The document summarizes issues with sex offense registries and the Adam Walsh Act (AWA). It discusses:
1) The history and origins of sex offense registries in the 1990s in response to media coverage, despite falling crime rates.
2) Key provisions and requirements of laws like the Wetterling Act, Megan's Law, and the AWA, including expanding registries to include juveniles and retroactivity.
3) Issues with the AWA including overburdening state budgets, placing unnecessary burdens on law enforcement, targeting juveniles and families, undermining rehabilitation, creating a false sense of security, and compromising community safety.
4) Recommendations including repe
Controlling or Coercive Behaviour in Relationships: Making Legislation Work M...IBB Law
Mention domestic abuse and many will immediately think of visible bruises, scars and marks on a victim. Yet domestic abuse is not only physical. Psychological, emotional and financial abuse are all types of domestic abuse categorised under coercive or controlling behaviour. Each can result in a victim being isolated from their friends and family; being controlled over aspects of their everyday life, such as where they can
go, who they can see, what they can wear and when they can sleep; and controlling their finances.
For more information on the topic raised in this report please contact IBB Solicitors family and matrimonial legal experts via the link below:
https://www.ibblaw.co.uk/service/family-matrimonial
Divorce and Matrimonial Team
IBB Solicitors
The Bury
Chesham, Buckinghamshire
HP5 1JE
Tel: 03456 381381
Bad bad teacher! How judicial lenience, cultural ignorance, and media hype have inevitably lead to lighter sentences, underreporting and glamorization of female sex offenders - By: Stephanie S. Reidlinger
Controlling or Coercive Behaviour in Relationships: Making Legislation Work M...IBB Law
Mention domestic abuse and many will immediately think of visible bruises, scars and marks on a victim. Yet domestic abuse is not only physical. Psychological, emotional and financial abuse are all types of domestic abuse categorised under coercive or controlling behaviour. Each can result in a victim being isolated from their friends and family; being controlled over aspects of their everyday life, such as where they can
go, who they can see, what they can wear and when they can sleep; and controlling their finances.
For more information on the topic raised in this report please contact IBB Solicitors family and matrimonial legal experts via the link below:
https://www.ibblaw.co.uk/service/family-matrimonial
Divorce and Matrimonial Team
IBB Solicitors
The Bury
Chesham, Buckinghamshire
HP5 1JE
Tel: 03456 381381
Bad bad teacher! How judicial lenience, cultural ignorance, and media hype have inevitably lead to lighter sentences, underreporting and glamorization of female sex offenders - By: Stephanie S. Reidlinger
Report: Effects of Marcellus Shale Development on the Criminal Justice SystemMarcellus Drilling News
The sixth report in a series published by the Center for Rural Pennsylvania. The data is extensive. There is none of the unprofessional focus group commentary that has characterized some previous reports in this series and there are actual comparisons between Marcellus and non-Marcellus counties that allow for more useful analysis. What’s most interesting about the report is that it completely voids most of the fractivist junk science and junk journalism we’ve seen on the subject of shale crime.
Anti-Bullying Legislation in the United StatesSecurly
Bullying in various forms is on the rise in schools in the US and yet there is no federal law addressing this concern. The Department of Education provides some guidelines for states to create laws and policies to be implemented by individual school districts. We cross-referenced various statistics including the Department of Education and individual state government reports filed within the past few years to understand the discrepancies in state policies and bullying numbers across the country. We dug deeper into the prevention methods and policies enacted by each state –as well as its history –to uncover the underlying connections that provide for successful, or not-so-successful, anti-bullying environments.
YouthhubAfrica's Policy Brief on Child Rights ActYouthHubAfrica
This policy brief is based on a perception survey commissioned by Youthhubafrica titled “Societal Perception and Non-Domestication of the Child Rights Act in Kano, Kebbi and Sokoto States”. After years of working on the Child Rights Act across Nigeria, it became imperative to investigate the slow pace of domestication in Northern Nigeria.
Inequality in the Juvenile Justice SystemLori Cohen
We’d all like to believe that the scales of justice are in balance. Well – they aren’t, and the numbers that tell the story are staggering. Check out this infographic about the inequalities in the juvenile justice system.
Inequality in the Juvenile Justice SystemLori Cohen
We’d all like to believe that the scales of justice are in balance. Well – they aren’t, and the numbers that tell the story are staggering. Check out this infographic on the inequalities in the juvenile justice system.
YOUTH IN BLACK CAP is a movement against increasing incidences of child sexual abuse It is a peaceful movement to inform and aware communities about the increasing incidences of child sexual abuse and pressurize policy level higher officials/authorities, parliamentarians and law makers for the formulation and implementation of create child protective and friendly laws policies and programs. This is a youth led social movement where the youngsters put on black cap, hold a candle, different handbills and posters related to child sex abuse and stand in the main junctions of the city without hindering the traffic. This movement will be organized every Friday morning from 9-10. Before the organization of the movement, youths will be oriented about the concept of the movement and motivate them to be the part of the campaign. To make the movement throughout the country, local NGOs operating in the district level and youth will be mobilized. CWISH and Dynamic Youth Forum who envisioned the movement will coordinate with different organizations and make a coordination committee to launch the movement from central level. The secretariat of the committee will be in CWISH office, Buddhanagar. The organizations involved in the movement will have active participation. Interested individuals without institutional affiliation can also make voluntary contribution and take part actively in the movement. Coordination committee will provide technical support in need. The movement will be launched in 19 November which is also celebrated as world’s day against child abuse. On this occasion letter of demand will also be submitted to the prime minister.
