Lawmakers Debate Sex Offender Bill
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Updated: 3:54 AM Apr 1, 2009
Lawmakers Debate Sex Offender Bill
Nevada lawmakers debated a bill Tuesday that would provide additional protections to victims of sex offenders, by prohibiting the offenders from moving within 1,000 feet of the victims.
Posted: 3:54 AM Apr 1, 2009
Reporter: By CATHY BUSSEWITZ
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CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - Nevada lawmakers debated a bill Tuesday
that would provide additional protections to victims of sex offenders, by prohibiting the offenders from moving within 1,000 feet of the victims.

Assemblyman Lynn Stewart, R-Henderson, who introduced AB325,
told the Assembly Corrections, Parole and Probation Committee that as the law is written now, offenders could move across the street or next door to their victims.

Committee members also were told by a young mother, who was raped by her babysitter's boyfriend when she was four years old, that her attacker years later moved next door to her grandmother, where the victim used to live.

"I'm living this whole thing all over again when I go to my grandmother's house," she said. "I no longer want to go over there. I have to face him looking at me, laughing at me."

Lawmakers were told that in some instances, sex offenders have a
difficult time finding a place to live because entire towns are off-limits. One offender moved to a rural area to comply with the rules, but when housing developments sprung up around him, he had to move away, Stewart said.

To remedy that, the bill also would give some latitude to sex offenders who are attempting to comply with the law.

Stewart told the committee about an 18-year-old who had consensual sex with a 14-year-old, and then was convicted as a sex offender after parents objected. He said the couple later married, but under a strict reading of the current law the husband could be required to move over 1,000 feet away from his now-wife.

"Now they are married and have kids," Stewart said. "We don't want to break up that family."

But some lawmakers did not want to make it too easy on sex offenders.

"That's understandable that we would have some leeway there," said Assemblyman Ty Cobb, R-Reno. "But I don't think we should be bending over backwards for them to let them live wherever they want to live."

Mark Woods, deputy chief of the state Division of Parole and Probation, proposed an amendment to allow the division some discretion in dealing with the 1,000-foot rule.

"It's those occasions where a person has established residence and is doing very well," Woods said. "Those are going to be the tough cases."

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Latest Comments

Posted by: MSLGWCEO Location: Oklahoma on Apr 1, 2009 at 08:17 AM

"Parental control is best prevention against sex predators..." "Most children who are abused know their abuser. They trust their abuser." By, " a friend or relative who was willingly let in the front door." "The political predators are about to come rushing forward with moral outrage, declaring that they will fight to keep “some” neighborhoods free of sexual predator residents (who are still free to visit anytime)." http://cfcoklahoma.org/New_Site/index.php?option=com_fireboard&Itemid=0&func=view&catid=4&id=1386#1386
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