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Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Jacob Sullum :: Townhall.com Columnist
Banishment of Sex Offenders is Unfair and Ineffective
by Jacob Sullum
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When Georgia's legislature drew up a list of places where sex offenders were not allowed to live, the majority leader of the state House said he hoped the restrictions would be so intolerable that sex offenders "will want to move to another state." By overturning those restrictions, the Georgia Supreme Court has created an opportunity to reconsider the mindless harsher-is-better approach they exemplified, which is neither fair as a matter of criminal justice nor sensible in terms of public safety.

Despite all the talk of protecting children, registered sex offenders are not synonymous with predatory criminals, let alone child molesters. In Georgia, they include many people who were guilty of nothing beyond consensual sex as teenagers.

Even if they have never demonstrated a propensity to abuse children, the 10,000 or so sex offenders covered by the registration requirement have to regularly report their whereabouts to local law enforcement officials, who in turn make the information publicly available. Failure to report triggers a prison sentence of at least 10 years.

Yet, until the Georgia Supreme Court intervened, sex offenders also had a strong incentive not to register since doing so enabled the government to enforce residence restrictions that made nearly all locations in urban areas off limits. The penalty for violating those restrictions was the same as the penalty for failing to register.

Georgia's law barred sex offenders from living within 1,000 feet of a school, church, daycare center or any other location where children might congregate, including parks, playgrounds, swimming pools, skating rinks and school bus stops. Even if a sex offender managed to find a legal place to live, he could be ordered to move again and again, depending on how his neighbors decided to use their property.

Anthony Mann, the registered sex offender who successfully challenged Georgia's law, bought a house in Clayton County with his wife in 2003. At the time, it was a legal location. But then a daycare center opened nearby, rendering it illegal.

"Under the terms of that statute," the state Supreme Court noted, "there is no place in Georgia where a registered sex offender can live without being continually at risk of being ejected." Concluding that the law "precludes appellant from having any reasonable investment-backed expectation in any property purchased as his private residence," the court unanimously ruled that it violated the Fifth Amendment's ban on uncompensated takings of private property.

Georgia's law also prevents Mann from working at the barbecue restaurant he co-owns since it's within 1,000 feet of a daycare center established after the business was opened. Because Mann did not present enough evidence of economic harm, the Georgia Supreme Court did not overturn the work restrictions, which have been challenged in federal court as well.

Constitutional issues aside, closing off employment opportunities for sex offenders, who already are handicapped by criminal records, is not exactly conducive to rehabilitation. Nor is forcing them to cluster in the boondocks, far from employers and treatment programs, or encouraging them to go underground.

In Iowa, which bars sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet of schools or daycare centers, police and prosecutors have concluded that such residence restrictions do not prevent recidivism since people can readily travel beyond their immediate neighborhoods, and that they discourage registration. After Iowa's law took effect, the number of sex offenders whose whereabouts were unknown more than doubled.

Last year, the chief sponsor of Iowa's law, state Sen. Jerry Behn (R-Boone), conceded that he may have gotten a bit carried away. "If you draw a map, pretty soon you can make it so no area in town is available to live in," he told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "It would have been better if we had put it at 1,000 feet."

But who can be bothered to look at a map when there's important grandstanding to be done? "The bottom line," Behn explained, "is it's all about protecting children." Or seeming to.

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About The Author
Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine and a contributing columnist on Townhall.com.
 
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Stay rational.
A dispassionate view NEEDS to be expressed on topics like this, and other "hot button" issues in our society. Injecting more emotion into something like this is not the answer. I applaud those who have tried to stay rational.

Marxbrothers
I appreciate your apology, thank you.

People get very emotional about this sort of abuse, whether they have experienced it first hand or not. When we see someone being clinical and unemotional about it, we can only assume the worst.

I'm all for treatment on any sort of disorder, however, I truly believe some people of disorders simply are not curable, try as we may. I follow and study repeat offenders and their walk through therapy, and often it leads to more victims. A child used in any manor, even petting, will have deep emotional scars and change the course of their life forever. Who they could've been as an adult will be sadly impaired by self loathing, insecurity, depression, drug use, and suicide. I always wondered, since I beat many negative statistics, how different and better off I could've been now, because nonetheless, I was still developmentally impaired by it. I suffered horrible depression, my grades failed, I did do drugs, I was in failed relationships, but I overcame them all many years ago. Without the suffering during those 20's years of struggling, who would I have been today?

I just find it deeply suspicious that a pedophile who does use lies and manipulation to assimilate in life and lure children, are being forthcoming and honest in during those therapies. They wish to be released, they will say anything. Unfortunately, certain therapies that even rapists and pedophiles ask for, like castration, are denied by special interest groups who support criminals. They feel it's inhumane but are willing to risk children's lives for a psychotic's humanity.

I guess what I hope you can realize and believe, that some individuals just cannot be cured and the laws indeed need to change to harsher penalities for the safety and sanctity of future generations.
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