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Tracking Sex Offenders via GPS for Life 1240

ecmcn writes "According to Yahoo! news, the governor of Florida just passed a bill that, along with increasing the jail time served for convicted sex offenders, requires them to be tracked for life via GPS. No technical details about the tracking, but it mentions "warning authorities when a sex offender is someplace he shouldn't be". Maybe they can get Google maps to add red zones around all of the restricted areas."
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Tracking Sex Offenders via GPS for Life

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  • Why stop there? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by TripMaster Monkey ( 862126 ) * on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:47PM (#12411300)

    <sarcasm>

    Why limit this to just sex offenders? Why not all criminals? Heck...why don't we just tag everyone...after all, odds are everyone will commit a criminal act sometime in their lives, right?

    I got a great idea....we'll tag everyone, giving each transmitter a unique frequency....their 'number', if you will.

    Oh wait....this idea has already been proposed [ibs.org]...

    (Interesting side note...our president's number seems to be 666 [meepzorp.com].

    </sarcasm>
    • Re:Why stop there? (Score:5, Informative)

      by BrowserCapsGuy ( 872795 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:50PM (#12411346)
      Somebody needs a class in civics. The governor cannot pass a law. He can only sign it into law or veto it.
    • Re:Why stop there? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by 88NoSoup4U88 ( 721233 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:04PM (#12411587)
      I had a conversation with some friends about tagging all people on the world.

      Besides the obvious 'those who want to do bad stuff, will be able to remove it', I was amazed at how many of my friends were willing to tag themselves if they had the guarantee that everyone else got tagged too.

      I myself am very uncomfortable with the idea itself : Less so, if I got it black-on-white that only a certain radius of a crimescene is used for bringing up the location-data of the people in the whereabouts... Then again, a guarantee given by my (dutch) government, means shit to me.

      So who in here would want to 'sacrifice' a little/big bit of his privacy, if you have the guarantee that everyone else gets tagged too ?

      • Re:Why stop there? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Total_Wimp ( 564548 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:20PM (#12411838)
        So who in here would want to 'sacrifice' a little/big bit of his privacy, if you have the guarantee that everyone else gets tagged too ?

        I'm appalled. I'm just speechless. Do people not realize that they're already criminals? Don't they speed in their car? Didn't they steal gum in the 5th grade? Didn't they ever get drunk and pee in the street? Did they pay every bill on time, all the time?

        When you make it easy to lock up all the criminals then you make it easy to lock up everyone. Why are we so willing to nuke the bad guys even though we'll be hit by blast as well?

        TW
    • Re:Why stop there? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:06PM (#12411633)
      In a similar opinion:

      My problem is that the current regulations do not discriminate between offences.

      1) Go to bar, get drunk, meet girl, bring girl home.
      2) Learn next morning she is 17 (still looks like 25) and used fake ID to get in. Also learn her father is a lawyer.
      3) Get listed on sex offender list; be tracked with GPS for the rest of your life.

      A similar scenario occurred in my area, but with a bar accepting 25 year or older people only. The guy felt safe, she looked at least 25. Being a well known sport hero (making millions a year) the girl literally jumped on him. Next morning she left the hotel room (team was on the road), she bragged around, daddy heard about it and saw the opportunity.

      It was explained the only way out would have been to have her and her legal guardian (daddy) sign an agreement for sexual encounter. The fact she used fake ID to get in the bar had no impact, she was a minor, and you are responsible to make sure she was of age, no matter how she acted.

      Now calling your lawyer and meet all parties for a signed agreement is not the first thing on your mind when drunk with a girl grabbing your pants under the table.

      Until we clearly discriminate between horny young girls and clear violent attacks or pedophile cases, I will have a hard time with harsh regulations imposed post-prison sentenced (debt to society paid and all).
      • Re:Why stop there? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by N3WBI3 ( 595976 )
        4) Learn that screwing somebody you just met in a bar just might have a negative effect on the rest of your life (forget the fact more than 1/4 have genital warts and that it is not prevented by condoms, there is no cure, and it can cause a woman to be infertile).

        Until we clearly discriminate between horny young girls and clear violent attacks or pedophile cases, I will have a hard time with harsh regulations imposed post-prison sentenced (debt to society paid and all).

