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20 Fed. Sent. R. 357 (2007-2008)
Still Time to Rethink the Misguided Approach of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act

handle is hein.journals/fedsen20 and id is 369 raw text is: SUD Time to Rethink the Misguided Approach of the
Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act

Studies, including studies by the Department of Justice,
show that the vast majority of sex offenders do not reof-
fend, that sex offender treatment is effective, and that
community support and stability are essential to rehabili-
tation. Publication on an Internet sex offender registry
very often results in job loss, homelessness, disruption of
treatment, loss of social and family support, harassment,
and even violence. When used indiscriminately for low-
and high-risk offenders alike, public notification interferes
with rehabilitation, thus diminishing public safety, and
wastes resources better spent on the relatively small num-
ber of offenders who are dangerous and likely to
recidivate.
About half the states use a risk-assessment model,
which classifies sex offenders according to dangerousness
and risk of recidivism and limits public notification
accordingly. The Sex Offender Registration and Notifica-
tion Act of 2006 (SORNA), however, requires the states to
adopt a harsh one-size-fits-all policy by July 26, 2009, or
lose Byrne Grant funds. The SORNA was enacted without
hearings. The states were not consulted and current state
practices were not considered. Input from organizations
with expertise in the area was ignored. It is not too late to
rethink this flawed policy.
I. SORNA: A Misguided One-Size-Fits-All Policy
The SORNA, enacted on July 27, 2006, as Title I of the
Adam Walsh Act, requires the states, the District of
Columbia, the territories, and Indian tribes to substan-
tially implement its terms, as determined by the
Attorney General, by July 27, 2009, or be penalized by
the loss of iO percent of Byrne Grant funds they would oth-
erwise receive.' Under SORNA, a sex offender is a
person convicted under the law of any jurisdiction of any
kind of sex offense, broadly defined.2 This includes a juve-
nile adjudicated delinquent for an attempted sexual act if
he was at least fourteen years old) It includes a teenaged
boy convicted of consensual sexual contact with his girl-
friend if she was a day over four years younger.4
For every sex offender as defined under SORNA, a
broad range of information is required to be published on
the Internet. Offenders are placed in one of three tier lev-
els requiring registration and Internet notification for

fifteen years, twenty-five years, or life. The tier levels are
based not on dangerousness or risk of reoffense but on
the offense alone. The fourteen-year-old boy adjudicated
delinquent of an attempted sexual act remains on the reg-
istry for life.) The eighteen-year-old boy convicted of
consensual sexual contact with his girlfriend is on the reg-
istry for twenty-five years.6 The vast majority of offenders
are subject to registration and Internet publication for
twenty-five years or life, even with a clean record and suc-
cessful completion of treatment.7 There is no opportunity
to petition for removal based on lack of dangerousness, a
low risk of recidivism, or remoteness.
In enacting the SORNA, Congress delegated, or per-
haps abdicated, its legislative responsibility to decide
whether the law would be retroactive to the Attorney Gen-
eral. The Attorney General has declared that SORNA is
fully retroactive to all sex offenders convicted at any time
in the past even now when no jurisdiction has yet imple-
mented the law.8 According to these regulations, persons
who were never required to register, completed their
period of registration, or were removed from the registry
based on a low risk assessment are now required to regis-
ter and to be broadcast on the Internet.9 The SMART
Office of the Justice Department recognizes the impracti-
cality of identifying, notifying, and registering all such
persons, and so has determined that a jurisdiction will be
in compliance if it endeavors to notify and register per-
sons who, at the time of implementation, are currently in
the system as registrants, prisoners, or supervisees for an
offense of any kind or are convicted of a new offense of
any kind.'0 This still requires registration and Internet
publication of persons who have already fulfilled state reg-
istry requirements, were removed from the registry based
on a low risk assessment, or were never subject to registra-
tion requirements in the first place.
Moreover, the Department of Justice-the same body that
deemed the law retroactive-regularly prosecutes people
who have never been given notice of a duty to register or
been registered by an appropriate state official as SORNA
requires-which includes every person charged thus far as
no jurisdiction has yet implemented the law-for the new
crime of failure to register as required by SORNA. Many
of these unfair prosecutions have been dismissed as in

Federal Sentencing Reporter, Vol. 20, No. 5, PP. 357-362, ISSN 1053-9867 electronic ISSN 1533-8363
©2oo8 Vera Institute of Justice. All rights reserved. Please direct requests for permission to photocopy
or reproduce article content through the University of California Press's Rights and Permissions website,
http://www.ucpressjoumals.com/reprintInfo.asp. DOI: lo.1525/fsr.2oo8.20.5.357.
FEDERAL SENTENCING REPORTER                 - VOL. 20, NO. 5       * JUNE 2008

a
AMY
BARON-EVANS
Sentencing
Resource Counsel,
Federal Public and
Community
Defenders

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