Are sex offender laws too broad?

Over eight years in the Missouri House, Republican Representative Rodney Schad has gotten numerous phone calls, letters, and emails from registered sex offenders and their families about the damage the registry has caused in their lives — the harassment, persistent unemployment, and community ostracism. Three years ago, Schad decided to start researching the state’s registration policy, and what he found surprised him.

“There’s no way to tell who’s dangerous and who isn’t,” says Schad. “[People] look up their address and see 10 offenders living or working near their house.” In his view, the list is becoming bloated and less helpful to ordinary citizens than it should be.

To try and refine who actually shows up on the public registry, Schad crafted legislation to create a tier system so that only the most dangerous offenders are listed publicly. Currently, anyone convicted of any type of sex crime, from public urination to child molestation, is placed on the list.

The bill also creates an appeals process, so that offenders can petition to be removed from the registry after 10 or 20 years, depending on their crime, and removes all juvenile sex offenders tried in juvenile court from the public registry. The bill has passed the Republican-led House of Representatives both this year and last year with bipartisan support because, Schad says, “every one of our representatives has these offenders in their districts.” It remains to be acted on in the Missouri Senate, which has not concluded its 2012 session.

This proposed change to Missouri’s registry comes just as the state has moved into compliancewith the federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA), a portion of the Adam Walsh Act passed by Congress in 2006. That law is aimed at protecting children from predators by collecting sex offender data in a national public registry and requiring those people listed in it, including juveniles, to report their movements to law enforcement.  But even though the federal compliance deadline has passed, only 15 states have substantially complied. (Missouri is one of them.)

Many states have decided not to comply because their legislators oppose lifelong registration for some juvenile sex offenders, one of the requirements of SORNA. Other states have found that even though noncompliance comes with a 10 percent cut to federal justice assistance grants, the cost of compliance would be much higher.

Finding a balance

Missouri is not the only state pushing back against the strictest registry requirements. Georgia, which had one of the toughest sex offender laws in the nation, scaled back its registration requirements in 2010 for people who had committed crimes such as false imprisonment or non-sexual kidnapping. This immediately removed 819 people from the registry, according to theAtlanta Journal- Constitution.

In Ohio, which was the first state to go along with the Adam Walsh Act in 2007, the state Supreme Court has struck down three controversial portions of SORNA compliance legislation in the last two years: the lifetime registration of some juveniles, the application of the more restrictive Adam Walsh Act penalties to offenders sentenced under previous, less strict laws, and community re-notification requirements for offenders previously sentenced.

“What you’re seeing with Missouri and other states that are coming into compliance,” says Elizabeth Pyke, director of government affairs at the National Criminal Justice Association,  “is that they’re trying to get to that balance between what they feel is a good system for their state and what keeps them in line with the national rules.”

Even though Ohio’s Supreme Court has struck down key provisions of the law that put the state into compliance with the Adam Walsh Act, the state attorney general’s office, which administers the sex offender registry, says that these decisions have not affected overall compliance with Adam Walsh requirements.

For Missouri, compliance with the act means that the state will get to keep the full amount of its federal justice assistance grant for fiscal year 2012. But if Schad’s legislation becomes law, Missouri will come out of compliance and lose about $600,000.

Support for the list

In Greene County, in southwest Missouri, Sheriff Jim Arnott and Prosecutor Dan Patterson havevoiced concerns to the legislature over changes to the registry. Arnott insists the registry as it stands is a valuable law enforcement tool, and both Patterson and Arnott say people convicted of forcible sex crimes should remain on the public list for life.

But Schad and the Missouri House decided that taking lower level offenders off the public registry would not be a threat to public safety. Most of the offenders on the registry, Schad says, committed their offenses when they were “young, dumb, and stupid.” Many were charged with public urination or exposing themselves while they were drunk, offenses with penalties that include sex offender registration.  “All those [minor offenses] are lumped together with the guy that raped a baby,” Schad says.

And when it comes to compliance with the Adam Walsh Act, the cost outweighs the benefits, Schad believes. More than half of the state’s registered sex offenders did not list an employer in their registration, which means many of them are likely to be unemployed, according to the Missouri Highway Patrol, the agency responsible for maintaining the state’s registry. “If we can help these people find good jobs,” Schad says, “that would more than save [the $600,000 grant amount].”

Tide still trending toward punishment

Even though opposition to the harshest sex offender policies is brewing, the more common story is still more punishment, not less. The Louisiana House passed a bill this week to exclude sex offenders convicted of computer-related offenses from social networking sites. The Arkansas parole board is considering banning registered sex offenders from using the Internet, and New York has recently distributed sex offenders’ email addresses to online gaming companies which are then disabling offenders’ accounts.

