(Associated Press)
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Thursday, March 26, 2009
Court Upholds Sex Offender Registration
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Name
at
3/26/2009 03:52:00 PM
Labels: 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Florida, sex offender
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
New Sex Offender Bill
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Name
at
2/10/2009 03:56:00 PM
Labels: Newton County, sex offender, state senator john douglas
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Ga. sex offenders must hand over online passwords
A law is set to take effect in Georgia Thursday that requires sex offenders to hand over Internet passwords, screen names and e-mail addresses.
Georgia joins a small band of states complying with guidelines in a 2006 federal law requiring authorities to track Internet addresses of sex offenders. But the state is among the first to take the extra step of forcing its 16,000 offenders to turn in their passwords as well.
A federal judge ruled in September that a similar law in Utah violated the privacy rights of an offender who challenged it. That ruling applied to only one offender who had a military conviction
on sex offenses but was never in Utah's court or prison system.
No one in Georgia has challenged the law yet. But critics say it threatens the privacy of sex offenders and places an additional burden on law enforcement officials.
State Sen. Cecil Staton, who wrote the bill, says the measure is designed to keep the Internet safe for children. Authorities could use the passwords and other information to make sure offenders aren't stalking children online or chatting with them about off-limits topics.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of similar issues.
(AP)
Posted by
Dave
at
12/30/2008 03:48:00 PM
Labels: constitutional rights, Internet, privacy breach, sex offender
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Georgia top court strikes down sex offender law provision
Posted by
Edgar Treiguts
at
11/26/2008 08:46:00 AM
Labels: Georgia Supreme Court, sex offenders
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Woman can stay in home, says court in eastern Georgia
A woman on Georgia's sex offender registry will get to stay in her home for Thanksgiving.
Wendy Whitaker's attorneys say a state court in eastern Georgia granted the woman a temporary restraining order, preventing officials from evicting her.
Whitaker, 29, of Harlem, near Augusta, is a plaintiff in a federal lawsuit seeking to strike down housing restrictions for sex offenders.
She's on the registry because of a sex act between her and a boy when both were teen-agers, an act that she and her attorneys say was consensual. Whitaker was 17 at the time. Her attorneys say her punishment is extreme.
She has faced the possibility of losing her home because it's located within 1000 feet of a child care center and church. State law requires people on the registry to live more than 1000 feet from areas where children congregate, such as day care centers and schools.
Whitaker had faced eviction on Thanksgiving Day.
The order allows her to remain in the home as a state court case, which seeks to remove her from the registry, moves its way through the legal system.
Posted by
Mary Ellen Cheatham
at
11/25/2008 05:10:00 PM
Labels: harlem georgia, sex offender registry, Wendy Whitaker
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Sex offender residency law under fire
Critics of Georgia's crackdown on sex offenders are trying to block the eviction of a 29-year-old woman who is the face of a lawsuit challenging the tough new restrictions. Lawyers for Wendy Whitaker filed a motion in Columbia County Superior Court today urging a judge to block an eviction scheduled for next week. The new rules, approved in 2006, ban sex offenders from living, working or loitering within 1,000 feet of just about anywhere children gather.
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
11/22/2008 12:40:00 PM
Thursday, November 13, 2008
New challenge to sex offender law
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Name
at
11/13/2008 03:32:00 PM
Labels: Glynn County, sex offender, Southern Center for Human Rights
Monday, October 27, 2008
Georgia court: Sex offender provision unfair
Georgia's top court has ruled a provision in Georgia's strict new sex offender law is unconstitutional because it fails to tell homeless offenders how they can comply with the
law.
The law is designed to keep sex offenders away from children by monitoring how close they live to schools, parks and other spots where kids gather. But critics say it unfairly subjects homeless offenders to a life sentence if they fail to register a home address.
The Georgia Supreme Court's 6-1 decision Monday found the law's registration requirements were "unconstitutionally vague." But the opinion went on to say that homeless offenders are not exempt from the statute, and suggested special reporting requirements for the homeless.
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On the Net: http://www.gasupreme.us
(AP)
Posted by
Dave
at
10/27/2008 10:30:00 AM
Labels: Georgia Supreme Court, sex offenders
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
GA sex offender law 'unfair' to homeless, say advocates
Civil rights advocates say a strict new Georgia law designed to keep sex offenders away from children punishes the homeless. Georgia's Supreme Court is considering whether the law unfairly subjects homeless offenders to a life sentence if they fail register a home address. The case involves a homeless man and convicted sex offender who was kicked out of a Gainesville homeless shelter two years ago and was arrested three months later on charges he failed to register with Georgia's sex offender list. Defense lawyers say the law is unfair because it bars homeless sex offenders from giving a post office box or simply saying they are homeless. The challenge is among a growing number of cases targeting Georgia's sex offender law, which sponsors declared one of the toughest in the nation when it was adopted in 2006.
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
7/08/2008 10:55:00 AM
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
New state laws debut today
One is the controversial new gun measure. This allows Georgians with carry permits to bring firearms into restaurants serving alcohol, onto public transportation, and into state parks.
