Showing posts with label Computer - e-mail - Passwords. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Computer - e-mail - Passwords. Show all posts

August 13, 2015

Beckley woman arrested for failure to register as sex offender

If it is true, and I doubt it, that passwords are required, then the state needs to be sued for invasion of privacy. Everyone is permitted to remain anonymous to exercise their Free Speech rights.

UPDATE: As we thought, passwords are NOT required! Search to see what is required..will the media get anything right?
8-13-15 West Virginia:

West Virginia State Police have arrested Carrie Jo Bevel, 26, of Beckley for failing to register as a sex offender. She was arrested on probationary violations along with 3 felony counts of Failure to Register Sex Offender.

Bevel is a registered sex offender in Raleigh County and must register due to a conviction of 3rd Degree Sexual Assault involving a 5-year-old female in Marshall County, WV. She must register for life due to the victim being minor.

Bevel was originally picked up Wednesday on a probationary hold, involving urinalysis violations. During that time it was discovered that she had failed to register internet account information as required. She was arrested on 3 felony counts of Failure to Register as a Sex Offender, all first offenses with a potential 1-5 year sentence each count.

Sex offenders are required register internet information to include registering internet providers and accounts, emails, usernames and passwords associated with any internet accounts. Registered sex offenders are also not allowed to maintain Facebook accounts and Bevel had further acquired a Facebook account under a name different than her own.

Bevel was remanded to the Southern Regional Jail, awaiting arraignment on the felony charges and subsequent probationary violation hearing. ..Source.. by WVNSTV.com

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July 3, 2015

New state law provides more oversight for sex offenders

UPDATE 7-4: A great reader reminds us they dropped the "password" requirement before passage. see #17

7-3: Unfortunately there is no known advocate in TN fighting nonsensical laws. Lawmakers failed to do their research, in Georgia lawmakers also tried to force registrants to provide passwords, but federal court issued an injunction which stopped the state from requiring passwords. see White v Baker. Also in Utah the "password" issue -along with several others- was taken to court; the case ultimately ended in the U.S. Supreme court. However, the legislature REMOVED the password requirement along the way so that issue did not goto the high court but other issues did. See Doe v Shurtleff. Apparently lawmakers have little respect for rights of registrants! Makes one wonder how they got elected.
7-3-5 Tennessee:

ACKSON, Tenn. -- A new state law grants greater oversight on registered sex offenders who use social media.

Previously, sexual offenders had to provide the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation with their email addresses and screen names.

Now the law requires all registered offenders to provide email addresses plus usernames and passwords to all Internet accounts.

Local law enforcement said they hope the changes will increase safety for everyone.

"It's serious, and we talk about it all the time," said Madison County Sheriff John Mehr. "Children will get on the computer, they will chat with people when they think it's their age and in fact the person is 40 years old."

The sheriff also said this is a small step in the social media requirements for registered sex offenders. More changes are expected in the future. ..Source.. by WBBJ 7 Eyewitness News Staff

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August 26, 2009

GA- Woman Who Challenged Sex Offender Laws Arrested

8-26-2009 Georgia:

Authorities in Columbia County have arrested a woman who challenged Georgia's sex offender laws last year.

A spokeswoman for Wendy Whitaker's attorneys says she was arrested and charged with failing to notify police of her new address after moving from a home that was central to her challenge.

Whitaker was convicted of a sex offense more than ten years ago. That means she has to live more than 1000 feet from a school or child care center, and also notify police when she moves, the same as violent rapists and pedophiles. Her attorneys say her punishment is extreme because her offense was a consensual sex act with a high school classmate when she was 17.

Whitaker had challenged the law, but a federal court judge last year ordered her to move out of her home in Harlem, which is near a church day care center. A judge in Columbia County then issued a temporary injunction, which allowed her to stay in her home while her attorneys sought to remove her from the sex offender registry.

Whitaker's attorneys say they don't know much about the arrest. They say they also don't know where she was living when she was arrested on Monday.

State lawmakers have since passed a law that protects teen-agers in cases such as Whitaker's from being placed on the state's sex offender registry. But that law only applies to people convicted after July, 2001, several years after Whitaker was charged.

Meanwhile, attorneys for another convicted sex offender are urging a federal judge to block a new Georgia law, which requires sex offenders to hand over Internet passwords, screen names and e-mail addresses to law enforcement officials.

Attorneys for Terrence White told the judge today the law is too broad and infringes on White’s constitutional rights. State attorneys say the new requirements give authorities another tool to keep registered sex offenders from striking again.