And amid the looming threat of federal funding cuts, the Illinois Senate approved a $20 million expansion to the state’s registry in an effort to comply with the Adam Walsh Act.

But many opponents of broad sex offender laws argue that the laws are based on fear, not science. Sex offenses have one of the lowest rates of recidivism of any type of crime. Only 3.5 percent of sex offenders were reconvicted of a subsequent sex crime within three years of their release from prison, according to a study from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Contact Maggie Clark at maclark@pewtrusts.org

  • http://sexoffenderissues.blogspot.com/ SOIssues

    Yes, yes they are.  The registry is nothing more than an online shaming hit-list, and residency restrictions do nothing except exile ex-offenders, making them homeless and/or jobless, potentially making some more dangerous.

    But, this is what you get when you have a lot self-centered, grand standing politicians who are out exploiting ex-offenders, fear and children for their own political gain!

    http://www.facebook.com/OfficialSOIssues
    http://sexoffenderissues.blogspot.com

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/T7WBIILMSAKZ5IRPWNFJQ6UWS4 fighter pilot

    Yes, the current laws are way too broad. As a parent, I wouldn’t know without further research on each individual offender, who is really a threat. I lived by a contact offender several years ago and he was never a problem. It did not affect the way I raised my kids. It wouldn’t have mattered if he was there or all of the other neighbors that are not on the registry were the only ones in the neighborhood. My kids had rules and they were required to follow them or suffer the consequences. I only wish that all lawmakers would look at the data on sex offenders and make the necessary changes to allow people to have a second chance at life after making a mistake. I commented on another article with the old adage “first time shame on you, second time, shame on me” and there shouldn’t be a third time. Please push these same changes throughout our country. The families of sex offenders need to be able to move on with their lives. The children of offenders should be able to have both parents in their life and should not have to deal with the humiliation and abuse of the registry.

  • http://sexoffenderissues.blogspot.com/ SOIssues

     Also, children are being ruined for life due to these same egotistical politicians:

    http://sexoffenderissues.blogspot.com/2007/12/child-sex-offenders.html

    Who, when they get busted for a sex crime, get slapped on the wrist.

    http://sexoffenderissues.blogspot.com/2007/07/corruption-links.html
    http://www.youtube.com/user/CelebritySexOffender
    http://www.youtube.com/user/PoliceSexOffenders

  • The_Emperor

    Wow.  It’s about time a politician had the audacity and ‘huevos’ to show leadership and actually do something to improve public safety rather than make it worse.

    Hopefully, the laws get repealed so they can make good ones instead of continuing to enforce bad ones out of pride.

  • yellowroselady

     

    Many times these folks get a job then, in some states and
    counties, someone from the sheriff’s office shows up and hands the boss a copy
    of the person’s registry listing….and you guessed it, they get fired on the
    spot.  Some after 3 days, others after 6 months, and then there are a few
    that are employed for several years before Susie Subtle Citizen sends an
    anonymous copy of the listing.  Representative Schad makes a very valid
    point in that we are requiring their place of employment be listed as we as the
    license plate numbers if company vehicles…if you were an employer wanting to
    remain in business how would you approach an applicant who required to disclose
    this information or goes to prison on a felony charge. 

    You do the math… 763,000 men, women and children, as young as 8 and 10 in
    some states, across the nation required to register. The “crimes”
    range from urinating in public, sexting, exposure, false accusations by a
    soon-to-be ex-wife, angry girlfriend, or spiteful student, viewing abusive or
    suggestive images of anyone18 years old or younger, solicitation, playing
    doctor, Romeo and Juliet consensual sexual dating relationships, endangering
    the welfare of a child, rape and incest.  Now multiply by 3 or 4 family
    members, wives, children, mothers, grandmothers, girlfriends, aunts and other
    loved ones that are suffering the collateral damage by being harassed,
    ridiculed, threatened, beaten, wives lose their jobs, asked to leave their
    church and other organizations, have to move, have signs placed in their yards,
    have flyers distributed throughout the neighborhood….all because they are
    trying to provide a support system for someone who has paid their debt to
    society and wants to work and support their family….that’s all. 

    Education is the key!  Use the funds Congress wants you
    to spend on beefing up registries to teach parents, teens and children about
    sexual safety to include behavior that is appropriate toward them as well as
    behavior that is appropriate coming from them.  Very Important!

