MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Federal hearings in July will focus on whether one man in the Minnesota Sex Offender Program should be released. U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank and U.S. Magistrate Jeffrey Keyes put the man’s case on a fast track after attorney Dan Gustafson argued that every day his client is still confined is a violation of his rights. Full Article
Related posts
-
Civil Commitment and the Criminalization of Homelessness
Source: petrieflom.law.harvard.edu 10/24/25 In July, President Donald Trump issued an Executive Order titled “Ending Crime and... -
Iowa Ignores Civil Commitment Concerns
Source: yahoo.com 7/27/25 Two years have passed since families and advocates of incarcerated individuals demanded to... -
They Served Their Time. But They May Still Die in State Custody.
Source: theappeal.org 4/21/25 In half the country, sex offense civil commitment incarcerates people after they complete...

Amazing! Experts have found that E.T. showed “little evidence of posing a risk” and recommended his release. Two doctors at the institution say he shouldn’t be released. They have 700 cash cows, couldn’t they let go of one now and then??? This is a travesty! These men have served their sentences… and it has been shown that there is virtually no counseling going on at this place, yet they keep these men prisoner indefinitely. What the hell is going on in America that they can get away with this????
I don’t know the laws in MN, In a lot of states a person gets their voting rights back after the sentence is complete, if this is true in MN then tell them you want a voting booth there, also over night visits from wife’s. If you can’t beat the law, then drive up the cost of it.