Zambians oppose physical violence against women and children Afrobarometer
Due to a coding error, initial Afrobarometer reports misstated the views of Zambian citizens on gender base violence yesterday Instead of approving of physical punishment, 9/10 Zambians disapprove of physical punishment of wives by their husbands. We regret this error and apologize to the citizens of Zambia. Please find updated report here
11 Sex Offenders Assessment and TreatmentShahid M. Shahidullah an.docxpaynetawnya
11 Sex Offenders: Assessment and Treatment
Shahid M. Shahidullah and Diane L. GreenINTRODUCTION
There has been a rapid growth and expansion of correctional institutions in America in the1980s and 1990s. Between 1982 and 2003, correctional expenditures for all levels of government, including federal, state, and local, increased 573 percent. In 1982, total correctional expenditures were about $9.1 billion. In 2003, they increased to about $60.9 billion (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2006). This rapid growth in correctional expenditures was accompanied with rapid growth in incarcerated population. In 2004, there were about 7 million people in America who were in prison, or jail, or in probation. Between 1995 and 2005, the incarcerated population in America grew at an annual rate of about 3.4 percent (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2005). In 2001, about $38.2 billion was spent by the state authorities for corrections, and out of that about $28.4 billion was spent for adult correctional facilities. In 2001, about 59 percent of the justice expenditures of the states were for corrections alone.
This growth and expansion in corrections has brought, particularly for the states, not only new prisons and prison jobs but also new responsibilities and concerns for offender management. In the context of the emerging policy model of prison reentry, correctional institutions are being increasingly asked to build a bridge between prison and communities, particularly through a model of offender management that can reduce recidivism and strengthen reentry and reintegration. A new managerial paradigm is currently growing in American corrections that emphasizes that offender management should be seen in terms of a more holistic and comprehensive perspective—a perspective that can combine risk assessment and treatment with new goals and planning for their reentry and offender management in the communities (MacKenzie, 2001). This new model has expanded particularly in the area of sex offender management, and its expansion is planned and guided nationally by the Center for Sex Offender Management [CSOM]—a federal program established in 1997 by the Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice, in collaboration with the National Institute of Justice, National Institute of Corrections, State Justice Institute, and the American Probation and Parole Association.
The core of the CSOM model is that sex offender management must begin with effective assessment and treatment of sex offenders inside the prison. Reentry and recidivism depend on whether the risk of reoffending was effectively assessed, and suitable treatment plans were made and offered. The postincarceration success of sex offender registration, notification, tracking, and management is now seen as intimately connected with effective sex offender assessment and treatment during incarceration in prison. It is because of this emerging comprehensive approach that correctional institutions are reexamining ...
Controlling or Coercive Behaviour in Relationships: Making Legislation Work M...IBB Law
Mention domestic abuse and many will immediately think of visible bruises, scars and marks on a victim. Yet domestic abuse is not only physical. Psychological, emotional and financial abuse are all types of domestic abuse categorised under coercive or controlling behaviour. Each can result in a victim being isolated from their friends and family; being controlled over aspects of their everyday life, such as where they can go, who they can see, what they can wear and when they can sleep; and controlling their finances.
For more information on the topic raised in this report please contact IBB Law's Family and Matrimonial legal experts via the link below:
https://www.ibblaw.co.uk/service/family-matrimonial
Divorce and Matrimonial Team
IBB Law
The Bury
Chesham, Buckinghamshire
HP5 1JE
Tel: 03456 381381
Report: Effects of Marcellus Shale Development on the Criminal Justice SystemMarcellus Drilling News
The sixth report in a series published by the Center for Rural Pennsylvania. The data is extensive. There is none of the unprofessional focus group commentary that has characterized some previous reports in this series and there are actual comparisons between Marcellus and non-Marcellus counties that allow for more useful analysis. What’s most interesting about the report is that it completely voids most of the fractivist junk science and junk journalism we’ve seen on the subject of shale crime.
Anti-Bullying Legislation in the United StatesSecurly
Bullying in various forms is on the rise in schools in the US and yet there is no federal law addressing this concern. The Department of Education provides some guidelines for states to create laws and policies to be implemented by individual school districts. We cross-referenced various statistics including the Department of Education and individual state government reports filed within the past few years to understand the discrepancies in state policies and bullying numbers across the country. We dug deeper into the prevention methods and policies enacted by each state –as well as its history –to uncover the underlying connections that provide for successful, or not-so-successful, anti-bullying environments.
YouthhubAfrica's Policy Brief on Child Rights ActYouthHubAfrica
This policy brief is based on a perception survey commissioned by Youthhubafrica titled “Societal Perception and Non-Domestication of the Child Rights Act in Kano, Kebbi and Sokoto States”. After years of working on the Child Rights Act across Nigeria, it became imperative to investigate the slow pace of domestication in Northern Nigeria.
Inequality in the Juvenile Justice SystemLori Cohen
We’d all like to believe that the scales of justice are in balance. Well – they aren’t, and the numbers that tell the story are staggering. Check out this infographic about the inequalities in the juvenile justice system.
Inequality in the Juvenile Justice SystemLori Cohen
We’d all like to believe that the scales of justice are in balance. Well – they aren’t, and the numbers that tell the story are staggering. Check out this infographic on the inequalities in the juvenile justice system.