        I can agree with this, I am not a

        • " 4) Learn that screwing somebody you just met in a bar just might have a negative effect on the rest of your life "

          Hmm.....every action you take has a 'price'...but, really, where do YOU go to get laid on a regular basis? I find it is the best place to find good looking women, who you can sleep with...after all, that is a guy's purpose in life eh?

          At least till he gives up....and gets married....

        • Re:Why stop there? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by dougmc ( 70836 ) <dougmc+slashdot@frenzied.us> on Monday May 02, 2005 @06:37PM (#12413741) Homepage
          4) Learn that screwing somebody you just met in a bar just might have a negative effect on the rest of your life
          As might walking across the street. Or starting your car. Or volunteering at the local hospital, getting a job, raking the grass. Life is dangerous.

          Sex, however, is generally believed to be normal, even if our society tends to demonize it. For example, the odds are pretty good that your parents have had it at least once.

          (forget the fact more than 1/4 have genital warts and that it is not prevented by condoms
          Nothing is absolutely prevented by condoms, not HIV/AIDS or pregnancy. However, they are still believed to be at least somewhat effective, even against genital warts [nih.gov]. They're not perfect, but they're far better than nothng.
          there is no cure, and it can cause a woman to be infertile).
          So you've heard of STDs. Good. But what does that have to do with screwing a woman you just met in a bar? If I recall correctly, the first time I met my wife was in a bar. That was perhaps 12 years and two kids ago ...

          You could meet a woman in church (or pick some other place for finding wholesome, God fearing women), get to know her for a few months, fall in love, and finally have sex and then get genital warts from her -- she may not even realize that she has it. And then you learn that she's only 17, get arrested, go to prison, and when you're released you get labeled as a sex offender and have to wear a GPS tracker for the rest of your life. Which may not be very long, as some vigilante finds out that there's a sex offender living in his neighborhood on the Intraweb, and he breaks in and kills you in your sleep. (Hopefully they'll take the GPS tracker off before they bury you.)

          And genital warts aren't the worst thing you can get, and not the only thing that cant' be cured. And you can also get them without even having sex (kissing could pass them from mouth to mouth.)

          Nobody said life was fair. But in theory, our legal system ought to be, and treating `sex offenders' like we do, making them register, tracking their movements, especially when their crimes are stupid things like `public urination' (it varies from state to state, but some do treat that as full fledged `sex offenders'), when we don't do similar things for people convicted of murder, assault and battery, armed robbery, etc. is about as far from `fair' as you can get

          But all the politicians have to do is play the `think about the children' card, and everybody involved seems to stop thinking and start jerking their knees instead ...

      • Re:Why stop there? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Bodysurf ( 645983 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:16PM (#12411776)

        RTFA.

        From the article:

        "It establishes a mandatory sentence of at least 25 years behind bars for people convicted of certain sex crimes against children 11 and younger, with lifetime tracking by global positioning satellite after they are freed."
      • Re:Why stop there? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by dark_requiem ( 806308 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:22PM (#12411892)
        The scenario you paint is indeed one that needs to be viewed seriously. Remember, the correct way to analyze a proposed government program (unless you're an anarchist like me, in which case the correct answer is a resounding "Nay!") is by the damage it could do if abused, rather than the benefit it will incur if properly administered. This is another example of knee-jerk reactionary legislation, pumped out to score points with the constituency, rather than a serious attempt to solve a problem. And as the first poster pointed out, why stop with sex offenders? Why not non-violent, victimless drug "criminals"? The state loves to scapegoat them, so it seems the perfect opportunity. Hopefully, this legislation is shot down. It's not that I condone sex offenders, but this is extreme beyond all reason, and too readily adapted to whatever is the next crime of the moment.
    • Are you incapable (Score:3, Insightful)

      by stoolpigeon ( 454276 ) *
      of morally differentiating between various crimes? Do you not find that the difference in the damage done between say a thief and a child molester warrants different treatment? Do the objective studies showing an incredibly high recidivism rate for sex offenders not impact how you view this?

      Based on your side not and making guesses about your opinions -- are you also as opposed to euthanasia due to the same types of concerns in regards to where it will stop?
    • Re:Why stop there? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by itsallgeek2me ( 880817 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @05:17PM (#12412774)
      Here's the thing, If we're worried about them, why are they free roaming about in public? If we're not worried about them, why are we keeping track of them? You've either served your time/been rehabilitated or you haven't. All this wishy washy stuff is just a band-aid.
  • Great idea. (Score:5, Funny)

    by grub ( 11606 ) <slashdot@grub.net> on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:47PM (#12411302) Homepage Journal

    "warning authorities when a sex offender is someplace he shouldn't be"

    2005.05.02-14:49 WARNING: Jackson, Michael has left
    Neverland.
    • by telecsan ( 170227 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:54PM (#12411402)
      "warning authorities when a sex offender is someplace he shouldn't be"

      Correction:

      2005.05.02-15:52 WARNING: Jackson, Michael has entered Neverland.

