Friday, July 21, 2006
A look at sex-offender bans
This isn't about technology per se, but sex-offender registries on the Web have had an impact on bans and residence-restriction laws considered in this in-depth article in the Boston Globe. The piece suggests that – though "the race to enact restrictions is gaining steam" – offender-free zones may have unintended consequences. The Globe cites a new law in Iowa - which has "some of the toughest sex offender laws in the country" – that banned sex offenders whose victims are minors from living within 2,000 feet of a school or licensed day-care provider. "The Des Moines Register reported that the number of sex offenders who had not registered with the state doubled from 142 to 298 between June 2005 and January. An informal group of prosecutors and police now opposes the law." The Globe cites a psychologist as saying that "the vast majority [of offenders] either know or are related to their victims" and they're unlikely to reoffend in their own neighborhood. A police chief told the Globe that, "while he supports tougher penalties for and better monitoring of sex offenders, he opposes residency requirements. For one thing, he said, they're "extremely difficult to enforce." Finally, the Globe cites a study by the city of Marlborough, Mass., finding that a bans on offenders within 2,500 feet of a school or day-care center would make "95% of the city off-limits to sex offenders," ostensibly sending offenders to nearby towns or states with fewer restrictions.
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I believe that not every person convicted of a sex offense is the devil incarnate. There are absolutely sex offenders that need close watch by authorities. However to categoricaly subject all sex offenders to the humiliation of registering every three months and being told you are not allowed in this city is wrong. What has happened to the notion that a person convicted of a crime who has met all requirements in and outside the penal system has a right to live a life free of fear and harassment? Why does the media, district attorneys and politicians constantly fan the flame of fear in the public about this crime? There are other much worse criminal acts that are committed every day by others that should draw as much ire as the sex offender in the public eye and yet very little is ever said about other more heinous acts.
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