YOUTH IN BLACK CAP is a movement against increasing incidences of child sexual abuse It is a peaceful movement to inform and aware communities about the increasing incidences of child sexual abuse and pressurize policy level higher officials/authorities, parliamentarians and law makers for the formulation and implementation of create child protective and friendly laws policies and programs. This is a youth led social movement where the youngsters put on black cap, hold a candle, different handbills and posters related to child sex abuse and stand in the main junctions of the city without hindering the traffic. This movement will be organized every Friday morning from 9-10. Before the organization of the movement, youths will be oriented about the concept of the movement and motivate them to be the part of the campaign. To make the movement throughout the country, local NGOs operating in the district level and youth will be mobilized. CWISH and Dynamic Youth Forum who envisioned the movement will coordinate with different organizations and make a coordination committee to launch the movement from central level. The secretariat of the committee will be in CWISH office, Buddhanagar. The organizations involved in the movement will have active participation. Interested individuals without institutional affiliation can also make voluntary contribution and take part actively in the movement. Coordination committee will provide technical support in need. The movement will be launched in 19 November which is also celebrated as world’s day against child abuse. On this occasion letter of demand will also be submitted to the prime minister.
Zambians oppose physical violence against women and children Afrobarometer
Due to a coding error, initial Afrobarometer reports misstated the views of Zambian citizens on gender base violence yesterday Instead of approving of physical punishment, 9/10 Zambians disapprove of physical punishment of wives by their husbands. We regret this error and apologize to the citizens of Zambia. Please find updated report here
11 Sex Offenders Assessment and TreatmentShahid M. Shahidullah an.docxpaynetawnya
11 Sex Offenders: Assessment and Treatment
Shahid M. Shahidullah and Diane L. GreenINTRODUCTION
There has been a rapid growth and expansion of correctional institutions in America in the1980s and 1990s. Between 1982 and 2003, correctional expenditures for all levels of government, including federal, state, and local, increased 573 percent. In 1982, total correctional expenditures were about $9.1 billion. In 2003, they increased to about $60.9 billion (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2006). This rapid growth in correctional expenditures was accompanied with rapid growth in incarcerated population. In 2004, there were about 7 million people in America who were in prison, or jail, or in probation. Between 1995 and 2005, the incarcerated population in America grew at an annual rate of about 3.4 percent (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2005). In 2001, about $38.2 billion was spent by the state authorities for corrections, and out of that about $28.4 billion was spent for adult correctional facilities. In 2001, about 59 percent of the justice expenditures of the states were for corrections alone.
This growth and expansion in corrections has brought, particularly for the states, not only new prisons and prison jobs but also new responsibilities and concerns for offender management. In the context of the emerging policy model of prison reentry, correctional institutions are being increasingly asked to build a bridge between prison and communities, particularly through a model of offender management that can reduce recidivism and strengthen reentry and reintegration. A new managerial paradigm is currently growing in American corrections that emphasizes that offender management should be seen in terms of a more holistic and comprehensive perspective—a perspective that can combine risk assessment and treatment with new goals and planning for their reentry and offender management in the communities (MacKenzie, 2001). This new model has expanded particularly in the area of sex offender management, and its expansion is planned and guided nationally by the Center for Sex Offender Management [CSOM]—a federal program established in 1997 by the Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice, in collaboration with the National Institute of Justice, National Institute of Corrections, State Justice Institute, and the American Probation and Parole Association.
The core of the CSOM model is that sex offender management must begin with effective assessment and treatment of sex offenders inside the prison. Reentry and recidivism depend on whether the risk of reoffending was effectively assessed, and suitable treatment plans were made and offered. The postincarceration success of sex offender registration, notification, tracking, and management is now seen as intimately connected with effective sex offender assessment and treatment during incarceration in prison. It is because of this emerging comprehensive approach that correctional institutions are reexamining ...
Controlling or Coercive Behaviour in Relationships: Making Legislation Work M...IBB Law
Mention domestic abuse and many will immediately think of visible bruises, scars and marks on a victim. Yet domestic abuse is not only physical. Psychological, emotional and financial abuse are all types of domestic abuse categorised under coercive or controlling behaviour. Each can result in a victim being isolated from their friends and family; being controlled over aspects of their everyday life, such as where they can go, who they can see, what they can wear and when they can sleep; and controlling their finances.
For more information on the topic raised in this report please contact IBB Law's Family and Matrimonial legal experts via the link below:
https://www.ibblaw.co.uk/service/family-matrimonial
Divorce and Matrimonial Team
IBB Law
The Bury
Chesham, Buckinghamshire
HP5 1JE
Tel: 03456 381381
I created this presentation for the Hickory City Council as they considered passing an ordinance regulating sex offenders\' access to public parks within the city.
1Writing Activity 4 Final DraftShaland.docxlorainedeserre
1
Writing Activity 4 : Final Draft
Shalanda Moore
ENG 215 - Research & Writing
Dr. Mary Rose Kasraie
September 1, 2019
Prosecutors on aggregate don’t seem to seek the death penalty more for black people than white people, though there are some gaping disparities in a few states and in some counties. Instead, the real racial bias when it comes to the death penalty pertains to the race of the victim. Killers of black people rarely get death sentences. White killers of black people get death sentences even less frequently. And far and away, the type of murder most likely to bring a death sentence is a black man who kills a white woman.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports 208,000 people are in state prisons for drug offenses. Of this number, 32 percent are white, and 68 percent are African American or Hispanic.
The link to other forms of profiling suggests that there is something scientific and efficient about racial profiling. The reality is very different. Race is a social construct; not knowable by sight. Racial profiles are both over-inclusive in the sense that many, indeed most, of the people who fit into the category are entirely innocent, and under-inclusive in that many other criminals or terrorists who do not fit the profile will escape police attention. Racial profiling also faces the problems of predictability and evasion; the more predictable police profiles become, the easier it is for perpetrators to adapt to circumvent the profile. The ineffectiveness of racial profiling is illustrated by consistently low hit or arrest rates for policing actions based on racial profiling. There is surprising consistency in data coming out of the USA, the UK and Europe demonstrating similar ‘hit' or arrest rates across racial groups. In several studies, ethnic minorities are less likely to be arrested or have contraband or other ‘seizable' evidence found following a search. This refutes the proposition that minorities are more likely to be involved in crime and illustrates that racial profiling represents an ineffective use of police resources.
