Detailed Legislation
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The Jessica Lunsford Act
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Detailed Legislation Federal Legislation Full Integration: Fully integrates Megans Law and the Lychner Amendments into the Wetterling Act. New Requirements for Sex Offenders Prior to Release: A sex offender will have to register prior to release from prison or supervised release. Current law requires registration after release. [Dodd bill] Increase of Duration for Periodic Registration: The duration to register for a first-time sex offender increases from 10 years to 20 years and for second offenders and sexually violent offenders for their lifetime. Shortened Time to Comply: Any change of status requiring a registry update (change of address, employment, etc.) must be made three business days after the change occurs not 10 days. [Dodd bill is within 2 business days] Social Security Number: Social Security numbers will now be a required piece of information that sex offenders must supply to the state registries. However, that information will not be released on state sex offender notification websites. Annual Photographs: The bill adds a mandatory annual update (current law is just once) to the taking of a sex offenders photograph. The state is required to maintain that information as part of their registry. [Dodd bill] Tracking Devices: Creates a three-year pilot program to help states and local governments outfit sex offenders with electronic and GPS tracking devices. The program will fund a variety of tracking systems and require the Attorney General to study and report on the efficacy of the various technologies and approaches. New Notification Requirements for those Attending Educational Institutions: Requires an individual to notify police when they enroll or attend (current law is just attend) high schools, vocational/technical institutions or higher education institutions. [Dodd bill] New State Requirements Searchable Statewide Sex Offender Registry: Requires states, not local governments, to maintain a multi-field, searchable sex offender registry. In-Person Registration Requirement: Requires that a sex offender register / update their registry in person at an office designated by the state twice a year. Tracking of Persons in Prison: Provides funding for law enforcement to purchase programs like JusticeXchange to identify individuals currently in jail. Civil Commitment: Title II (the Dru Sjodin Act) requires state prisons to notify states attorneys whenever high risk offenders are about to be released, so that states attorneys can consider petitioning the courts for continued confinement of the offender. The civil commitment option is available under the law in many states if an individual is deemed a continuing threat to the public safety. Monitoring of Released Persons: Title II (the Dru Sjodin Act) requires states to monitor high-risk offenders who are released after serving their full sentence and are otherwise not subject to probation or other supervision for a period of no less than one year. Missing Child Reporting Requirements: Section 112 (the Prevention and Recovery of Missing Children Act) requires missing child reports to be input within two hours of receipt. Research shows that a two-hour time frame is crucial to the safe recovery of an abducted child. Prohibits law enforcement agencies from removing a missing person entry based on the child turning 18. [Dodd bill] New Federal Requirements National Sex Offender Registry: Title II (the Dru Sjodin Act) requires the U.S. Justice Department to create a national sex offender database accessible to the public through the Internet. The public web site would allow users to specify a search radius across state lines. Immediate Electronic Notification to States of a Sex Offenders Intent to Relocate: Requires the U.S. Attorney General to send out immediate electronic notification of a sex offenders intent to move to a new state once the Attorney General is notified by the current domiciliary state of the sex offenders intent to relocate. Model Sex Offender Registry: Requires the U.S. Attorney General, in consultation with the states, to develop a sex offender registry template that can be used by those states that currently do not have such a registry or have a substandard one. Strict Liability Crime: Makes failing to register or update registry information as proscribed in the Act a strict liability crime. There is an affirmative defense if failure to update information results from uncontrollable circumstances. Felony: Makes failing to register or updating registry information a federal felony. [Dodd bill] Taxpayer and Social Security Information: Allows for the release of taxpayer and Social Security information to law enforcement, when necessary, in trying to locate the sex offender or to verify information supplied by the sex offender. Immigration Provision: Makes failing to provide sex offender registration information a deportable offense. Releasing Numbers of Sex Offenders to the Public: Requires the U.S. Attorney General to poll states every three months to assess the total number of sex offenders in their registry and to release that information to the public. Study: Requires the U.S. Attorney General to examine ways for law enforcement to do a better job of actively notifying communities when a sex offender moves into their neighborhood. Compliance
The Childrens Safety Act of 2005
If you want the Jessica Lunsford Act passed in your state, use this as a guideline to create a petition. Get everyone you can involved: local media, business, friends, & family etc. Call your Senators, Governor and make as much noise as you can. Set a date for the petition drive to end but give enough time to get the signatures you need. When your drive is over make an appointment to deliver them to your Governor. |
| The Jacob Wetterling Act of 1994 | ||||||||||||||||||
In 1989, Jacob Wetterling, 11, his brother Trevor, 10, and a friend, Aaron, 11, were riding their bikes while returning home from a convenience store in St. Joseph, Minnesota. A masked man came out of a driveway and ordered the boys to throw their bikes into a ditch, turn off their flashlights, and lie face down on the ground. The gunman asked each of the boys his age. They each responded. He then told Trevor Wetterling to run into the woods and not to look back, or he would shoot him. Next, the gunman turned Aaron over, looked at his face, and told him to run into the woods. As Trevor and Aaron ran away, they glanced back to see the gunman grab Jacob's arm. When Aaron and Trevor reached the wooded area, they turned to find that Jacob and the gunman were gone. Although Jacob's family has never given up hope, Jacob Wetterling is still missing to this day.On October 22, 1989, friends and strangers rallied to the family's aid and worked 24 hours each day to search the area for Jacob and distribute flyers across the country. Investigators later learned that, unknown to local law enforcement, halfway houses in St. Joseph housed sex offenders after their release from prison. Jacob's mother, Patty, became an advocate for missing children and was appointed to a Governor's Task Force that recommended stronger sex offender registration requirements in Minnesota. Later, the U.S. Congress passed the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Act in Jacob's honor. |
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| Megan's Law of 1996 | ||||||||||||||||||
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In 1996, the U.S. Congress passed Megan's Law as an amendment to the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children's Act. It required every state to develop some procedure for notifying the public when a sex offender is released into their community. Different states have different procedures for making the required disclosures. On May 17, 1996, President Clinton signed Megan's Law which amended The Jacob Wetterling Act of 1994. Megan's Law requires states to establish a community notification system:
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