The law took effect in January and made Georgia one of a small band of states complying with guidelines in a 2006 federal law requiring authorities to track Internet addresses of sex offenders. But the state is among the first to take the extra step of forcing its 16,000 offenders to turn in their passwords as as well. ..Source.. by Mary Ellen Cheatham

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August 25, 2009

GA- Judge mulls law on sex offender online obligations

This violates the 4th Amendment without any question in this writers mind. The state has no right or grounds -without probable cause that a crime has been, or is in the progress of being committed- to anything personal found within registrants' home without a warrant. There is no -fishing expedition- exception in the 4th amendment!

8-25-2009 Georgia:

ATLANTA -- A federal judge on Tuesday began weighing arguments for and against a new Georgia law that requires sex offenders to hand over Internet passwords, screen names and e-mail addresses to law enforcement officials in the name of public safety.

Attorneys for convicted sex offender Terrence White urged U.S. District Judge Bill Duffey to block the law because it infringes on White's constitutional rights. State attorneys countered that the 2009 law gives authorities a much-needed tool to make sure registered sex offenders don't strike again.

Duffey did not rule immediately, but he said the case centers on a "fundamental issue in our culture."

"Children do have to be protected, but that also has to be balanced with constitutional protections," he said. "And I never take those lightly."

The case hinges on a state statute that took effect in January, bringing Georgia in line with a 2006 federal law requiring authorities to track Internet addresses of sex offenders.

It also made Georgia one of the first states to take the extra step of forcing its 16,000 offenders to turn in their passwords as well.

A similar law in Utah was struck down in September on grounds that it violated the privacy rights of an offender who challenged it. Lawmakers there last week amended the registry, requiring state officials to only use the online information to investigate sex crimes.

White, who is challenging the law in Georgia, was convicted in 1986 of enticing a child for indecent purposes. His attorney, Nicole Iannarone, contended that the law is written so broadly that it could allow authorities access to his online retail accounts, bank information and anything else considered "interactive online forums."

She argued that an overzealous sheriff could charge her client or another sex offender with violating the registry's rules if he or she refuses to turn in their Delta.com account information.

"The statute is over-broad, and it doesn't have anything to do with the mission of protecting children."

State attorney Paige Boorman, however, countered that the measure "is relevant and necessary to protect the public." She said online screen names and passwords are "tools for law enforcement" that will make it easier for them to investigate and prevent another sex crime before it's too late.

Duffey peppered both attorneys with questions, but focused on the balance between public safety and free speech. The addresses of sex offenders in Georgia are already posted online to alert neighbors to their whereabouts, the judge said.

"I'm not aware of a fundamental right to live somewhere anonymously," Iannarone replied. "It is a fundamental right to speak anonymously." ..Source.. by GREG BLUESTEIN



GA- Judge Weighing Sex Offender Law

8-25-2009 Georgia:

ATLANTA (AP) Attorneys for a convicted sex offender are urging a federal judge to block a new Georgia law that requires sex offenders to hand over Internet passwords, screen names and e-mail addresses to law enforcement officials.

Attorneys for Terrence White told the judge Tuesday the law is too broad and infringes on White's constitutional rights.

State attorneys say the new requirements give authorities another tool to keep registered sex offenders from striking again.

The law took effect in January and made Georgia one of a small band of states complying with guidelines in a 2006 federal law requiring authorities to track Internet addresses of sex offenders.

But the state is among the first to take the extra step of forcing its 16,000 offenders to turn in their passwords as well. ..Source.. by WSBRadio.com

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August 21, 2009

UT- Federal judge unleashes Utah's sex-offender registry

What the state did here is, ignore FREE SPEECH and addressed ANONYMOUS SPEECH. However, their answer (changing state laws) is contrary to a U.S. Sup court ruling on "anonymous free speech," even the state has no right to know what an individual has to say on various topics.

Utah now says, "yes we do have a right to know, to investigate sex crimes," but even that fails because they do not ask the general public to fess-up all their Internet ID's. This amounts to another state misconstruction, that, only former sex offenders will commit future sex crimes; and that is plain baloney!

8-21-2009 Utah:

Courts » A previous order found the list violated the First Amendment.

A federal judge on Thursday vacated an earlier decision that protected a sex offender from turning over his Internet names and passwords to Utah's Department of Corrections.

Judge Tena Campbell said the case against the state is moot because the Legislature has corrected the formerly overreaching sex-offender registry rules.

A man referred to in court papers as John Doe was convicted in military court of sexual offenses in 2005. He was later released from prison and forced to register personal information, such as his name and address, with the Department of Corrections' online sex-offender registry.