Narrow definitions of racial profiling describe situations where actions are based solely on the basis of a person's race or ethnicity. In practice, this has allowed police forces to deny the existence of racial profiling, where activities are legally justifiable but nonetheless racially biased such as the use of pretext traffic stops. Broader definitions recognise that decisions are usually made on a number of factors including race. This wider definition reflects the fact that racial profiling may occur irrespective of whether this is a deliberate policy of targeted minority groups or routine institutional practices. Patterns of profiling can also be seen in discriminatory treatment after a stop has taken place, such decisions to go on to search, more intrusive searches, citations and arrests.
Racial profiling is the use by the police of generalisations based on race, ethnicity, religion ...
An Overview of Juvenile Justice in the United States(HOAFPGe.docxgalerussel59292
An Overview of Juvenile Justice in the United States
(HO/AFP/Getty Images/Newscom)
Learning objectives
AFTER READING THIS CHAPTER, THE STUDENT WILL BE ABLE TO:
· Explain the concept of parens patriae.
· Differentiate between the types of juvenile offenders, including delinquents and status offenders.
· Explain the structure of the juvenile justice system and the roles and functions of various juvenile justice agencies.
· Summarize how juvenile offenders are processed through the criminal justice system.
· Understand the meaning of the deinstitutionalization of status offenders.
Introduction
The juvenile justice system is unique. This book explains the system and how it has evolved. The organization of this chapter is as follows: First, the juvenile justice system is described. Certain features of juvenile justice are similar in all states. Various professionals work with youth, and they represent both public and private agencies and organizations. From police officers to counselors, professionals endeavor to improve the lives of youth.
Every jurisdiction has its own criteria for determining who juveniles are and whether they are under the jurisdiction of the juvenile court. A majority of states classify juveniles as youth who range in age from 7 to 17 years, and juvenile courts in these states have jurisdiction over these youth. Some states have no minimum-age provisions and consider each case on its own merits, regardless of the age of the juvenile.
Because juveniles are not considered adults and, therefore, fully responsible for some of their actions, special laws have been established that pertain only to them. Thus, violations specific to juveniles are referred to as status offenses. Juveniles who commit such infractions are categorized as status offenders. Juveniles who engage in acts that are categorized as crimes are juvenile delinquents, and their actions are labeled juvenile delinquency. In brief, delinquent acts for youth would be crimes if committed by adults. By contrast, status offenses are not considered crimes if adults engage in them. Examples of status offenses include runaway behavior, truancy, unruly behavior, and curfew violation. The characteristics of youth involved in such behaviors will also be described.
In 1974, the U.S. Congress enacted the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA). This act, although not binding on the states, encouraged all states to remove their status offenders from secure institutions—namely secure juvenile residential or custodial facilities—where they were being held. States subsequently removed status offenders from institutions and placed these youth with community, social service, or welfare agencies. This process is called the deinstitutionalization of status offenses (DSO) and will be described in some detail.
Next, a general overview of the juvenile justice system is presented. While later chapters will focus upon each of these components in greater detail, the juven.
Problem Evaluation Paper 1Problem Evaluation Paper .docxsleeperharwell
Problem Evaluation Paper 1
Problem Evaluation Paper
Alexis Lucca
CJA/355
04/11/2016
Gerald Norris
Problem Evaluation Paper
2
Problem Evaluation Paper
Criminal justice can be said to be the system of governmental institutions and practices
aimed at holding up social control, crime mitigation and deterring, for example giving penalties
to criminals and also rehabilitating them. The career mostly falls in between legal and law
enforcement. Law enforcement is the ones dealing with the criminal behavior causes and societal
response to crime, for example, criminology, and forensic psychology. Policing also falls in this
category. The current issue in the criminal justice field is The Punishment and Criminalization of
young people and children (Martin & Philbin, 1980).
Many children aged 13 and 14 years in the United States who have undergone the
prosecution for adults had continued being sentenced to life imprisonment with no signs of
parole. However, the juveniles continue to being imprisoned despite the fact that their sentence is
unconstitutional hence leading to their death with no review and scrutiny or follow up.
According to (EJI) Equal Justice Initiative undertook in the year 2008, about seventy-three cases
showing that juveniles have died in prison through condemnation followed by minimal review
have been documented. The courts did not consider that the children were young making the
sentences imposed on them mandatory. Most of the children were combined with the crimes
which had been committed by adults and old teenagers leading to the involvement of two-thirds
of children of a younger age (Goodman & Grimming, 2007).
The difference between older teens and young children should then be observed. Below
are then some problems which make this situation to keep on growing. Influence from
dysfunctional backgrounds. This is because of exposure to violence, like mostly most of them
have been subjected to sexual abuse; they have been abandoned or have even been neglected.
Secondly, their parents are drug and dealers, addicts, sex workers and alcoholics. This then
Problem Evaluation Paper
3
makes it clear that these children have been brought up in poor places with lethal violence, where
their parents were not able to afford safety, health and luxuries that every child would require.
