Initiative aimed at protecting children is prohibitively expensive, unenforceable
Sacramento Bee
A little more than a year ago, California voters overwhelmingly approved Proposition 83, popularly known as Jessica's Law. That initiative, aimed at monitoring and controlling sex offenders, now is collapsing under its own excess. Virtually no local government is enforcing the law because its sweeping provisions are both unenforceable and prohibitively expensive. ...
The measure requires lifetime monitoring for sex offenders – not just those charged with child sexual abuse and rapists whose victims were adults, but also those convicted of consensual sex with a teenager and even misdemeanor indecent exposure. It also bars offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a school or park. ...
So for now at least, the law is not being enforced, and there is a real question whether it ever will or even can be. ...
State corrections officials predicted the residency restrictions in the law would drive sex offenders underground and make our communities less safe. Now it also turns out that the measure would bankrupt local governments if it is enforced as written. California will be wrestling with this mess for years to come. Full Story
Editorial: 'Jessica's Law' one year later: Empty promises
Posted by Moderator at 12/15/2007 09:44:00 PM
Labels: Community Notification, Mobility Restrictions, Residency Restrictions
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