in a report Tuesday: “Residency restrictions that preclude or eliminate appropriate offender housing can threaten public safety instead of enhancing it.”

Lawmakers rarely show the courage to fix problems created by get-tough-on-crime voter initiatives, but there will never be a better time to improve Jessica’s Law. The state budget and the prison system are in crisis and must be reinvented, and amending this law — which the Legislature can do with a two-thirds vote — would benefit them both. Ideally, the measure should be overturned, but at a minimum the Legislature should create a review process that allows low-risk offenders to escape the residency and monitoring rules. California simply can’t afford to pay more to be less safe.

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