Wednesday, March 4, 2009

GA Considers Revising Sex Offender Laws

WCTV : Ga. Considers Changes To Sex Offender Law.

ATLANTA (AP) Georgia legislators are seeking to soften some of the toughest provisions in the state's crackdown on sex offenders. The Senate voted 52-2 on Tuesday to make sweeping changes to the law. The new plan now goes to the House, where powerful Republican legislators pushed the original law through three years ago. The bill would require a homeless offender to provide the Sheriff’s Office, in lieu of an address, the places where he or she sleeps, eats and works and other places the offender frequents, and report in weekly to the Sheriff’s Office.

The current law bans sex offenders from living, working or loitering within 1,000 feet of just about anywhere children gather. That includes schools, parks, gyms, swimming pools and the state's 150,000 school bus stops.

One change would allow "low risk offenders,'' such as those convicted of statutory rape, to petition the legal system to get off the registry after completing their sentence.

The Senate proposal would also clear the way for most sex offenders to volunteer in churches (because the prohibition is a violation of the Constitution). Sex offenders who are elderly and disabled could ask the courts to be released from the residency requirements under the proposal.