      All the incidents were reported to have happened at the ranch, right?
      • Re:Great idea. (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Catbeller ( 118204 )
        Actually, no incidents were ever reported until a state attorney cast a net looking for some. It's amazing how much crime you can find if you advertise on a web page for victims. The incident that was settled years ago I discount -- how much payment would you consider to let a man off the hook for assaulting your son? Apparently, the dad wanted some millions or he'd make an accusation. After legal wrangling, MJ paid him off to make the slime go away -- a very bad idea, leading to what is happening now.

        Kids
        • by The Angry Mick ( 632931 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:55PM (#12412461) Homepage
          It's not news, it's lazy pseudojournalistic exploitation for ratings, and fame for the prosecutors. Take it from an old guy: CNN et al have tanked and turned into tabloid horsecrap. The golden age of news in the U.S. is over for now.

          Tell me about it. This weekend saw a never ending onslaught of "news" folk speculating over a missing Georgia bride-to-be. On CNN, Nancy Grace was hopping up and down insisting that "this is not a case of cold feet".

          It was.

          In the meantime, these Georgia children [missingkids.com] are still missing.

          And none of them have merited even a passing mention on even the local news stations.

    • by PornMaster ( 749461 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:54PM (#12411413) Homepage
      Too bad that any police department using AOL for e-mail won't get the alerts anyway...
  • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:48PM (#12411310) Homepage Journal
    I'm wondering if this will be struck down by some court? Punishment after a sentence is done...that doesn't sound like it goes along with the constitution.
    • by ForestGrump ( 644805 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:53PM (#12411399) Homepage Journal
      In Calif, tracking is public info. Listed with home address and offense. take a look at meganslaw.ca.gov

      And NO, Mr. Jackson isn't listed *yet*
      grump
  • GO AHEAD (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:48PM (#12411313)
    Track all you like. I'll be at the elementary school giving out candy if you need me. [fp]
  • What if (Score:3, Interesting)

    by dtfinch ( 661405 ) * on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:49PM (#12411328) Journal
    Someone cloned your RFID tag, disabled yours with some sort of shock, went out and did a bunch of sex offending and stuff, then destroyed their copy of the tag?
  • by bassgoonist ( 876907 ) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {ecurb.m.noraa}> on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:50PM (#12411336) Journal
    Public safety vs. personal freedoms. Just how many freedoms do you lose when you sexually assault someone... As someone who is NOT a felon, I see no problem in this tracking... But what if it was a wrong place, wrong time drunken haze kind of thing. I don't know what to think sometimes. You just have to be careful whose toes you step on.
    • As someone who is NOT a felon, I see no problem in this tracking...

      As someone who is not a jew, I see no problem with the Holocaust...
      As someone who is not black, I see no problem with slavery...
      As someone who is not Native American, I see no problem with breaking land treaties...
      As someone who is not a cop, I see no problem with cops getting shot
      As someone who doesn't smoke pot, I see no problem with stiffer drug penalties... As someone who doesn't have AIDS, I see no problem with a national da

    • And what happens when a state decides that two 17 year old boys who have sex with each other are sex offenders? The problem is not that violent sex offenders should be monitored. The problem is, who decides who is a sex offender?

      jfs
      • by Soko ( 17987 )
        And what happens when a state decides that two 17 year old boys who have sex with each other are sex offenders? The problem is not that violent sex offenders should be monitored. The problem is, who decides who is a sex offender?

        Ummmm... This is only applied to convicted offenders in a court of law. You know, that whole "trial" thing, with a jury of 12 of your peers and a judge and all. That's who decides who is a sex offender. As it should be.

        I'm all for civil liberties, as long as those liberties don't
    • by LurkerXXX ( 667952 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:13PM (#12411732)
      Yep. I've seen cases where a 17 year old boy sleeps with a 15 year old girlfriend. Get's caught... statutory rape conviction. That makes him a sex offender by law. Now, I'm not real pro young kids sleeping with each other, but I'd hardly consider that 17 year old a 'sexual preditor' that needs to be monitored for the rest of his life. That's just wrong. And asking me as a taxpyer to pay for that is crazy.
    • by C0deM0nkey ( 203681 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:50PM (#12412389)
      But what if it was a wrong place, wrong time drunken haze kind of thing.

