Quentin (not his real name) was convicted eight years ago of child pornography possession in Florida. He served his time and has since moved to another state. But his sentence required his photo and other personal details to appear on Florida’s sex offender registry, and there they will stay for the rest of his life, even if he never sets foot in the state again. Full Article
Related posts
-
NM: Meta faces New Mexico trial over child-exploitation claims
Source: reuters.com 1/30/26 New Mexico AG alleges Meta enabled child exploitation on platforms Meta claims First... -
MO: #TheyLied Defamation Plaintiff, Suing Over Rape Allegations, Can Prove Reputational Harm with His Own Testimony
Source: reason.com 1/28/26 In Apperson v. Kaminsky, decided Friday by the Missouri Supreme Court (opinion by Justice... -
CA: Steven Tyler Accuser Can Proceed With California Sex Abuse Claims Only, Judge Says
Source: rollingstone.com 1/28/26 The Aerosmith musician asked the court to dismiss the entire lawsuit, saying he...

They need to keep challenge that system of the registry in Florida and keep fighting to get rid of this because keeping someone on the registry even if they’re no longer in that state is a waste of time and violates constitution.
They need to keep challenging that system of the registry in Florida and keep fighting to get rid of this because keeping someone on the registry that could be deceased, even if they’re no longer in that state, is a waste of time and violates the constitution.
Out of curiosity, what primary address and vehicle descriptors does Florida use when a registrant is out of state? Or dead?