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  • 21 Feb 2015 8:19 PM | Vicki Henry

    PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT: THE RALLY IN TALLY

    Advocates of sex offender registry reform will gather in a peaceful protest at the Florida State House in Tallahassee FL on April 22, 2015 during the annual Lauren Book's 'Walk In My Shoes' event. The Rally in Tally is a joint collaboration among civil rights activists; we seek to raise awareness of the sex offender law reform movement, provide educational material, and garner attention to our plights at a high-profile event that brings politicians, celebrity advocates, and the news media together.

    The intent of the Rally in Tally is not to attack, dispute, or criticize the efforts of Lauren's Kids as it relates to raising awareness and the prevention of sexual abuse in America. However, we are taking a stand against the policies of the Lauren's Kids foundation in its efforts to promote and lobby for Florida's "scorched Earth" policies. Lauren Book and her powerful lobbyist father, Ron Book, have pushed a number of harmful policies under the Lauren's Kids banner, including tough residency restrictions that forced registered citizens in Miami-Dade County to sleep under bridges, in abandoned parking lots, and even along train tracks and warehouses. In the past year Lauren's Kids supported a law marking the state-issued ID cards of some registrants with a scarlet letter, creating "pocket parks" to expand exclusion zones against registrants, and is currently supporting a lifetime GPS bill for all registered persons. In addition, Lauren Book has
    referred to all registered citizens as "monsters," "incurable," a "clear and imminent danger," and "ticking time bombs."

    We cannot make the Rally in Tally a success without you, our fellow activists. We need people willing to travel to Tallahassee to present the Book family, Florida Legislature and ill-informed public with a visual representation of the unconsidered consequences of hastily-devised legislation. Registered citizens, civil rights activist and registrant families are strongly encouraged to attend. Our hope is that anyone reading this will realize each person is needed at this rally to stand publicly for our rights. If you cannot attend the event, then we encourage you to support the rally movement by making a donation to assist in paying for supplies or sponsor someone who otherwise would not be able to participate.

    Please send us an email at contact@womenagainstregistry.com for more information and to receive periodic updates about this exciting event!

  • 22 Jan 2015 11:18 PM | Administrator (Administrator)

    Posted: Wednesday, January 21, 2015 5:32 pm
    By MARTHA SHANAHAN Sentinel Staff


    A local lawmaker has sponsored several bills in the N.H. House of Representatives that would increase protections for people on the state's registry of sex offenders.

    Rep. Timothy N. Robertson, D-Keene, said he was motivated by information about two recent local attacks that he said may have been committed by someone who targeted people listed on the registry.

    Robertson said he believes this is a common problem in the state.
    "They have been found guilty, and they have served their time," Robertson said. ""They don’t deserve to be targeted for the rest of their lives."

    One of the four bills he's introduced would "(prohibit) the use of sex offender registry information for the purpose of harassing, intimidating, or threatening a registered sexual offender or offender against children, or any family member, employer or landlord of such person."

    A representative from the Concord organization Citizens for Criminal Justice Reform, Chris Dornin, encouraged Robertson to sponsor that bill after he investigated the homicide of 48-year-old David E. Wheelock of Keene and an attack on a Westmoreland man that Dornin believes are connected.

    Wheelock was killed in December 2013 at his house on Pearl Street in Keene.
    He had been convicted of 28 counts of child pornography in October 2005, and those convictions are listed on the N.H. Department of Safety’s sex offender registry.

    Authorities have not identified a suspect or a motive in the murder, but Assistant N.H. Attorney General Benjamin J. Agati said last month that they are considering a theory that Wheelock’s sexual offender status made him a target.

    Dornin said the possibility that Wheelock was targeted for being on the registry indicated a threat to other registered sex offenders.

    "It underscores how punitive the registry is, and the unfairness of charging someone (just to make them) a shaming and violence target," he said.

    Dornin cited another case in which he believes an attacker mistook a Westmoreland man on the sex offender registry for his neighbor.

    The victim, Walter Field, was attacked last year outside his house, and police said at the time that the assailant had been looking for another person.

    The assault left Field with fractures to his face and damage to his left eye, according to N.H. State Police Sgt. Shawn M. Skahan, who investigated the crime.

    During the attack, one of Field’s brothers overheard the assailant make statements that led police to conclude Field’s neighbor was the intended target of the attack.

    Police did not release the neighbor’s name, citing safety concerns, but Dornin said he has spoken to the man, who he said is a registered sex offender.


    Source: http://www.sentinelsource.com/news/local/in-thursday-s-sentinel-a-local-lawmaker-sponsors-bills-to/article_bd4f2dac-6bb9-5364-b1db-2e135050bd7e.html

  • 15 Jan 2015 11:58 PM | Administrator (Administrator)

      JAN 13, 2015

    PORTLAND, Maine - A Maine judge must give further consideration to whether a man's rights were violated by legislative action requiring him to be placed on the state sex offender registry retroactively.

    The state supreme court ruled Tuesday in the case of a man who served 72 hours in jail in 2003 after pleading guilty to possession of sexually explicit materials.

    At the time, the conviction didn't require him to be on the sex offender registry. But that changed later that year when lawmakers updated the list of crimes mandating placement on the registry.

    On Tuesday, the supreme court vacated a judge's decision that rejected Doe's lawsuit. Justices said more information is needed to reach a conclusion on his stand-alone claim that lawmakers illegally circumvented the judicial process to impose extra punishment.


    Source: http://news.mpbn.net/post/judge-required-revisit-sex-offender-registry-lawsuit 

  • 30 Dec 2014 9:27 PM | Administrator (Administrator)
    By The Associated Press
    Posted Dec. 11, 2014 @ 9:00 am

    SPRINGFIELD: The University of Illinois Springfield plans to offer a free online class examining the issues surrounding wrongful convictions.


    The university said Wednesday that online registration is underway for the six-week course, which begins in February and is open to the public. Participants need not be enrolled at the university.


    It will examine the scope and causes of wrongful convictions and the difficulties in trying to free innocent people after they have been convicted. It also will consider strategies to prevent future wrongful convictions.


    The course will be taught by Assistant Professor Gwen Jordan, who also is a staff attorney for the Illinois Innocence Project.


    Scores of inmates in Illinois and elsewhere have been freed from prison after serving years for crimes they did not commit.

    Read more: 

    http://www.journalstandard.com/article/20141211/News/141219881#ixzz3NRUvbO00


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