John Doe's crime did not involve the Internet, but a Utah law that took effect July 1, 2008, added registry requirements forcing Doe and other offenders to provide Internet screen names, passwords and Web sites where they are registered. The measure included e-mail, chat, instant messengers and social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook.

Doe challenged the law, saying it violated his First Amendment right to free speech among other things. In 2008, Campbell agreed, ruling the new law was too restrictive.

Utah's Legislature has since amended the registry. Now Corrections only can use Internet identifiers to investigate sex crimes, and that information is now deemed private under state records laws. ..Source.. by Steve Gehrke, The Salt Lake Tribune

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August 15, 2009

GA- Gwinnett Authorities Arrest Sex Offender

8-15-2009 Georgia:

GWINNETT COUNTY, Ga. (MyFOX ATLANTA) - Gwinnett County Sheriffs deputies arrested a registered sex offender Thursday after he failed to provide email addresses and passwords related to his internet activity as required by law.

Deputies learned that Douglas Elkins was on a dating site called PlentyofFish.com and he sent at least one woman sexually explicit photos of himself.

So what! It was a woman and I do believe the law permits "consenting adults" to do whatever they want, outside of public view. The public cannot view what is the bits and bytes of electronic transmissions.

Elkins was charged with failing to register as a sex offender for not providing the email addresses and passwords he was using and violation of probation.
Again, 1st and 4th amendment rights extend to folks on parole and probation, the state has no business interfering with consenting adults.

Elkins was convicted in 2002 in Gwinnett County for child molestation. ..Source.. by FOX News

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June 19, 2009

MT- Want A Job? Hand Over Your E-Mail Login

Sure, right, Bozeman here's my answer!
6-19-2009 Montana:

Bozeman, Montana Tells Applicants To Provide Facebook, Google "Usernames And Passwords," Which Some Find A Bit Too Invasive

(CBS) If you're planning to apply for a job with the city of Bozeman, Montana, be prepared to hand over much more than your references and résumé.

The Rocky Mountain city instructs all job applicants to divulge their usernames and passwords for "any Internet-based chat rooms, social clubs or forums, to include, but not limited to: Facebook, Google, Yahoo, YouTube.com, MySpace, etc."

"Before we offer people employment in a public trust position we have a responsibility to do a thorough background check," Chuck Winn, Bozeman's assistant city manager, told CBSNews.com in an interview on Thursday. "This is just a component of a thorough background check."

"Shame on us if there was information out there available about a person who applied for a job who was a child molester or had some sort of information out there on the Internet that kind of showed those propensities and we didn't look for it, we didn't ask, and we hired that person," Winn said. "In many ways we would have let the public down."

After CBS affiliate KBZK highlighted the requirement on Wednesday, a firestorm of sorts has erupted online: irate e-mail messages have jammed mailboxes in City Hall, snarky Twitter.com comments have poked fun at a place once awarded the sobriquet of "All-America City," and a poll indicates 98 percent of respondents believe the city's policy amounts to an "invasion of privacy."

In addition to the usual requests for a home address and Social Security number, Bozeman's one-page background check form asks for the account information for "current personal or business Web sites, Web pages or memberships." It assures applicants that any information received "is confidential."

Winn said applicants are not required to divulge their social networking log-ins, but warned that there could be repercussions if they lie. "If you say 'I have no driving violation,' and then we run your driving record and it turns out you do, and through further questioning we find out you've been deceitful about it, than that would be cause (for firing)," he said. "That tells us a lot about that particular person. They lied to us and were deceitful."

Under the policy, which the city says has been in place for a few years, a police officer logs into and reviews the social networking sites of people applying for public safety (that is, police and fire) jobs. For other jobs, the city's human resources department will perform the investigation.

An attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group based in San Francisco, questioned Bozeman's choice to ask for usernames and passwords.

"I think its indefensibly invasive and likely illegal as a violation of
the First Amendment rights of job applicants," said Kevin Bankston, an EFF attorney. "Essentially they're conditioning your application for employment on your waiving your First Amendment rights ... and risking the security of your information by requiring you to share your password with them... Where does it stop? How about a photocopy of your diary?"

One potential privacy concern is that accounts for Facebook and Google, among other sites, are used for more than just displaying photos, videos, and messages. They're also used for e-mail, meaning that a Bozeman investigator could review years of personal messages.

"I don't think the government can condition your application for employment on your giving up your First Amendment rights and your Fourth Amendment rights," Bankston said.