It was therefore brought into conclusion by Oklahoma that when a person is a youth,
they are vulnerable to psychological damage and influence, and this has been taken to be more
than a chronological fact. Moreover, the children who have gone through this have some things
in common which disturb them. Protection and treatment from health care providers, police
failure, foster systems, family courts and security agencies of young children. Most of the crimes
committed by these children are mostly.
LGBTQ Criminalization and Criminal Justice ReformMarvin Webb
This infographic raises awareness about how LGBTQ people are disproportionately represented in the criminal justice system. It notes that biased policing and aggressive sentencing make LGBTQ people more likely to face time in prison, where they often face poor treatment and abuse. It also explores funding for LGBTQ criminalization and criminal justice reform, which, while still small, is growing.
LGBTQ Criminalization and Criminal Justice ReformMarvin Webb
This infographic raises awareness about how LGBTQ people are disproportionately represented in the criminal justice system. It notes that biased policing and aggressive sentencing make LGBTQ people more likely to face time in prison, where they often face poor treatment and abuse. It also explores funding for LGBTQ criminalization and criminal justice reform, which, while still small, is growing.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
2. History and Origins of Sex Offense Registries
During the 1990s, a spike in media
coverage of sex offenses led to an
outbreak of laws aimed at people
convicted of sex offenses at the state
and national levels.
However, at the same time, the rate of
reported violent offenses and forcible
rapes during these years fell
dramatically. The Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s Uniform Crime Reports
show that violent offense rates fell 25
percent during this time and the rate of
forcible rapes dropped 19 percent.
3. Sex offense legislation and policy
1994 – The Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Act
(Wetterling Act) required states to compile a list of individuals convicted of violent sex
offenses against children to register with the police for a period of 10 years.
1996 - Megan’s Law amended the Wetterling Act by mandating community notification
for 15 years after the release of adults convicted of violent sex offenses who were
released into the community.
2003 – The Dru Sjodin National Sex Offender Public Registry (NSOPR) joins state web-
based registries to a single federal registry available online. The law also makes it a
felony for persons on a registry to fail to update their contact information and
whereabouts.
2006 – The Adam Walsh Act (AWA) mandates that states comply with federal
guidelines or lose federal funding. In most instances, states that comply with Adam
Walsh will have to both expand their registries to include children and increase the
number of offenses for which registration is required.
4. The Adam Walsh Act (AWA) explained
Title I of the AWA mandates a national sex offender registry and provides a
comprehensive set of minimum standards for sex offender registration and notification
in the United States:
•Requires that youth register, if prosecuted and convicted as an adult OR (a) if offender
is 14 or older at time of offense AND (b) adjudicated delinquent for an offense
comparable or more serious than “aggravated sexual abuse” OR adjudicated
delinquent for a sex act with any victim under the age of 12.
•Incorporates more sex offenses for which registration is required.
•Requires people to provide more extensive registration information, including photos.
•Makes the registry retroactive. People convicted of sex offenses prior to AWA’s
passage are subject to SORNA’s registration requirements IF (a) they are currently
registering, (b) under supervision or incarcerated, OR (c) if the offender re-enters the
system because of a new conviction whether or not the new crime is a sex offense.
•Requires states to have a failure to register offense on the books and provide a
criminal penalty for a “maximum term of imprisonment greater than one year.”
5. The Adam Walsh Act (AWA) exposed
Assertion: All people who are convicted of a sex offense will do it again.
Research: The Bureau of Justice Statistics tracked 272,111 individuals, including 9,691
people convicted of sex offenses, for three years following their release in 1994.
Within the three-year time frame, 95 percent of the people convicted of sex offenses
in the study remained arrest free.
Assertion: Registries can protect children from sexual violence by strangers who are
the biggest threat to children.
Research: A study using FBI Uniform Crime Report data between 1991 and 1996
showed that 34 percent of youth victims (0-17 years old) were sexually assaulted by a
family member and 59 percent were assaulted by acquaintances. Seven percent of
youth victims in this study were assaulted by strangers.
Congress relied on faulty data to justify AWA’s passage
6. The AWA imposes a burden on already
stretched state budgets.
Ohio determined that the cost of implementing new software to create a registry would
approach a half million dollars in the first year.
•Installing and implementing software alone would cost $475,000 in the first year. The
software would then cost $85,000 annually thereafter for maintenance.
•If Ohio chose not to implement AWA, the state would lose approximately $622,000
annually from its Byrne funds. However, the total cost of software, certification of
treatment programs, salaries, and benefits for new personnel would likely exceed the
lost Byrne funds.
Virginia conducted a comprehensive cost analysis and determined a total cost of more
than $12 million for the first year of compliance with the registry aspect of the AWA.
•The first year of implementing AWA would cost the Commonwealth of Virginia
$12,497,000. This figure would include the cost of hiring 99 new staff people,
implementing new technology and increasing the number of people on the registry by
approximately 8,000 individuals.
7. The AWA places significant burdens on law
enforcement.
Spending so much time tracking down people for failing to register and making sure
that information in the registry is accurate overburdens law enforcement and can take
away precious time and resources from more effective crime-fighting strategies like
educating communities about effective ways to prevent sexual violence.
•In Texas, the number of registerable crimes has grown from four to 20 since the
enactment of the first registration laws in 1991, with approximately 100 new people
added to the registry each week.
•In 2003, San Jose, California, spent $600,000 to dedicate seven staff people to
monitoring 2,700 people who are required to register.
•In Michigan, as of August 2004, two full-time employees manage information and
records for people convicted of sex offenses, but according to a state audit, the state’s
sex offender registries still contain inaccurate and incomplete information that may
give the public a false sense of security.
8. The AWA needlessly targets children and families.
• Numerous stories publicized in the media document youth as young as age 6
being labeled a sex offender for behaviors such as hugging or kissing other youth.
