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Public Criminal Records Provide
Resource For Saving Lives
There is no
greater fear for a parent than a child molester; there is
no greater fear for the perpetrator than a prepared
parent and a well-trained child.
In recent years,
parents, law enforcement agencies and governmental
offices have joined forces to protect the children of the
United States.
Today, families
and communities are beginning to draw together to protect
the children of America from a registered sex offender,
someone that might live right next
door.
Statistics Prove What Public
Criminal Records Support
The grim
reality is that the children of today are dealing with an
enemy that is not frightening. In fact, this enemy is often a
neighbor that they know and trust.
The
“grown-up” that invites them over for cookies and milk to
“talk” about their day, share a hobby or watch
cartoons.
These
registered sex offenders build relationships with
children, children that trust them; children that die at
the hands of these evil souls. See National Alert
Registry
Statistic claim
that 90% of all sexual molestations and sexual assaults
against a child are done by someone they
know.
Most pedophiles
will have assaulted many times before being caught and
the re-arrest rate for those convicted is said to be as
high as
52%.
Current
statistics predict that 1 in 5 girls and 1 in 6 boys will
be molested before they reach the age of
18. These
numbers are
terrifying.
Megan’s Law Uses Public Criminal
Records To Identify The Sexual Predator’s Living In Your
Neighborhood
In 1994, the senseless murder of Megan
Kanka, a 7-year-old living in New Jersey, by a convicted
sex offender, influenced the United States to pass
Megan’s Law.
This law required that those
convicted of these offenses must register their home,
work and other personal addresses with the local law
enforcement in which they reside.
Law enforcement offices were instructed
to make public notice, using the sex offender’s public
criminal record, to each neighborhood so that the
surrounding families knew one of these people was living
or working in their neighborhood.
While the law
created hope for parents of young children there was
little funding available to make the law a practiced
reality.
Without the
funding, it was nearly impossible to implement Megan’s
Law and get them to register.
Technology would provide a resource in
the Internet that would make it much easier to bring the
hope of Megan’s Law into a reality.
As
the registration of convicted sex
offenders became
more common practice with law enforcement
agencies,
Access to
the information, via the Internet, became more widespread
and could be shared between agencies in moments rather
than
days.
There was hope that Megan’s Law
might actually provide the security and safety for the
children for which it was
created.
Jessica’s Law Was Created To
Continue The Battle Against Child Molestation
However,
the death of 9-year-old Jessica Lunsford in 2005 would
send an alarming message to parents, law enforcement
agencies and governmental bodies across the United
States.
Megan’s
Law was not providing the safety and security that was
hoped.
Lunsford
was brutally murdered by her neighbor, a convicted sex
offender. Florida law officials created
Jessica’s Law in 2005 intended to severely punish child
molesters and lower their ability to
re-offend.
This law
was modified and introduced by the United States federal
government as the Jessica Lunsford
Act.
The Jessica
Lunsford Act ‘s included severe penalties for the
molestation of a child; mandatory minimum of 25 years, if
convicted for molesting a child under the age of
12.
The provision of
electronic monitoring for the lifetime of the convicted
sex offender upon release was
mandated.
In Florida, sexual
rape or battery of a child under the age of 12 was
designated a capital offense punishable by death or life
without parole.
The provisions of
Jessica’s Law supported the protection that Megan’s Law
had hoped to offer children.
Public Criminal Records And The
Internet Become A Tool For Children’s’
Safety
Since
2005, there are many different resources that publish the
public criminal records of convicted sex
offenders.
These
websites were created in an effort to insure the safety
of our children, making it difficult for the convicted
sex offender to slip back into a neighborhood
unnoticed.
For sex
offenders, the tables turned when it became mandated by
law that they register as
their public criminal
records have become a
red flag for every parent.
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