      So...now you shouldn't be held responsible for your actions against a 12 year old? What is up with that? Or, to make it less senstational, remove the age (the law deals with attacks on pre-teen children).

      I understand you are making the "slippery slope" argument. Anyone out there reading can keep the obligatory Voltaire quote to themselves. What I want to know is when we start holding people responsible for their actions?

      People, actions have consequences. You commit a felony, you pay a price. Go through rehab, work out your problems, bully on you. That's great. There is still, depending upon what you may have done, a price to be paid: in this case, you wear the monitor for life or until you can prove you were innocent (in other cases, you have a "record", etc.).

      "Judge, I didn't know what I was doing when I traumatized that girl/boy/woman/man because I was drunk/intoxicated/out of my mind/whatever. Honestly, Judge, I was in the wrong place at the wrong time and she just looked soooo good." That's bullshit. "Well...she said 'No', but I knew she meant 'Yes'". That's even greater bullshit.

      Maybe the reality is: you could not handle the freedom. If you cannot handle the freedom, maybe it should be limited.

      There are two kinds of freedom in this world: Freedom to and Freedom from. These two kinds of freedom are in balance. If your society leans towards Free "from" (the United States, for example), you are secure at the expense of civil liberties; if your society leans towards Free "to", you have lots of civil liberty but opportunities are greater for social breakdown (not that it will happen - just that it is harder to control the population if you emphasize civil liberty at the expense of security).

      What is the correct balance? Not where the United States is at or presently heading (depending upon your opinion). My opinion, however, is that the United States courts do not adequately hold people responsible for their actions; there is too much leniency and sixth chances and "oh-he's-such-a-good-boy-give-him-another-chance-y our -honor" crap that an attitude of disdain and disrespect for what it means to be a productive member of society is being sown. We need to hold people responsible for their actions; sometimes a bad decision should impact you for life - especially when your bad decision impacts someone else for life.

  • by coug_ ( 63333 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:51PM (#12411362) Homepage
    I'm not a sex offender, nor have I ever been one, but I do think this is going a little overboard, unless we're talking about using it just to enforce the conditions of their parole and not tacking on new restrictions that weren't previously being made.
    • I think all this stuff against sex offenders lately is kind of misguided. Particularly when you consider what counts as a "sex offense" in some cases. Like being 16 and having consentual sex (although of course you can't "consent") with your 16 year old girlfriend. OK, it's illegal I guess. Does that mean that you should be GPS tracked when you're 85?
      • by terrymr ( 316118 ) <terrymr@@@gmail...com> on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:22PM (#12411882)
        I remember thinking that when I got one of those police notices of a sex offender moving into my neighborhood. He was convicted of having sex with a girl of 17 while he was 18. The police also rated him as a "high risk to reoffend".
        • He was convicted of having sex with a girl of 17 while he was 18.

          There should be a threshold of 2 or 3 years difference between the ages of the "offended" and "offender". _AND_ the "offended"'s testimony should be taken into account.

          How many times you've heard things like "But dad, I love him!"

          Obviously the problem is that we live in a society where kids under 16 are already having sex like wild. Maybe we should lower the age of accountability (or watchamacallit).

          What do you think?
          • by Xyrus ( 755017 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @08:59PM (#12415120) Journal
            Only in western societies (or "advanced") societies is teen sex known as a "bad thing".

            Teen sex was quite the norm not all that long ago, mainly due to the fact that you'd be lucky to make it to 30 before you died.

            Young marriage was quite common. You were considered an old maid if you weren't married by 20. So on and so forth.

            The problem, as you put it, is the fact that our society is so puritanical about anything dealing with sex. Frank discussions about sex are still something very rare in this country.

            Mix this with the media with the "sex sells" mentality and you've got a few million horny teenagers who think that scoring is the next best thing to having their own car for their rep.

            If their parents don't talk to them, their TV will.

