A bill for an act relating to public safety; requiring sex offenders to serve 50-year conditional release
or probation terms; establishing intensive probation for certain sex offenders;
A bill for an act relating to public safety; requiring sex offenders to serve 50-year conditional release
or probation terms; establishing intensive probation for certain sex offenders;
That’s 50 years of paying probation fees and ensuring Probation Officers their jobs? Seems clear why they’d wanna pass something so vile. Politicians: the True Scumbags of America.
What happens if say within the first 5 years, the ex offender rebuilds their life, Better job, mitigates risks etc, etc., etc?
“During phases I, II, III, and IV, the offender must spend at least 40 hours a week
performing approved work, undertaking constructive activity designed to obtain employment,
or attending a treatment or education program as directed by the agent. An offender may
not spend more than six months in a residential treatment program that does not require the
offender to spend at least 40 hours a week performing approved work or undertaking
constructive activity designed to obtain employment.”
And how exactly are all these offenders supposed to find a job? Who will hire them all? There is so much about this bill that is impossible to enforce and will also require the probation department to have their funding and staff greatly increased to comply with this law.
Minnesota must have a lot of excess money if they are considering this law.
This bill is quite a hard turn from where MN has traditionally been regarding RCs. IIRC, currently Tier I is LE-only, Tier II LE and “need to know” entities (schools, daycare, etc.), and Tier III public dissemination. Also, I don’t recall MN’s recidivism being out of hand or statistically excessive, so why the sudden need to change things? I guess the judges are being too “lenient” for the legislators’ minds? Maybe judges are considering the facts and are making rational decisions, unlike what legislatures seem to do anymore.
I kind of wonder if they’re trying to “get ahead” of what they see happening in the courts. Since courts are striking more and more aspects of registries, this is perhaps their response.
Crazy stuff, to say the least. Hopefully if passed, the first person receiving the sentence files a lawsuit. Sure seems Cruel & Unusual, using the rational of Judge Matsch in Millard.
Thankfully there’s no companion bill in the MN Senate (yet). This bill was authored by two single, old, first-term white guys and a stay-at-home mom. Great.
It seems that when one state starts to understand that sex offense registries don’t work, 2 or 3 other states go the opposite direction and make the penalties harsher.
Why does the same crime committed in different states have different penalties? And better yet, why can’t people see that new offenses are mostly NOT committed by registered sex offenders when there are multitudes of research that support this?
I just don’t understand the ignorance of people.