Another possible hitch: Some social networking sites flatly prohibit disclosure of passwords, so a job seeker who complied with Bozeman's request could lose his account. Facebook's terms of service, for instance, say: "You will not share your password (or) let anyone else access your account."

Bozeman's Winn said the city does not want to be the "taste police" and is focused on looking for evidence of illegal activity. "They can log in themselves," he said. "If not, they can show us what's on their face page. 'Yes, I have a face page but I don't want to show it to you.' That's a fine answer. We'll use other resources out there to do a through background check. We owe it to the public." ..Source.. by Declan McCullagh

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February 3, 2009

GA- Civil disobedience: A Proper Construction

2-2-2009 Georgia:

Today a few sites are claiming "FIRST OPEN CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE BY S.O.," and citing a Georgia court case which is in progress today.

Civil disobedience is a refusal to follow some law, going to court to seek an injunction against the state enforcing a law, is not civil disobedience, nor is this the first case of a former sex offender going to court seeking an injunction against a sex offender law.

Black's law (6th Ed): "Civil disobedience: A form of lawbreaking employed to demonstrate the injustice or unfairness of a particular law and indulged in deliberately to focus attention on the allegedly undesirable law."

Note: Since the gentleman (a Georgia RSO) is seeking to proceed in court anonymously (John Doe status) and at this point does not have a lawyer, the court giving him time to find one (and the court indicating it may appoint one if the gentleman cannot find one), I will not mention his name nor give links to my sources. With that said,

The facts in essence: Georgia enacted a law requiring all of its RSOs to turn over certain information to the state as part of its registration scheme (namely passwords to all online e-mail accounts, and other things).

Following enactment of that law a Georgia RSO (The gentleman mentioned above) has gone to federal court seeking an injunction to stop the state from enforcing that law against him on his next birthday (apparently that is when the state requires him to update his registration information including anything new required by the state, hence the passwords and e-mmail addresses).

Because he presented a minimal but compelling argument and supported same with equally compelling facts, apparently the court issued a temporary injunction without objection from the state's attorney.

Next, is this the first RSO who has gone to court seeking a declaration that this type of collateral registration law is unconstitutional, NO he is not the first.

There are other similar cases (which should be presented) in different states:
Passwords
Registered Sex Offenders Must Comply with New Internet Rules
Ga. sex offenders must hand over online passwords

In each of those links are other links to the current and past court cases on this and similar issues in a few states.

Good Luck, Georgia RSO,
eAdvocate (PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO THIS GENTLEMAN, anyone)

..News Source Withheld (see above for reason)..

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January 26, 2009

Passwords

There would be no need for passwords unless the intent is to search the contents of e-mails or registrants' computers. Accordingly, there is another decision out of Indiana that is relevant (as to searching), where the state sought -legislatively- to search computers of registrants including those not under the jurisdiction of the state. A federal district court issued a permanent injunction declaring that a 4th amendment violation.

1-26-2009 National:

Maybe you’ve seen one of the news stories about the revised Georgia statute (Georgia Code § 41-1-12) that now requires sex offenders to turn their Internet passwords, screen names and email addresses over to authorities. The purpose of the revised statute is to give authorities the ability to track what sex offenders are doing online, to, in the words of one news story, “make sure” they “aren’t stalking children online or chatting with them about off-limits topics.”

Critics of the law say it goes too far, since it will let law enforcement agents read emails a sex offender sends to anyone, including family and employers. The state senator who wrote and sponsored the legislation revising the statute concedes that it does, at least to some extent, invade the privacy of those to whom it applies. But he also says they have forfeited their privacy rights by having been convicted of a sex crime and argues that the need to protect children outweighs any privacy concerns.

Georgia is apparently one of a very few (two?) states that have expanded their sex offender registry requirements to include passwords, usernames and email addresses. The first state to do this seems to be Utah, which adopted legislation requiring sex offenders to “provide Utah's sex offender registry with all of their internet identifiers and the websites on which they use those identifiers.” Doe v. Shurtleff, 2008 WL 4427594 (U.S. District Court for the District of Utah 2008). A man affected by this legislation filed a lawsuit challenging its constitutionality. He argued that it violated his First Amendment right to free speech, which includes a right to be able to speak anonymously.

The Utah statute required that sex offenders provide the following to the Utah Department of Corrections (UDOC):

(i) Internet identifiers and the addresses the offender uses for routing or self-identification in Internet communications or postings; [and]

(j) the name and Internet address of all websites on which the sex offender is registered using an online identifier, including all online identifiers and passwords used to access those websites. . . .

