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The Alliance for Constitutional Sex Offense Laws (ACSOL) is dedicated to protecting the Constitution by restoring the civil rights of registrants and their families. In order to achieve that objective, ACSOL will educate and litigate as well as support or oppose legislation.  The ACSOL website and recordings are provided as a service to registrants, registrants’ families, and others for general information only.  The information on the website and in the recordings are not designed to provide legal or other advice or to create an attorney-client relationship.  You should not take, or refrain from taking, action based on their content.  Prior results and case studies do not guarantee a similar outcome in future representations.  ACSOL accepts no responsibility for any loss or damages that may result from accessing or reliance on content on the ACSOL website and recordings and disclaim, to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, any and all liability with respect to acts or omissions made by registrants, registrants’ families and others on the basis of content on the ACSOL website.

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Important News / Announcements

Action Alert: Click YES on this Fox news poll “Do you think sex offenders can be rehabilitated?”

CA: Judge’s SORNA ruling protects due process rights of Californians caught in federal registration trap

ACSOL Conducts Successful Lobby Day in Sacramento

ACSOL Online Meeting April 18, 2026

Supreme Court Vigil 2026 Held in Washington, D.C.

ACSOL Board Members Meet in Four Congressional D. C. Offices

CA: Asm. Soria Plans to Amend AB 2753 Preventing Registered Sex Offenders from Running for Public Office in California

CA: Public Safety Committee Approves AB 1568 Despite Lack of Support

General News Feed

TN: Woman Removed From Sex Registry Banned from Speaking About Case

Source: tba.org 7/21/25 The state of Tennessee agreed to permanently remove a woman from the sex offender registry months after a judge found she had been “falsely labeled as a sex offender.” But state officials included a stipulation in the agreement forbidding her and her attorneys from discussing the agreement and her lawsuit with the media, The Tennessean reports. They also are barred from...

UK: The Age-Checked Internet Has Arrived

Source: wired.com 7/25/25 Starting today, UK adults will have to prove their age to access porn online. Experts warn that a global wave of age-check laws threatens to chill speech and ultimately harm children and adults alike.   Beginning today, millions of adults trying to access pornography in the United Kingdom will be required to prove that they are over the age of 18. Under...

WA: Mandatory reporting law includes conversations from confession if child abuse is suspected

Source: abajournal.com 7/21/25 Mandatory reporting laws are considered important tools in the fight against child abuse and neglect, according to a court filing by the Washington state attorney general’s office. (Image from Shutterstock) Is a new Washington state law, which requires priests to report suspected child abuse or neglect, including information from confessions, an assault on the Catholic Church and thousands of years of...

NY: Woodstock Town Board votes to fire employee found to be sex offender in explosive meeting

Source: wamc.org 7/23/25 There’s turmoil on the Woodstock Town Board as lawmakers grapple with how to handle the town’s hiring of a Level 3 sex offender earlier this year. In an explosive meeting that put Supervisor Bill McKenna on the defensive, members of the board voted to fire the employee Tuesday night. A warning to listeners that this story discusses sexual assault. Members of...

The BBC’s Unforgivable asks if we can ever forgive a child sex offender

Source: bbc.com 7/22/25 Writer Jimmy McGovern discusses his new drama set and filmed in Liverpool. Unforgivable, an original drama from multi-award-winning screenwriter Jimmy McGovern (Time, Cracker, The Street) centres around the Mitchell family who are dealing with the devastating aftermath of an act of abuse perpetrated by a member of their own family. The drama examines the extensive ripple effect of abuse from multiple perspectives and how...

U.K. primary school teacher banned after failing to declare relationship with child sex offender

Source: manchesterworld.uk 7/23/25 A primary school teacher has been banned from the classroom for two years after failing to declare her relationship with a sex offender. Leanne ___, 36, has been found guilty of unacceptable professional conduct at a hearing of the Teaching Regulation Agency (TRA). Miss Leanne was a Year 1 teacher at Lark Hill Community Primary School in Salford between 2019 and...

B.R.A.V.E. San Quentin CA program provides safe space to discuss shame and trauma

Source: sanquentinnews.com 6/28/25 A new 26-week self-help program has been established at San Quentin Rehabilitation Center, designed to help those convicted of a sex offense to understand why they committed the crime. The program’s name, B.R.A.V.E., stands for Bridging, Responsibility, Accountability and Vulnerability through Empathy. It began in January 2025 with 38 participants in attendance, which included volunteers and administrative and medical officials. The...

The Registry Paradox: Why Ending Sex Offense Registries Could Make Us Safer

Source: Nebraskans Unafraid 7/22/25 For decades, sex offense registries have stood as a seemingly unshakeable pillar of public safety. The logic is intuitive: track people convicted of certain offenses, make their presence known, and communities will be safer. Yet, a growing body of research suggests that this widely accepted strategy is not only largely ineffective in preventing new crimes but may, in fact, be counterproductive,...