    Vicki Henry

    Women Against Registry dot com

  • todtown

    Let’s hope that this is the new trend – away from putting the screws to people who have already done their time, and toward more sensible sex offender management. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=624866457 Valerie Parkhurst

    Its no secret the Registry needs fine tuning not many people disagree with that, but dont be fooled by some posters, their “loved ones” have crimes that warranted putting needle’s in their arms, but where are they? Trolling the internet plying that “woe to me” crap. Most states have already implemented the “Romeo” exlusions in their registries and that was the right thing to do, but many offenders have crimes that would set your hair on fire and their ultimate goal is to abolish the registry completely.They want to  Abolish civil commitment and go back underground to offend unabated. The war on our women and children is escalating not declining and a daily read in the newspapers confirm that. Sex Offender groups spend alot of time trying to convince YOU they were over prosecuted and under served by plea deals, dont fall for it. Yellowroselady” loved one is a perfect example of the “pure evil one human can perpetrate on another” she is just setting the groundwork for his prison release..

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=624866457 Valerie Parkhurst

    Its no secret the Registry needs fine tuning not many people disagree with that, but dont be fooled by some posters, their “loved ones” have crimes that warranted putting needle’s in their arms, but where are they? Trolling the internet plying that “woe to me” crap. Most states have already implemented the “Romeo” exlusions in their registries and that was the right thing to do, but many offenders have crimes that would set your hair on fire and their ultimate goal is to abolish the registry completely.They want to  Abolish civil commitment and go back underground to offend unabated. The war on our women and children is escalating not declining and a daily read in the newspapers confirm that. Sex Offender groups spend alot of time trying to convince YOU they were over prosecuted and under served by plea deals, dont fall for it. Yellowroselady” loved one is a perfect example of the “pure evil one human can perpetrate on another” she is just setting the groundwork for his prison release..

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=624866457 Valerie Parkhurst

    Its no secret the Registry needs fine tuning not many people disagree with that, but dont be fooled by some posters, their “loved ones” have crimes that warranted putting needle’s in their arms, but where are they? Trolling the internet plying that “woe to me” crap. Most states have already implemented the “Romeo” exlusions in their registries and that was the right thing to do, but many offenders have crimes that would set your hair on fire and their ultimate goal is to abolish the registry completely.They want to  Abolish civil commitment and go back underground to offend unabated. The war on our women and children is escalating not declining and a daily read in the newspapers confirm that. Sex Offender groups spend alot of time trying to convince YOU they were over prosecuted and under served by plea deals, dont fall for it. Yellowroselady” loved one is a perfect example of the “pure evil one human can perpetrate on another” she is just setting the groundwork for his prison release..

  • Extremely Disgruntled

    It’s not only the Registry that needs fixing, it’s the criminal codes themselves which add to this listing “crimes” that are not crimes everywhere. I recently posted this, but it seems pertinent to this discussion, so I’ll paste it here. (In advance, I assure you that more than one will comment on mine, misunderstanding my intentions, as I attempt to word below to prevent that from happening.)
    Don’t go shooting this guy down before you have all the facts. Remember,
    Ohio has 3 ADULT with ADULT fully consensual activities that are
    illegal only in Ohio and end you up in Tier 3 for lifetime registration
    for something LEGAL everywhere else in the world. Definitely don’t jump
    to conclusions when Ohio is involved. Now if the offender actually was 45 and with
    a child (under 8) Then, we have real concerns. Remember also, that all
    offenders are not the same. Some should be never allowed to see the
    light of day again, but as it stands now, the Adam Walsh Child Safety
    and Protection Act, isn’t sticking to its original intentions anymore.
    It is diluting the list to put every single sexual crime no matter how
    stupid (Ohio examples above) the crimes are. Any assault of another
    person should be a crime, but consensual, or public indecency for peeing
    behind a tree, shouldn’t be a concern. Because these crimes are listed
    on the list that WAS for child molesters and others like them, (those who we
    need to WORRY about,) everyone who is now on the list is automatically
    “deemed” a pedophile/baby-raper without any justification in MOST cases.
    Unless and until you research the person on the list and find out what
    REALLY happened with them, benefit of the doubt must be given. Until
    someone you know of or love, gets stuck behind these laws, and then listen
    to what is commented in these forums, you will never know what is really
    going on. I truly pray that not one of you, or even someone you know,
    gets behind these laws from that side of them. Only then you may just
    have a change of tune. To reiterate, in case someone intends to
    purposely misunderstand me: All assaults are crimes. Crimes against
    children are not to be taken lightly. Any form of abuse is a crime. Consensual, adult with adult acts are supposed to be legal. Now go ahead and re-read what I wrote. I dare you.

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  • Gummi

    It depends on a person to person. Some try to improve their life by a living while others try to do more stuffs like this. If the crime is very rare and brutal then that offender needs to get harshest punishment in his life.

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