Utah Code§ 77-27-21.5(12). A related statute required them also to give the UDOC “any password required for use with an online identifier.” Utah Code § 77-27-21.5(2)(c). It defined “online identifier” as “any electronic mail, chat, instant messenger, social networking, or similar name used for Internet communication.”

Doe, who was challenging the Utah statute, made a number of First Amendment arguments, but the federal judge to whom the case was assigned found that his “most compelling” argument was that the Utah statutes abridged his First Amendment right to speak anonymously online. Doe v. Shurtleff, supra. In analyzing this argument, she noted that there were no opinions dealing with this issue; there were, of course, opinions dealing with challenges to different aspects of sex offender registry statutes, but not this particular issue. So the judge was, as she noted, “in wholly untested legal waters.” Doe v. Shurtleff, supra.

She therefore relied on Supreme Court dealing generally with the right to anonymous speech, one of which was McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission, 514 U.S. 334 (1995). In McIntyre, the Court explained that

[a]nonymity is a shield from the tyranny of the majority. It thus exemplifies the purpose behind the Bill of Rights, and of the First Amendment in particular: to protect unpopular individuals from retaliation-and their ideas from suppression-at the hand of an intolerant society. The right to remain anonymous may be abused when it shields fraudulent conduct. But political speech by its nature will sometimes have unpalatable consequences, and, in general, our society accords greater weight to the value of free speech than to the dangers of its misuse.

The Utah judge noted that the Supreme Court has also recognized “the importance and unique nature of the Internet as a virtual `marketplace of ideas.” Doe v. Shurtleff, supra (quoting Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union, 521 U.S. 844 (1997)). And she pointed out, quite correctly, that courts have combined these two principles to hold that the First Amendment protects anonymous online speech. Doe v. Shurtleff, supra.

The defendants in the Utah case (who included the Utah Attorney General) did not

[directly challenge the right to anonymous speech online. Instead, they contend that because he is a sex offender, Mr. Doe has relinquished that right. Defendants cite cases in various other contexts that have approved curtailing the constitutional rights of sex offenders and felons. Defendants do not cite any authority, however, supporting the proposition that a sex offender who has completed his prison term and is not on parole or probation gives up First Amendment rights.

Doe v. Shurtleff, supra. So they made the same argument the sponsor of the Georgia legislation is making as to why that statute is not unconstitutional.

The judge disagreed. After reviewing cases, she found that

[Mr. Doe has not given up his right to anonymous internet speech because of his status as a sex offender. . . .

First, the United States Supreme Court has held that even people in custody have First Amendment rights, although restrictions on those rights are scrutinized under a low standard. . .

Second, the [U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit] has ruled that a complete, unconditional ban on internet access as a condition of supervised release is overly broad and impermissible.

Doe v. Shurtleff, supra. The Utah judge found that the fact Doe, the plaintiff in the case, retained his First Amendment right to anonymous speech was “bolstered by the fact that Mr. Doe is not on parole or subject to supervised release.” Doe v. Shurtleff, supra.

She also found that the Utah statutes infringed on his right to anonymous speech: “If Mr. Doe provides the UDOC with his Internet information and knows that there are no statutory limits on how that information can be used by the UDOC, or others, he is less likely to engage in protected anonymous speech.” Doe v. Shurtleff, supra. The judge then had to decide if the infringement violated the First Amendment. Georgia Code § 41-1-12(o). That might open the statute up to a challenge based on the holding in the Doe v. Shurtleff case.

The infringement would NOT violate the First Amendment if (i) it was being imposed to protect a compelling government interest and (ii) it was the least restrictive means available to accomplish that end. Doe v. Shurtleff, supra. The judge found it was not:

[Utah undoubtedly has a compelling interest in protecting children from internet predators and investigating online crimes, which are the stated goals of the Registry Statute. The Registry Statute appears to achieve these ends. For example, if the UDOC makes sex offenders' internet information immediately available to investigators, investigations into potential crimes originating online could be hastened. Moreover, knowing that police will have their internet information would probably discourage some sex offenders from using the internet to help them commit crimes.

The only question is whether the Registry Statute's disclosure requirements are the least restrictive means available to meet these goals. They are not. With no restrictions on how the UDOC can use or disseminate registrants' internet information, the Registry Statute implicates protected speech and criminal activity alike. An alternative statute that contained such restrictions would be similarly effective and less threatening to protected anonymous speech.

Doe v. Shurtleff, supra. The defendants asked the judge to interpret the statutes as only letting the UDOC use the Internet information a registrant provided for the purpose of conducting criminal investigations and as barring the UDOC from releasing it to the public. Doe v. Shurtleff, supra. She found that doing this would in effect require her to re-write the statute, which was a job for the Utah legislature. The judge therefore held that the Utah statute violated the First Amendment.

