They are now now required to register with the Department of Public Safety every 90 days. One reason the state is keeping such close tabs on sex offenders is because research has shown that some sex offenders have been known to reoffend. In a 3-year study by the U.S. Department of Justice, which began in 1994, over 5% of sex offenders were rearrested for another sex crime after being released from prison. 40% of the sex offenders who allegedly committed another sex crime did it within the first year of being release from jail. Here in Mississippi from 2004 to 2006, there were 710 sex offenders released from the Mississippi Department of Corrections, but there were no sex offenders who returned to MDOC with a new sex offense during that time. We want to know can a sex offender be cured. Thursday night at 10:00pm we talk to a mental health expert and a prosecutor... as we look at curing local sex offenders. Share Your Thoughts
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Information on Megan’s Law:
Washington State’s 1990 Community Protection Act included America’s first law authorizing public notification when dangerous sex offenders are released into the community. However, it was the brutal 1994 rape and murder of seven-year-old Megan Kanka that prompted the public demand for broad based community notification. On May 17, 1996, President Clinton signed Megan's Law. Megan's Law requires the following two components: Sex Offender Registration – The 1994 Jacob Wetterling Act requires the States to register individuals convicted of sex crimes against children. Sex offender registration laws are necessary because:
Community Notification – Megan’s Law allows the States discretion to establish criteria for disclosure, but compels them to make private and personal information on registered sex offenders available to the public. Community notification:
Our interactive Megan’s Law map provides Internet access to better serve America’s evolving, fast paced, transient society. Young parents considering day care providers or businesses and organizations whose employees or volunteers have unsupervised access to children require this critical information so that they can make informed choices based on the best information available. In order to remain current and maintain relevance we ask the public to provide updated information that we may have overlooked, including new, broken or invalid web links so that the KlaasKids Foundation can continue to be the Internet’s premiere Megan’s Law destination. On July 27, 2006 President Bush signed the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act. One important component requires the U.S. Justice Department to create a public accessible Internet based national sex offender database that allows users to specify a search radius across state lines. The result is the Dru Sjodin National Sex Offender Public Website. Accessing Megan's Law - International Efforts - http://www.forsarah.com/html/mainpage.html |
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