            ~X~
  • by G4from128k ( 686170 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:51PM (#12411364)
    And what happens when the person takes the subway or is in a building? People act like GPS is the all-knowing eye in the sky. In reality, it fails in urban landscapes.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:52PM (#12411368)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Not a chance (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gevmage ( 213603 ) * on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:53PM (#12411386) Homepage
    This is political grandstanding. An example of making a point of "doing something" that looks good on camera and in the newspapers, but doesn't actually accomplish anything. It's technically infesable and actually attaching a tracking device to a person, like a tagged animal, would involve so much legal fighting that it would probably end up in the US Supreme court.

    The proposed ammendment to the US Constitution was a similar strategy; the White House knew it didn't stand a chance, but it put the issue in the minds of voters and polarized people around the issue.

  • by BubbleSparkxx ( 879715 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:53PM (#12411390)
    Well this seems awfully pointless unless we GPS all children.

    Doesn't the government have more important things to do, like regulate indecency on Satellite Radio or make sure Baseball is steroid free?
  • Accuracy? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by LinuxHam ( 52232 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:53PM (#12411396) Homepage Journal
    And what about Jessica Lunsford's killer? All he did was cross the street. He wasn't where he wasn't supposed to be until he fled to Georgia. What if his trashmen left his trash cans on the wrong side of the street? Will an alarm go off when he's within 50 yards of a house where a potential victim lives? Imagine taking care of THAT database! Who defines where are the places he's allowed to go? Yes they would have figured out right away that he did it, but it wouldn't have saved her life. If you're going to strip liberties, at least make it worth it. (not-so-subliminal rabidity activation scheme here)
  • GPS for kids (Score:4, Interesting)

    by TripMaster Monkey ( 862126 ) * on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:54PM (#12411403)

    I recently saw a GPS locator made for kids to wear...it would attach to their wrist like a bulky wristwatch and continually broadcast its location.

    Now here's an idea...tie the two systems together, so if a kid wearing one of these things comes within 50 feet of a known sex offender, it emits an alarm and/or broadcasts a warning to the parents.

    I should be rich.
  • by marshac ( 580242 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @03:55PM (#12411430) Homepage
    http://www.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/internetlife /2004-03-29-child-self-porn_x.htm [usatoday.com]

    If they succeed in prosecuting her for the crimes they are charging her, she would become a sex offender. Would she have to wear a GPS tracker too?
    • by huge colin ( 528073 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:38PM (#12412181) Journal
      She was charged with "sexual abuse of children"? Correct me if I'm wrong, but you don't get charged with "attempted murder" after a failed suicide attempt. Not sure why this should be any different.
    • Hilarity. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Grendel Drago ( 41496 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @05:26PM (#12412880) Homepage
      You know, I wondered how often something like that happened. I'm sure it wasn't an issue twenty years ago when you needed expensive equipment and your own chemical lab to make porn (yeah, yeah, darkroom chemicals are simple; they're still not trivial, and they leave evidence a little harder to dispose of than JPEGs.) But I'm sure this is just the tip of the iceberg; there's got to be quite an underground economy in self-produced child pornography. And while it's creepy, I don't think laws sending folks to "pound me in the ass" federal prison were intended for these kids, or the people they tell that they're 'eighteen, honest, I swear, for real'.

      I think they were intended more for completely legitimate but thoroughly unsettling sites like this [lilamber.com]. (Seriously. It's set up exactly like a fucking pornsite.) Which coincidentally, is utterly legal. Funny, huh?

      --grendel drago
  • Ill leave the heavy crime and punnishment stuff to someone else, but who can be labeled a sex offender is ludicrious. I knew a lawyer who defended a guy the government was prosecuting as a sex offender for the following:

    Guy got drunk, drove drunk, stopped on the highway to pee on the side of a road at 2:00am.

    The reasoning went something like, "well, if he's peeing in public, hes exposing himself in public, therefore he's a sex offender."

  • by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:01PM (#12411527) Homepage
    Someone else made a sarcastic remark about tracking other offenders as well, but I have to worry about this measure and related measures as well. (Earlier today there was a story about Ohio's drunk driver plates and the proposed pink plates as well.)

    There are thousands of people falsely accused of crimes on a regular basis and while many (hopefully most) false accusations get cleared up, many do not and it leads to needlessly painful and complicated lifestyles for many unfortunate people. *I* am not one of the unfortunate, but I could have been had investigators not done their jobs investicaging properly. (If I were black or poor or both, I'm pretty sure I'd have been convicted quickly.) But the fact is, being accused alone is often enough to mark a person for life and the abuse of the system is way too prevalant in my opinion. (Countless divorcing men are thrown into jail while wives attempt to maintain custody of children by accusing the men of abuses of all sorts... way too common and sadly, women are rarely, if ever held accountable for making these allegations...and if a defendant cannot afford legal counsel? He's screwed.)

