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Concerns Remain Over Sex Offender Law Save Email Print
Posted: 6:15 PM Jul 17, 2008
Last Updated: 6:15 PM Jul 17, 2008
Reporter: Brendan Riley AP

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CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - Another revision of the Nevada attorney
general's position on a new sex offender law has left critics of the law confused - and glad that a federal judge has blocked enforcement of the law pending further review.

The latest position change was sent Thursday by Deputy Attorney
General Binu Palal to Maggie McLetchie of the American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada, prompting McLetchie to say the attorney general "is really falling down on the job" because of the lack of clarity.

Palal's letter Thursday said the attorney general wouldn't try to retroactively enforce a section of the new law barring certain sex offenders from residing within 1,000 feet of a school or daycare facility.

That's a change from a letter sent Wednesday by Palal, telling McLetchie that no provisions of the new law, SB471, would be applied retroactively.

"This is incredibly frustrating. It's impossible to get any clarity," McLetchie said, adding that given the confusion it's a good thing that a preliminary injunction issued by U.S. District Judge James Mahan prevents enforcement of the new law.

McLetchie said the ACLU supports tough laws against sex offenders, but also believes that provisions of SB471 can't be applied retroactively and in any case should apply to offenders convicted of the most serious crimes.

SB471 isn't the only new law dealing with sex offenders that's undergoing review. A related measure, AB579 dealing with juvenile
offenders, will be analyzed by the Nevada Supreme Court, and the
2009 state Legislature also is expected to study it.

The reviews follow a ruling by Clark County Family Court Judge William Voy that part of the law is unconstitutional. AB579, based on the federal Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act passed in 2006, included many teenage sex offenders 14 and older with adults under requirements for sex offender registration and community notification.

The federal law, named for a six-year-old who was abducted from a Florida shopping mall in 1981 and later found slain, cut off certain grant funds to states unless they included in their registries juveniles who committed sex offenses when they were as young as 14.

The registration provision has been criticized by Human Rights Watch, a leading human rights group, which says no juveniles - and no other offenders considered to pose low future risk - should be registered.

Lawyers for the Clark County juvenile public defender's office and for the ACLU of Nevada sought the ruling from Voy, arguing that the new law is unconstitutional.

Voy held that the law section dealing with juvenile offenders violates constitutional due process guarantees because it lacks a rational basis for extending to 14-year-olds but not to someone who may be younger but more dangerous.

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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Posted by: R Location: Las Vegas on Sep 22, 2008 at 10:29 AM
To Nancy: Your husband will be eligable for consideration to be removed for registration after 10 years. The system stinks! It needs to be revamped. Sex Offenders vs Sex Preditors, then a classification in itself. Urinating in public. Give us all a break! We need to start somewhere. I hope your husband is off the net. He needs to apply, if not. Write me, if you think we can change the system.

Posted by: Nancy Location: Fernley, NV on Jul 18, 2008 at 09:57 AM
My husband pleaded guilty to open/gross lewdness from urinating in a public place while ill. It was ruled as a gross misdemeaner and he now has to register as a sex offender once a year for the rest of his life. This new law would now bring him up to a Tier I. Not only is this a gross humiliation for this man as it is already but talk about a waste of tax payers money making this man go through registering and all the paper work etc. Our system really needs an overhaul in this matter!

Posted by: Peter Del Valle Location: San Diego on Jul 17, 2008 at 08:17 PM
LIE OF THE YEAR: "McLetchie said the ACLU supports tough laws against sex offenders." Next thing you know is that the ACLU will support John McCain as president, the continuation of Guantanamo Bay illegal lockup facility, and big businesses who pollute the air and sea on a daily basis.

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