• In most states, intercourse with a child under the age of 14, 15, or 16 is
considered sexual assault regardless of consent. However, according to the
National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, slightly more than three-quarters of youth
in the survey reported having had sexual intercourse. Of those youth, more than
80 percent reported having had sex by age 15.71 Thus, the youth reporting having
engaged in sex by the age of 15 would be guilty of committing a sex offense.
• Youth rarely eroticize aggression and are rarely aroused by child sex stimuli. Most
youth behavior that is categorized as a sex crime is activity that mental health
professionals do not deem as predatory.
9. Recidivism rates of youth who commit sex offenses are low
A 2002 review of 25 studies concerning juvenile sex offense recidivism rates
reveals that youth who commit sex offenses have a 1.8 — 12.8 percent
chance
of re-arrest and a 1.7 — 18.0 percent chance of reconviction for another sex
offense.
Comparatively, in a 2005 study of 27 states’ youth recidivism rates conducted
by the Virginia Department of Juvenile Justice, a study in 2005 found that 55
percent of youth were re-arrested within one year and 24 percent were re-
imprisoned for any offense, not just sexual offenses.
The AWA needlessly targets children and families.
10. Registries prevent people who need treatment from seeking it.
• According to Bruce Winick of the University Of Miami School Of Law,
sexual predator and community notification laws may be providing a
strong disincentive for people who commit sex offenses to plead guilty to
their crimes and accept treatment.
• Researchers have found that as the penalty for sex offenses has
increased, it has become more difficult to initiate an intervention for
sexual violence both before the behavior is brought to the attention of
authorities and after criminal sanctions are imposed.
The AWA needlessly targets children and families.
11. Registering children means registering entire families
Having a family member on the registry puts an extra burden on the family
of a person convicted of a sex offense.
•A study of 183 people participating in sex offense treatment in Florida
found that about 19 percent reported that other members of their
household had been “threatened, harassed, assaulted, injured, or suffered
property damage” as a result of living with a person on the registry.
•According to a 1996 study by Freeman-Longo, reports in New Jersey and
Colorado suggest a decrease in the reporting of both incest offenses and
juvenile sex offenses by victims and by family members who do not want to
deal with the impact of public notification on their family.
The AWA needlessly targets children and families.
12. The very purpose of the juvenile justice system is inherently undermined by the
AWA.
The AWA increases the likelihood that youth will be on registries because it includes
youth adjudicated in juvenile court of sex offenses, thus undermining a system which is
designed to protect youth from the lifelong penalties carried by the adult criminal
justice system.
•The juvenile justice system acknowledges that youth are amenable to treatment.
Youth involved in the juvenile justice system should receive more treatment and
rehabilitative services than they would receive in the adult criminal system. The registry
undermines rehabilitation by labeling a young person a “sex offender,” thereby
stigmatizing the youth and closing available doors for services and treatment.
•Registries and notification ostracize youth and disconnect them from support systems.
The Annie E. Casey Foundation’s annual Kids Count data book keeps tally of
“disconnected” youth (youth who are not working or in school) as a factor in child well-
being. Youth who are connected to school or work are generally expected to have
better life outcomes than youth who are not.
The AWA needlessly targets children and families.
13. The AWA compromises community safety.
Registries encourage a disproportionate and inappropriate focus on registries
and the people on them. Statistics from the Justice Department support the idea that
the people on the registry are not likely to be the people who pose the greatest
potential threat.
•The majority of people arrested for sex offenses have never been previously
convicted of a sex offense. In 2003, the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) reported that
86.1 percent of the people arrested for a sex offense had never been previously
convicted of a sex offense and would therefore not already be included in the registry.
Furthermore, another study by BJS found that of all the adults arrested for rape in
1997 (791,513), 3.6 percent were of people released from prison in 1994. In other
words, people who had been previously convicted of sex offenses are not the majority
of people arrested for sex offenses on a yearly basis.
•People who are convicted of sex offenses are not likely to repeat the offense. The BJS
found that 95 percent of people released from prison after serving time for a sex
offense remained arrest free within three years.
14. The AWA compromises community safety.
Reliance on registries creates the illusion that parents can protect their children from
sexual violence simply by checking an online database.
•A survey of mental health professionals found that 70 percent of those surveyed felt
that “a listing of sex offenders on the web would create a false sense of security for
parents who might feel that they can protect their children simply by checking a web
site.”
•Despite registry requirements and stiff penalties for not registering, registries are
often inaccurate and out of date.
•In 2006, Dallas Morning News found that 18 percent of Dallas County registrants
either had incorrect addresses listed or never lived at the address listed.
•In 2005, a Virginia man sued a private registry management company for falsely listing
his name on a registry of people convicted of sex offenses. Another suit was filed
against a neighbor for defamation. The company managing the registry does not verify
information before posting it online.
15. The AWA compromises community safety.
Registering people for consensual, nonviolent, and statutory offenses overloads the
registry and distracts the public. Furthermore, not every person on a sex offender
registry has committed rape or a sexual offense against a child.
Human Rights Watch reviewed statutes in all 50 states and found that a sex
offense is defined differently in different states. The Adam Walsh Act (AWA), the
newest piece of federal legislation related to registries, is designed to represent the
minimum offenses that are registerable, thus the law is likely to encourage states to
further expand the offenses for which people must register. At the time of the
publication of the Human Rights Watch report, the following offenses require
registration:
•Adult prostitution-related offenses (five states)
•Public urination (13 states, two limit registration to urination in front of a minor)
•Consensual sex between teenagers (29 states)
•Exposing genitals in public (32 states; of those, seven require the victim to be a
minor).
