
The National Sex-offender Registry
The listed are convicted sex offenders. The FBI is actively seeking any information that may lead to their whereabouts. To get the details of a case, please click on the accused photo.
Click here to report a crime and remain anonymous!
Prior to 1994 only five states required convicted sex offenders to register their addresses with local law enforcement. As recognition of the severity of this problem grew, Congress passed the Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and Sexually Violent Offender Act, 42 U.S.C. §§14071, et seq. (“Wetterling Act”). This requires state implementation of a sex-offender registration program or a 10 percent forfeiture of federal funds for state and local law enforcement under the Byrne Grant Program of the U.S. Department of Justice. Today, all fifty states have sex offender registries.
The realization registration alone was not enough came after the tragic murder of 7-year-old Megan Kanka by a released sex offender living on her street. The public outcry created a call for programs to provide the public with information regarding released sex offenders. In 1996 Congress passed a federal law mandating state community notification programs. Megan’s Law, section (e) of the Wetterling Act, requires all states to conduct community notification but does not set out specific forms and methods, other than requiring the creation of internet sites containing state sex-offender information. Beyond that requirement, states are given broad discretion in creating their own policies.
The Challenge
There are currently 800,000 registered sex offenders in the
While community supervision and oversight is widely recognized as essential, the system for providing such supervision is overwhelmed
Loopholes in
The increased mobility of our society has led to “lost” sex offenders, those who fail to comply with registration duties yet remain undetected due to law enforcement’s inability to track their whereabouts. The wide disparity among the state programs in both registration and notification procedures permits sex offenders to “forum-shop,” research which states have the least stringent laws, in order to live in communities with relative anonymity.
Recommendations
There is a clear need for more consistency and uniformity among state programs for sex offender registration and community notification.
There should be more funding to assist states in maintaining and improving these programs.
New technology should be developed for tracking offenders and improving communication between and among various agencies (law enforcement, corrections, courts and probation).
Of the estimated 800,000 known sex offenders in the
Listed below are the sex offender registries for each of the 50
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