Senator Robach Urges The Assembly To Act On Sex Offender Legislation
Senator Joe Robach and members of the Senate Majority Conference announced that the Senate will act today on legislation (S.6019) requiring the lifetime registration of sex offenders and prevent sexual predators from coming off the State sex offender registry later this month.
Currently, most sex offenders are only required to register for ten years. On January 21, 2006, the 10th anniversary of the effective date of New York State’s sex offender registry, 168 sex offenders will be dropped from the registry because they have met the 10-year mandate to keep police posted of their whereabouts. Hundreds more will drop off the sex offender registry each month thereafter, totaling over 3,500 offenders by the end of 2006.
"This is no time to play politics. We are imploring the Assembly to act swiftly on this important piece of legislation. If they do not act soon, thousands of sex offenders will fall off the registry and communities across New York and our children will be at risk" stated Senator Robach.
The Senators were joined at a news conference by Laura Ahearn, Executive Director of "Parents For Megan’s Law," a group of concerned citizens advocating for tougher sex offender laws.
"Legislative action must be taken immediately to prevent thousands of convicted sex offenders from vanishing off of the Registry. Without immediate legislative intervention, sexual predators will be allowed to go about completely unnoticed in our communities. They could be coaching your child, selling them ice cream or working in a toy store and parents or employers would never know," said Laura A. Ahearn.
The bill to be acted on by the State Senate today would mandate lifetime registration for all levels of sex offenders. The bill does include a provision that would allow certain level one offenders to petition for a relief of duty to register after a minimum of twenty years.
This legislation is the first step in a series of bills the Senate will act on this month to toughen New York’s sex offender laws. Next week, the Senate plans to act on legislation (S.3273) that would provide for the civil commitment of sexually violent predators after they’ve completed their prison sentence in order to protect the public from criminals likely to commit repeated acts of sexual violence.
The following week, the Senate plans to act on legislation (all of which Senator Robach co-sponsors) that would:
> prohibit sex offenders from being employed in a job that involves substantial contact with children;
> require sex offenders to verify their address annually on the sex offender registry;
> increase the penalties for failing to register as a sex offender;
> make information about all registered sex offenders available online and allow visitors to the site to register to receive e-mail notification when a sex offender moves into a resident’s zip code;
> make failure to appear at the determination hearing a violation;
> establish a uniform mandatory dissemination practice among law enforcement agencies;
> restrict level three sex offenders from residing within one-quarter mile of any school or licensed day care facility;
> require level three sex offenders to be monitored by GPS devices;
> enact the "tenth anniversary, twenty-first century omnibus sex offender registration reform act," which would strengthen Megan’s Law in 25 ways; and
> require sex offenders to verify their registry information twice a year.