16. Recommendations: Federal and State Policy
1. Congress should repeal the section of the Adam Walsh Act that mandates the
registration of youth under age 18.
2. States should refuse to put children on public registries.
3. Assess the effectiveness of sex offense registries and community notification on a
national or state scale.
4. Reframe the problem of sexual violence from a criminal justice issue to a public
health issue.
5. Determine how money spent maintaining sex offense registries and notifying
communities might be better used elsewhere.
6. Evaluate the effectiveness of responses to sexual violence.
7. Assess the public safety impact of registries on communities.
17. Recommendations: Local and Community
Strategies
1. Educate the public about the realities of sex offenses
2. Educate the public on ways to increase personal safety
3. Provide resources to families who may be worried about inappropriate behavior
4. Provide training to teachers to help identify and distinguish between appropriate
and concerning behavior
18. State Legislation
or Statute
Submitted
to SMART
Office?
Status as of September 2008
Alaska Alaska has not submitted any SORNA legislation and has just
recently appointed an AG in the Department of Law to analyze
the situation and make recommendations regarding whether or
not (and how) Alaska will implement. Awaiting the SORNA final
guidelines before drafting legislation.
Arizona SB 1628
(passed
April, 2007)
Requires youth sex offenders to only be placed in treatment
programs of similar age and developmental maturity level;
requires a court hearing for any youth prosecuted as an adult to
determine if youth should be transferred to juvenile court.;
allows for an annual probation review hearing for youth sex
offenders under age 22 who are in the adult system; allows
transferred youth to be removed from the registry.
California Considering costs, no legislation yet.
Colorado A compliance committee made up of all the stakeholders is
currently studying what it would take to implement AWA in CO.
Doing a cost-benefit analysis of implementation and then will
make recommendations to the Governor's office and
legislature. There has been no legislation run or passed as of
yet and we don't anticipate any in 2008.
Delaware SB 60 Passed compliance legislation. Wholly adopted SORNA
provisions.
19. State Legislation
or Statute
Submitted to
SMART Office?
Status as of September 2008 from the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers
Florida SB 1604
HB 665
Mostly adopts provisions of the SORNA, but not retroactive
prior to July 1, 2007.
Georgia So busy with their state residence restriction and other bills
that they haven’t addressed the SORNA yet.
Hawai’i Will be addressing SORNA but most likely not the juvenile
piece. A work group, the Sex Offender Registration Team
(SORT), is in place to study the possibilities for SORNA
implementation.
7/17/08 update : legislature and the AG set up committee to
evaluate the impact of SORNA, it will report back to the
legislature prior to the opening of the 2009 session in mid-
January. SORNA implementation on hold for now.
Illinois SB 121 passed in 2007 which challenges juvenile provisions of
the SORNA: allows juveniles to petition to be removed from
registry after a full hearing, 2 years for misdemeanor offense; 5
years for a felony offense
Kansas Submitted some
policies such as
the website, and
some statutes,
but has not
passed
legislation or
submitted a full
compliance
package.
Working on substantial legislative changes to come closer to
compliance with SORNA. The state attorney general, based on
information provided by the state’s Offender Registration
Working Group, will not pursue the adult retroactivity portion
or the juvenile requirements of the SORNA. Kansas will exceed
SORNA’s registration requirements by having all sex offenses
except for sexual battery register for life. Sexual battery will
require a 15-year registration. Also, ALL offenders will be
required to report in person quarterly.
20. State Legislation
or Statute
Submitted to
SMART Office?
Status as of September 2008 from the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers
Louisiana HB 970
R.S. 15:540
et seq
Yes; not in
compliance.
SMART Office responded: LA not in compliance and must
change state codes regarding sexual assault to be in compliance.
Also, tiering has to be fact-based rather than based on elements
of the state offense. Also said LA not in compliance vis a vis
tribal nations. Supreme Court ruled that retroactivity did not
violate expo facto. United States Supreme Court is set for
argument on Wednesday, April 16, 2008 regarding Patrick
Kennedy v. a Jefferson Parrish sex offender on death row.
Maine Legislation pending to remove offenders from the registry for
some offenses committed between 1982-1992. Also pending in
the courts five challenges to the entire registry based on Doe v
District Attorney et al, 2007 ME 139, a decision of the Maine
Supreme Judicial Court issued last fall that called into question
the constitutionality of registry based on state constitutional
issues. The matter has been remanded for hearing. The state’s
Criminal Justice Committee has put off consideration of whether
or not to comply with Adam Walsh until next session (starting
January 2009). Currently, no juvenile is included on the ME
registry unless they have been bound over as an adult.
Maryland Proposed:
SB24
Passed:
SB59/HB18
Failed: SB
629/HB 76,
SB1538,
HB1450
SB59/HB18: State's sexual offender registry include the
registrant's former names, electronic mail addresses, computer
log-in or screen names or identities, instant-messaging identities,
and electronic chat room identities used by the registrant. The
bills also add (1) a copy of the registrant's valid driver's license
or identification card; and (2) the license plate number and
description of any vehicle owned or regularly operated by the
registrant as items that must be included in a registration
statement.
21. State Legislation
or Statute
Submitted to
SMART Office?
Status as of September 2008 from the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers
Massachusetts MA has not decided on strategy yet, but are leaning towards
compliance. No forward movement yet at the legislative side
(that we know of). Several state constitutional issues have been
identified as counter to the provisions of the SORNA, including
the right of sex offenders to a due process hearing to determine
risk level.