    And now yet again people are having their sentances increased beyond judicial order by adding yet another portion of a life sentance. What ever happened to "pay debt to society"? As usual, fear is paving the way to law that abuses the people, their freedoms and rights.

    Just to repeat, I'm not an unfortunate one, but I can so easily imagine how I or anyone else could suddenly become one without having deserved it. Hell, even a false accusation that never gets erased can cause irreparable harm to a person's reputation. I almost lost a job because it was found that my ex-wife had made accusations that were documented to be proven false later. I can't get those things expunged without spending a lot of money and I had done nothing wrong.

    Why are we doing this? Does it help keep us any safer? Fear is driving people to crazy things.
  • Overreaction (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dolly_Llama ( 267016 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:13PM (#12411725) Homepage
    This may not be a popular sentiment here, but what is done to sex offenders has gone way overboard.

    Consider what 'sex offender' can mean. We're immediately led to imagine a child molester, but consider that a 'sex offense' in some less enlightened areas in the country can be things like

    Sodomy (between consenting adults)
    Public Urination

    Now for those offenders that are the not nice things we are inclined to imagine, either the offender is a threat to public safety or he is not. There may be fine distinctions as to how an offender is considered a threat, but in the end it is a binary condition: Threat/Notthreat.

    If the person is a threat, that person should first NOT BE OUT IN SOCIETY, that's what prisons are for! Second, it would be in the public's best interest that the offender be given treatment such that he is no longer a threat upon eventual release.

    If that person is not a threat, LEAVE HIM ALONE! This increasingly public punishment of sex offenders makes even repentent, treatable offenders pariahs in any community. Look at what happened to the guy just recently released from Atascadero Hospital only to be bounced around from Mill valley to Oakland to Antioch, people picketing outside of his room, the location of which was released to the press.
    • RTFA (Score:3, Insightful)

      by stoolpigeon ( 454276 ) *
      Shouldn't let it bug me but it is. Over half the highly modded comments in this thread are like this one. The article says nothing about doing this to 'sex offenders' in general.

      The article states that this law applies to '...people convicted of certain sex crimes against children 11 and younger...'

      I like your idea that such people be incarcerated until cured - of course what that means in the vast majority of these cases is a life sentence with no parole. How economically feasible is that?
  • by doodleboy ( 263186 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:13PM (#12411733)
    Any sex offender seriously contemplating raping and killing a child will not hesitate to chop off the monitoring bracelet and go underground. Period.

    This is a ridiculous law. But it gives a scared public the warm fuzzies, and some politicians get to look good on TV for a while.

    It's like the Schaivo thing. Douchebag Tom DeLay and all those other political flaks were just looking to score brownie points with the public. Call me a cynic, but I doubt anyone in Washington looked at it any other way.
  • Adultery (Score:4, Insightful)

    by PsiPsiStar ( 95676 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:16PM (#12411781)
    What constitutes sex offense? In Georgia, isn't adultery included? I know the supreme court has struck down anti-sodomy laws.

    I assume statutory rape is included with rape and sexual assault. But what about sexual harrassment? What about prostitution?
  • by drDugan ( 219551 ) on Monday May 02, 2005 @04:22PM (#12411893) Homepage
    I think we should combine GPS tracking of criminals with services like this one

    http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=148095&cid= 12410776 [slashdot.org]

    mentioned earlier today on /.

    then I could get an SMS message on my cell phone when a sex offender was near.

    wait wait -- even better. let's put GPS tracking on all the KIDS, then we can check every ten seconds or so if the location of the sex offender is too close to some group of kids, and notify all the people in the area with an SMS message

    wait wait -- even betterer let's put GPS tracking devices on everyone and let the governement make some big heuristic rule set for who is supposed to be where at certain times and put shock collars on people that create taser-like debilitation if you're in the wrong place at the wrong time

    employers wouldn't have to use punch cards any more!

    you'd never have any ambiguity in crimes, like "where were you on the night of May 5?" -- 'cause we'd already know!

    no one would ever get lost ever again...
    etc etc etc

    it would be swell...

Suggest you just sit there and wait till life gets easier.

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