CA Extreme sentencing: OC tutor gets 235 years for molesting 2 students at after-school program

Source: ocregister.com 7/18/25 [ACSOL is posting this to show an example of extreme sentencing] A tutor who sexually assaulted two boys for more than a half-decade while working with them in an Orange County after-school program was sentenced on Friday, July 18, to 235 years to life behind bars. The sentence of Zeta “Jimmy” _______, 53, in a Santa Ana courtroom — officially 235...

India’s Trains Will Use AI-Based Facial Recognition At Railway Stations to Identify Sex Offenders

Source: freepressjournal.in 7/21/25 AI-powered facial recognition will be deployed at major Indian railway stations, including Mumbai CST and New Delhi, to identify known sex offenders. The initiative aims to enhance safety, particularly for women, by integrating AI tools with national offender databases under the Safe City project.   The Indian government will soon begin using artificial intelligence-based facial recognition systems at major railway stations,...

CASOMB Juvenile Registration Addendum: Registration is Counterproductive for Youth Who Have Offended Sexually

Source: casomb.org California Sex Offender Management Board 7/17/25 In 2018, the Board was tasked by the legislature with making policy recommendations about the management of juveniles who have offended sexually. CASOMB continues to monitor the research and discussions related to the management of youth who commit sexual based offenses and provides this updated addendum, on Juvenile Registration, to continue to provide expertise on this...

New Lawsuit Challenges CDCR Policy Harming Female Registrants

ACSOL filed a new lawsuit yesterday that challenges a CDCR policy which allows the agency to use a tool that has not been validated to assess the risk of re-offense for women required to register.  The name of that tool is the Female Sex Offender Risk Assessment (FSORA). The lawsuit was filed in Sacramento Superior Court and includes a declaration by Dr. Franca Cortoni,...

CA Public Safety Committee Approves Senate Bill 680

Source: ACSOL The Assembly's Public Safety Committee today approved an amended version of Senate Bill (SB) 680, which if enacted, would require individuals convicted of statutory rape to register for 10 years.  Unlike the original version of the bill, the current version of SB 680 would not be applied retroactively.  Instead, the bill would apply only to those convicted of PC 261.5 on or...

Sex Crimes Laws as Moral Panic. The goal of these policies is public safety, but is that attainable?

Alissa R. Ackerman   Jul 15 Moral panic occurs when people react to a societal problem with intense fear or outrage toward something they perceive as a threat to their values or safety. Moral panics can happen whether a perceived threat is real or exaggerated. Media accounts fuel and amplify our emotions, and our feelings then turn certain people into villains or monsters. Nowhere is...

Publishing Private Phone Number May Be Tortious, Says Court in Case Brought by Shark Tank’s Mr. Wonderful (Kevin O’Leary)

Defendant had 100K X followers, and as a result O'Leary "was flooded with unwanted communications." Reason: Eugene Volokh | 7.14.2025 5:01 PM From Judge Beth Bloom's order today granting default judgment in O'Leary v. Armstrong: Defendant posted on X Plaintiff's private cell phone number and encouraged the public to harass Plaintiff, stating "[h]ave you ever wanted to call a real life murderer?! You can NOW! @kevinoleartyv is...

ACSOL Online Meeting August 16, 2025

You are invited to join ACSOL Executive Director and civil rights attorney Janice Bellucci and an ACSOL board member for our next meeting.  The meeting will be held on Saturday August 16 online on Zoom beginning at 10 a.m. Pacific time, 1:00 PM Eastern, and will last at least two hours. You can use the Zoom app or you can call in using a...

ICE uses inflammatory, biased language and fear to describe sex-related arrests

Source: dhs.gov 7/9/25 [ACSOL is posting this as a warning] WASHINGTON — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) St. Paul arrested criminal illegal aliens, all of whom are convicted sexual predators, during a coordinated targeted enforcement operation in the Minneapolis area between June 6 and June 11, 2025. Under Tim Walz’s leadership, these depraved individuals have been walking freely around Minneapolis with impunity terrorizing...

Male victims of intimate partner violence: Insights from twenty years of research

Source: openaccessgovernment.org 5/30/25 Denise A. Hines, Ph.D., Enochs Endowed Professor of Social Work at the College of Public Health, George Mason University, explores the often-overlooked issue of male victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) Men’s victimization from intimate partner violence (IPV) has been documented since the first US population-based study in 1975. (1) A review of 246 studies (2011–2022) found that 11.8% of men experience physical...

N.J. court just made it harder for sex offenders to get off Megan’s Law registry

Source: nj.com 7/7/25 The New Jersey Appellate Division issued a ruling clarifying that sex offenders must prove they pose no threat to public safety—not just that they’re unlikely to reoffend sexually.   A New Jersey appeals court has ruled that individuals seeking removal from the state’s sex offender registry must prove they are not a danger to the public in any way, not just that they...

ACSOL Board Cancels 2025 Conference

The ACSOL board of directors has decided to cancel this year's conference in order to protect registrants, their families and those who support them.  The conference was previously scheduled to be held on September 26 and September 27. "Cancellation of this year's conference was a difficult decision to make for the ACSOL board of directors," stated ACSOL Executive Director Janice Bellucci.  "Cancellation was necessary,...
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