Michigan The MI Senate had legislation introduced for compliance early
on, but it didn’t go anywhere. With final guidelines will likely
move in a definitive direction. The House has created a
subcommittee to address existing registry issues and SORNA
compliance but no bill has yet been introduced.
Minnesota There are no plans at this time to introduce AWA-related
legislation in the 2008 session.
Mississippi HB 1015 Submitted
compliance
package but it
was not
approved.
Passed SORNA compliance bill but it does not address
retroactivity, nor is it in compliance as far as the requirements
re: juveniles.
Missouri SB 714 Passed SORNA compliance bill March 2008.
Montana SB 156 SB 156 passed in early 2007 addresses some aspects of the
SORNA compliance, but not all. Next legislative session is just
before the July 2009 substantial compliance date. No SORNA-
specific legislation has been drafted yet. June 11, 2008 decision in
’s US District Court (Waybright v. ) that SORNA is
unconstitutional.
22. State Legislation
or Statute
Submitted to
SMART Office?
Status as of September 2008 from the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers
Nebraska LB 957 Compliance
package
submitted to
the SMART
Office.
Nevada AB 579 Submitted their
compliance
package to the
SMART Office.
No answer yet.
AB 579 was passed May 31, 2007, enrolled on June 1, 2007,
approved by governor on June 13, 2007, and codified in Chapter
485 of the NRS on June 14, 2007. Became effective July 1, 2008.
NV appears to be closest to substantial compliance of all the
states that have passed compliance legislation.
On June 24, 2008, NV ACLU filed a federal lawsuit asking for a
temporary stay in the law.
New
Hampshire
HB 1640 Not yet. July 9, 2008: HB 1640 passed by NH legislature and signed by
governor. The law reworks state's registration system by
categorizing the levels of sex offender crimes into three tiers.
Law takes effect January 1, 2009.
New Mexico NM will not attempt to pass AWA legislation until January, 2009.
Uncomfortable with the juvenile and retroactivity provisions of
the Proposed Guidelines and have provided letters to DOJ on
two occasions about this. Otherwise, NM appears to already be
approximately 80% compliant. Many NM state officials are
adamantly opposed to the juvenile provisions. Will be difficult
for legislature to enact legislation providing for substantial
compliance if DOJ maintains its strict reading of AWA.
New York Has not yet determined whether it will comply with the AWA
requirements. NY may not be able to achieve compliance
because juvenile records are expunged. Concerned with the
cost of implementation.
23. State Legislation
or Statute
Submitted to
SMART Office?
Status as of September 2008 from the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers
North
Carolina
HB 933 (Jessica’s Law) introduced in short session. It increases
10 year registration to 30 years with a petition process at 10
years. If HB 933 is enacted, NC will have 2 tiers: 30 years and
life. HB 933 changes 10 day registration/verification of
registration to 3 business days. Attempt at compliance with
AWA. Senate and House conference committee members
appointed to work out differences between House and Senate
versions of that bill; no action since appointments on 7/8/08.
Ohio SB 10 Not yet. Implemented SORNA compliance legislation as of 1/1/08.
Ohio Supreme Court ruled in favor of retroactive application of
original SORN law, saying that SO classification is remedial, not
punitive. State AG and legislators relied exclusively on that case
to dispute constitutional claims. Ohio Criminal Sentencing
Commission voted unanimously to recommend against
retroactive application (but didn’t testify). SB 10 is retroactive,
but not “super retroactive”. SB 10 was amended to greatly limit
the juveniles who will appear on the Internet registry. Only
juveniles transferred to adult court or designated “serious
youthful offenders”. It includes only 2–3% of juvenile sex
offenders in DYS. In Oct. 2007, direct action filed in Ohio
Supreme Court. Challenge retroactive application of SB 10:
violates separation of powers, ex post facto, due process, double
jeopardy. The case ultimately dismissed.
24. State Legislation
or Statute
Submitted to
SMART Office?
Status as of September 2008 from the
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers
Oklahoma HB 1760
went into
effect
November
1, 2007.
Yes; did not
achieve
substantial
compliance
Under HB 1760 5,500 SOs were reclassified and almost 80% of
them have been reclassified as Tier III offenders.
The legislature considered HB 3159 to achieve further
compliance.
Oregon Earliest legislative session to address SORNA will be Jan 2009;
right now looking at the financial impact of implementing the
SORNA; legislative concepts are not due from state agencies
until later in 2008. Will be filing for one-year extension in April
2009 as session does not end until July 2009.
Pennsylvania PA has introduced a SORNA compliance-related bill, SB 1130,
but it doesn’t address much of what needs to be addressed to
come into compliance.
Texas Will not address the SORNA until the Jan 2009 session. Had a
bill in the 2007 session of the legislature that would have
brought TX into partial compliance.
Utah HB 492 HB 492 is a sex offender bill passed in 2008that addresses some
of the SORNA requirements, but contravenes others, e.g.
requires reporting of changes of residence, work, education
institution, vehicle, and other information within three business
days rather than five days; but requires registration every six
months, rather than every year as is currently required by the
UT registry
Virginia SB 590 Not yet. Passed by the VA Assembly in its 2008 session. Attempt to meet
substantial compliance but some question as to its success.
Washington Formed Sex Offender Policy Board in July 2008
25. How to contact us
Justice Policy Institute
1003 K Street, NW
Suite 500
Washington, DC 20001
202-558-7974
info@justicepolicy.org
www.justicepolicy.org
The accompanying guide for advocates, policymakers, and the media can be found at:
http://www.justicepolicy.org/images/upload/08-11_BRF_WalshActRegistries_JJ-
PS.pdf