Would a court reach the same conclusion as to the revised Georgia statute? I don’t know. The Georgia statute says the information collected pursuant to its requirements “shall be treated as private data” except that it can be disclosed to law enforcement agencies to law enforcement purposes or to agencies conducting background checks. Those don’t seem particularly problematic. It also says that the Georgia Bureau of Investigation “or any sheriff maintaining” records under this legislation shall, in addition to informing the public about sex offenders living in their community, “release such other relevant information collected under this section that is necessary to protect the public concerning sexual offenders”. ..Source..

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January 14, 2009

GA- Decoding stupid law

1-14-2009 Georgia:

IT’S A NEW YEAR so of course Georgia has put onto its books another new law that won’t work. And, once again, it has to do with sex offenders. Legislators have a real fetish about such folks.

There’s nothing wrong with the intention, of course. Indeed, the state’s version only seeks to implement an act of Congress approved by entirely different politicians of higher rank who similarly know too little about the computer age.

The 2006 federal law simply requires authorities to keep track of the Internet addresses of sex offenders. Georgia one-upped this by requiring them to hand over all their passwords along with screen names and addresses. The only other state to have gone this far is Utah, where one portion of the law has already been overturned by the courts.

The perceived purpose of such laws is entirely valid as regards predatory sex offenders. It’s no secret that the Internet has become the happy hunting grounds for them, particularly as regards children.

THE PROBLEM, in Georgia, is once again the state’s overly broad definition of sex offender — basically anybody ever caught with their pants down in the wrong place at the wrong time. They’re also put on the sex-offender registry for life, even if the offense was premarital sex with the woman, then a teen, who is now their wife.

Making Internet prowling difficult for true perverts that prey on children is entirely worthwhile although, as often mentioned in this space before, if authorities really believe such now-released ex-convicts are still this much of a danger why did they let them go in the first place? Why didn’t they commit them to a secure mental-health facility for treatment until cured (or chemically castrated)?

The real predators are a very small minority of the 16,000 Georgians currently on the registry, some of whom are there for offenses pretty much ignored nowadays, such as voluntary oral sex.

Until Georgia changes its definitions and zeroes in only on true predators for intensive scrutiny, and further ceases to release them until treated and cured, all this constant attack by the General Assembly on this front is utter nonsense and, as the courts regularly agree, unconstitutional to boot.

PERHAPS EVEN worse, in this instance, is pretending this can do any good whatsoever and keep predators off the electronic hunting ground. Maybe they can catch the really, really dumb offenders with this but those would trip themselves up anyway. It’s the clever ones that are truly dangerous, and particularly if they are even modestly computer savvy.

First of all, it is child’s play to open a new account with e-mail, a different name and a different password every day. Heck, every minute if so inclined ... and all for free.

Plus, there are also such things as anonymous surfing through servers located overseas that are immune from Georgia (or U.S.) snooping and encryption programs of such a level that only the CIA — maybe — can decode them.

Sound-good, feel-good laws that don’t work are dangerous to a public that largely is deluded into believing it is somehow protected by them. The best way to protect our children from Internet predators remains strong parental/adult super-vision of computer usage.

While defenders of such laws are often heard arguing that “sex offenders have no rights” the reality is that they do, and particularly so if not in a cell and “having paid their debt to society.” They’ve got mostly the same rights as everyone else, particularly if they behave themselves.

SURRENDER THEIR passwords in an era when computer users are warned to protect their Social Security numbers at all costs?

Surrender access to bank accounts and credit cards managed online?

Surrender privacy in making political comments or in communicating with one’s minister?

The rest of us would tell the General Assembly to go to hell if asked to do this.
Why should released sex offenders, most of whom are trying to become ordinary people once again, feel any different?

It is appallingly easy to predict that this new Georgia law will be struck down by the courts, assuming any sex offender is actually ignorant enough of it and computers to be caught.

Indeed, one looks forward to the case where a sex offender if found not to have revealed his account and password on his church-operated server and is threatened with being sent back to prison for making contributions to his denomination’s mission fund “in secret.”

The risk that the General Assembly seeks to address is real, although far more limited than its overly sweeping law. It also won’t work, which makes it a fraud.

