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U.S. Constitution Title: Are sex offender registries unconstitutional? The Colorado Bureau of Investigation posts a list of registered sex offenders required under the law. It contains names, pictures, addresses, descriptions and more and readily available to anyone on the internet. But now, Federal Judge Richard Matsch has found that to be a violation of the U.S. Constitution. He wrote that the public has been given the “power to inflict punishments beyond those imposed through the court.” Alison Ruttenberg, the attorney for the sex offenders, told CBS4’s Rick Sallinger they were often scarred for life because of all the public information available on the convicted criminals. In some ways this judge could be seen as swimming against the current. The Supreme Court has already heard challenges to the constitutionality of sex registries on a couple of occasions and has allowed them to stand. The most frequently cited case seems to be Smith v. Doe, a 2003 case out of Alaska. In it, Anthony Kennedy described how the court had to determine if lifetime registration on these publicly available lists constituted ex post facto retroactive punishment. His decision cited the “frightening and high risk of recidivism” among sex offenders as sufficient justification for the extra burden placed on them by the registry after completing the rest of the sentence. That decision has been under criticism lately because the statistics on recidivism which were cited turned out to be completely flawed. (That’s not to say that the recidivism rate might not be very high, but the study they used is now largely discounted.) With that in mind, and this ruling as an initial step, I wonder if this somewhat restaffed court will see the question differently. It was only a 5-4 decision last time. I’ve personally never been comfortable with the idea of lifetime registries. It’s a case which causes a lot of internal conflict because I personally find sex offenders to be among the worst, most monstrous class of criminals, and even more so when the victims include children. (Yes, we’re talking to you, Roman Polanski.) Even absent an actual murder, some of the worst are, in my opinion, suitable candidates for the death penalty. But when we convict someone of a crime and sentence them to some term in jail, perhaps with additional probation, it just seems as though that’s supposed to be the end of it. A lifetime on such a registry absolutely seems like a life sentence in some ways even though that’s not what the criminal was sentenced to. There are no easy answers here as far as I’m concerned. But given how many people it would affect across the entire country, this one will be worth keeping an eye on. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top • Page Up • Full Thread • Page Down • Bottom/Latest Keep the registry, but limit the access to those who may be impacted. Require them to go to the police station and fill out a request form which includes a confidentiality clause. Or do away with the registry if people abuse the information.
#2. To: misterwhite (#1) I thought it interesting that the registries have survived so long without any serious challenges. Apparently, this judge just up and ruled them unconstitutional, kind of out of the blue. We'll see what the Supremes think, perhaps.
#3. To: Tooconservative (#2) I thought it interesting that the registries have survived so long without any serious challenges. Yeah. Cruel and unusual punishment. Violation of due process (registry for some felons, not others). Fourth amendment right to privacy.
#4. To: Tooconservative (#0) It was just a way for liberals to feel like they care and support "law and order" at the same time. Many, maybe even most sex offenders should have been put out of societies misery instead of housed. We are commanded by God(IMO)to put these people to death that they do not become rampant within society. Frankly it is our faults that sexual perversion, murder and drug addictions are so common. We accept it as part of the price of freedom. Drug addicts should be locked up in insane asylums until they are no longer mentally ill. Drug pushers, including those within government pushing or looking the other way, while quantities are shipped into the country, should be put to death promptly. Exercising rights is only radical to two people, Tyrants and Slaves. Which are YOU? Our ignorance has driven us into slavery and we do not recognize it. #5. To: jeremiad (#4) The Supremes have previously upheld these registries when they were challenged. However, the primary study upon which the courts have relied for years on recidivism by offenders has been revealed under review to have severe flaws and to overstate the danger of recidivism, the primary justification for allowing registries to begin with. So what's at stake here is whether the Supremes are willing to follow through on that new information about the key study they've based their past decisions on.
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