OH: Lawmakers keep piling on those convicted of sex crimes

How much is too much? ____ ____ must be asking himself that very question. The on-again, off-again Youngstown State University football player is embroiled in a controversy of his own making.

____ served about 10 months in a juvenile detention facility after he and a high-school teammate were convicted in 2013 of raping a 16-year-old girl.

In January, he joined the YSU football team as a nonscholarship walk-on. In August, ____  was informed by university officials that he would be required to sit-out a season. Full Editorial

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From the article:
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In January, he joined the YSU football team as a nonscholarship walk-on. In August, Richmond was informed by university officials that he would be required to sit-out a season.
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More penalties based off of a past conviction. This is what Justice Souter denoted in the 2003 Doe v Smith decision.

This seems to touch on an issue among you CA RCs about the screwed up tiers in that bill:
—-
Gottschalk said during a recent interview, “According to the latest statistics on federal prosecutions, we are meting out longer sentences on average to people who view child pornography than to people who actually sexually abuse children.”
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Yeah, makes sense.