SO LONG as the legislators aren’t willing to pay for identifying true predators and keeping them confined, and giving them medical treatment, it remains their political stagecraft that poses the largest danger to the state’s children. ..News Source.. by Rome-News Tribune.com

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January 7, 2009

GA- Registered Sex Offenders Must Comply with New Internet Rules

Again, lawmakers with another UNCONSTITUTIONAL provision tacked into sex offender laws. This password provision is no different than saying to RSOs, give me a key to your home so we can search it whenever we feel like. This is plain nonsense, two other states have tried it and courts have declared such UNCONSTITUTIONAL, the 4th Amendment has not been repealed to my knowledge. Any lawyer worth his/her salt can tackle this and win. Passwords, e-mail addresses, and other Internet IDs are all inside the home, a place where the state is not permitted to go absent a warrant showing probable cause that a crime has occurred.

Further, this law violates the U.S. Supreme court precedent which holds that every citizen has the right to anonymous free speech. Further, a federal court in Utah has already declared this unconstitutional. The same was held true in Indiana also by a federal court.


1-7-2009 Georgia:

Columbia County, GA—When Georgia sex offenders go online, there could soon be more eyes watching what they do, who they instant message, even monitoring their email accounts. “We have people here who are involved in internet crimes, internet crimes against children, and I’m sure we’ll come up with some type of plan to make sure we do monitor those people to make sure they’re not doing something illegal.“

Starting January 1st, sex offenders have to turn in their email addresses, passwords, and screen names to their local sheriff’s office. David Rush with Columbia County admits there are some kinks for law enforcement agencies to work out, but once they do, he says it (the new law) will be a plus.

Columbia County hasn’t decided exactly how they’ll monitor the offenders online or how often, but says if they don’t send in the information, they will be arrested. “It’s just another way for these people, these sex offenders to know that we are looking at them. As long as they’re obeying the law, they have nothing to worry about. But we want them to know that if they try to entice a child, or try to engage in any type of internet porn, we will be watching them and taking appropriate action if they do violate the law,“ says Rush.

Next week, the Governor’s Sex Offender Registry Task Force meets and could hammer out guidelines for how law enforcement agencies should validate the internet information sex offenders turn in and how often they should check on them. We’ll follow up after that meeting. ..News Source.. by Paige Tucker

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December 30, 2008

GA- Ga. sex offenders must hand over online passwords

This law violates the U.S. Supreme court precedent which holds that every citizen has the right to anonymous free speech. Further, a federal court in Utah has already declared this unconstitutional. The same was held true in Indiana also by a federal court.

12-30-2008 Georgia:

Privacy advocates are questioning an aggressive Georgia law set to take effect Thursday that would require sex offenders to hand over Internet passwords, screen names and e-mail addresses.

Georgia joins a small band of states complying with guidelines in a 2006 federal law requiring authorities to track Internet addresses of sex offenders, but it is among the first to take the extra step of forcing its 16,000 offenders to turn in their passwords as well.

A federal judge ruled in September that a similar law in Utah violated the privacy rights of an offender who challenged it, though the narrow ruling only applied to one offender who had a military conviction on sex offenses but was never in Utah's court or prison system.

No one in Georgia has challenged the law yet, but critics say it threatens the privacy of sex offenders and burdens cash-strapped law enforcement officials.

"There's certainly a privacy concern," said Sara Totonchi of the Atlanta-based Southern Center for Human Rights. "This essentially will give law enforcement the ability to read e-mails between family members, between employers."

State Sen. Cecil Staton, who wrote the bill, said the measure is designed to keep the Internet safe for children. Authorities could use the passwords and other information to make sure offenders aren't stalking children online or chatting with them about off-limits topics.

--Note: An excuse to ILLEGALLY spy on registrants, children have again been used as a pretext to enact another unconstitutional law!

Staton said although the measure may violate the privacy of sex offenders, the need to protect children "outweighs a lot of the rights of these individuals."

"We limit where they can live, we make their information available on the Internet. To some degree, we do invade their privacy," said Staton, a Republican from Macon. "But the feeling is, they have forfeited, to some degree, some privacy rights."

Most states already make the addresses of sex offenders available online. Georgia is one of at least 15 states that have adopted laws requiring sex offenders to detail their e-mail addresses, user names and other Internet handles, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

But researcher Sarah Hammond said Georgia and Utah appear to be the only states that require sex offenders to also hand over their passwords.

The new requirements are far from watertight. While offenders who don't report their user names and passwords could face probation violations — and possibly a return to prison — supporters admit it isn't hard to skirt the law's requirements.

"My hunch is, where there's a will, there's a way," Staton said. "If people are intent on violating this law, there are many different ways. What's important is we have given law enforcement a tool."