Other laws now on the books include:
- Wine can now be bought from wineries directly over the Internet and by phone. Partially finished bottles of wine can now be taken home from restaurants.
- Sex offenders are now prohibited from volunteering at churches
- Tougher measures on those driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol. Now, a fourth DUI offense in 10 years brings a felony charge. Georgia was one of five states that did not have a law making four DUI offenses a felony.
Posted by
Edgar Treiguts
at
7/01/2008 11:18:00 AM
Labels: DUI, Georgia, guns, new laws, sex offenders
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Sex offenders claim religious worship stifled
Posted by
Name
at
6/24/2008 03:33:00 PM
Labels: Bible, church, religious worship, sex offender
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Group challenges new sex offender residency law
A new law with residency restrictions on convicted sex offenders has drawn swift criticism – and a lawsuit -- from civil rights advocates. The measure is intended to fix a 2006 law which bans convicted sex offenders from living, working or loitering within 1,000 feet of children.
"For example, the much criticized school bus stop provision remains a part of the law, there are no exceptions for people who are physically incapacitated by illness or age, there is no distinction between people who are on the registry who because they engaged in consensual sex as teenagers, and people who are really dangerous people."
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
5/14/2008 10:19:00 PM
Tuesday roundup of bills signed by Perdue
-Legislation approved into law that gives consumers greater protection over their credit information. Consumers for a fee can ‘freeze’ access to their information.
-Approved is a bill that creates a special fund and speeds the process for the approval of reservoirs in the state.
-Three other bills approved deal with education—-all pave a smoother path for the creation of charter schools in Georgia.
-Perdue signed into law Tuesday a measure that reworks an earlier version of the sex offenders residency law that was struck down by the state’s Supreme Court. It brings back many restrictions to fix a 2006 law that bans sex offenders from living, working or loitering within one-thousand feet of nearly anywhere children gather.
-Despite his opposition to Sunday sales of alcohol in the state, the Governor Tuesday did sign a bill that allows for beer to be sold at Gwinnett County’s new baseball stadium on Sundays next year. In addition, Perdue signed the bill to allow Georgians to buy wine over the Internet.
Posted by
Edgar Treiguts
at
5/14/2008 08:11:00 AM
Labels: alcohol sales, bills, charter schools, consumer credit, credit information, Governor Sonny Perdue, legislation, water reservoirs
Friday, April 4, 2008
SB 1- Passes - Sex offender residency restrictions.
A Bill that re-stablishes residency requirements for people on the Sex offender registry got final passage today. Last year the State Supreme court struck down a that requirement because it would force sex offenders to move if a daycare center opens up near them. SB 1 now fixes that problem and allows Sex offenders to remain in their residencies. But once they move, they have to keep a 1000 feet distance from places where children gather. The bill now goes to Governor Perdue for his signature.
Posted by
Susanna Capelouto
at
4/04/2008 11:35:00 AM
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Proposal limits where sex offenders can live
Posted by
Name
at
1/15/2008 04:53:00 PM
Labels: sex offenders
Friday, December 14, 2007
Baker says sex offender law now clear
Posted by
Name
at
12/14/2007 03:43:00 PM
Monday, December 10, 2007
Lawmakers craft new sex offender bill
Posted by
Name
at
12/10/2007 03:18:00 PM
Labels: house republicans, sex offender, state supreme court
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
TV Ad Outs Unregistered Pedophiles
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Screenshot of announcement with number to call. (Courtesy Muscogee County Sheriff's Dept)
A west Georgia Sheriff's Department is calling on the public to report missing sex offenders. And the department is using a tv advertisement to do it.
The 30-second spot shows photos and names of nine sex offenders who haven't registered where they live in Muscogee County.
Major Joe McCrea of the County Sheriff's Office says the response has been exceptional:
"As of today, we should have five of those nine in custody... the one that is scheduled to turn himself in today, has actually called, himself, and is making arrangements to turn himself in -- as a result of this CSA."The spot began airing just before Thanksgiving.
McCrea says they intend to continue running the community service announcement several more weeks, due to the public response.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of this issue, and here for coverage of the "To Catch a Predator" program.
Posted by
Dave
at
12/04/2007 03:09:00 PM
Labels: Muscogee County Sheriffs Dept., pedophiles, To Catch a Predator
Thursday, November 29, 2007
AG not clear on sex offender ruling
Posted by
Name
at
11/29/2007 05:09:00 PM
Monday, August 13, 2007
State won't pay deputies for training
Georgia's 14,000 registered sex offenders pay $250 dollars a year to have their whereabouts and proximity to schools, churches and other sites tracked. But the money goes to the state and not the Georgia Sheriffs who do the tracking.
Terry Norris, Executive Director of the Georgia's Sheriffs Assocation, says that leaves many smaller agencies, in particular, short-changed. Norris says, "That was one provision that we tried to affect two years ago and it just didn't happen."
Some rural counties have seen an influx in registered sex offenders who are trying to find places to live away from urban areas.
This week on St. Simons Island, the GSA is holding a 2-day training for law enforcement agents on registry issues, but the state won't reimburse agencies for the training.
Posted by
Orlando Montoya
at
8/13/2007 03:03:00 PM