For offenders like Kelly Piercy, convicted of child pornography charges in 1999, the password requirement is the latest example of "pre-emptive justice."

Piercy, who suffers from a degenerative disease that has left him blind, said he already struggles to keep track of the roughly dozen screen names he has created, and he doubts deputies would have much sympathy for him if he forgets to report one.

"I made a mistake and I need to pay for it. And I did. But now we're the target of pre-emptive justice — and that concerns me," he said. "How much further down the road can sex offenders be chased?" ..News Source.. by AP

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August 7, 2008

UT- Expanded offender registry too broad?

8-7-2008 Utah:

Some members of the Utah Sentencing Commission on Wednesday expressed surprise and dismay at changes in Utah's sex offender registry that expanded it to include other crimes that have no sexual element.

But the state legislator who sponsored the bill creating the revisions later said including certain violent or terrifying crimes is the right thing to do.

The commission learned of the new aspects of the registry during a presentation by Jim Ingle, the unit administrator who handles the registry for the Utah Department of Corrections.

The Web site has been renamed the "Sex and Kidnap Offender Registry," and from now on will include individuals convicted of kidnapping, aggravated kidnapping, voyeurism and unlawful detention.

Kidnappings by parents (natural, biological, adoptive and noncustodial) are not included.

Utah Court of Appeals Judge Gregory Orme was the most outspoken of several commission members who wondered aloud why such crimes as unlawful detention would merit putting someone put on a public Web site for sex offenders.

Orme raised the hypothetical example of a farmer who suspects a teenager is stealing from him and locks the teen in a barn until the sheriff arrives. Later, it turns out that the teen's brother is the actual culprit and the farmer pleads guilty to unlawful detention.

Will this farmer now have his picture and address listed next to convicted rapists and child molesters?

Rep. Paul Ray, R-Clearfield, who was not at the meeting, said he thinks the commission does not fully understand the legislation he sponsored to make the revisions.

"I do think it's appropriate to have kidnapping on this Web site," Ray said. "They may not like it, but anybody that kidnaps is obviously not a safe person. ... To me, a normal person isn't going to do that. You have to have a violent streak to be able to do that."

Ray also believes those convicted of aggravated kidnapping and voyeurism belong on the registry, but he did say he wants to investigate further any concerns about the unlawful detention provision.

As far as the hypothetical farmer, Ray asked, "Would the district attorney prosecute that farmer? I wouldn't."

Ray noted that his bill was written as a team effort including representatives from the Department of Corrections, the Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice, the Utah Attorney General's Office, prosecutors and members of the judiciary.

"I do think I want to look into the unlawful detention to make sure we have that down. The prosecutors were ones who wanted to add that," Ray said.

However, Ray is pleased with the addition of the other crimes because he believes it furthers public safety.

Other changes in the law require considerably more information from a convicted person, although only limited material will go on the public Web site.

Among the new requirement provisions: Internet information (detailing addresses and passwords for sites the individual frequents except for personal finance or work matters), primary and secondary addresses, a copy of one's passport, a copy of INS paperwork, any volunteer organizations the person assists, DNA information, all phone numbers and professional licenses.

Those on the registry also must provide their Social Security numbers (which will not be made public), and list the license and VINs for of all cars the person uses regularly, even if the convicted individual does not own the car.

Ingle also cited another new provision that is aimed at helping police — listing employer information.

Police ran into difficulties seeking out registered sex offenders as they searched a South Salt Lake neighborhood for 7-year-old Hser Ner Moo in March because offenders at that time did not have to list where they work.

The girl was found raped, strangled and beaten to death. A 20-year-old man is charged with aggravated murder and child kidnapping in connection with the case.

There also is another court case involving the registry revisions in federal court. A Weber County man is challenging a narrow aspect of the registry changes in federal court, saying it violates his constitutional rights to have to provide computer passwords.

The man, identified in court documents as "John Doe," was convicted of carnal knowledge and sodomy on a minor in a military court in 2005 and served time in a military prison. He contends that he was never under the jurisdiction of the Utah Department of Corrections but was required to register as a sex offender here.

The federal lawsuit is still pending.

Rep. Jim Bird, R-West Jordan, who created the bill that addressed only the Internet aspects of the registry, said he believes the state is on firm legal ground here.

"We've run this thing through the Attorney General's Office and several other lawyers," he said.

The passwords will never be made public, but these will be available to law enforcement.

"The idea is very simple: If one of your daughters came up missing and the last known person (to have communicated with her) was contacted on MySpace .Com or Facebook.com, wouldn't you want to know who that individual was?" Bird said. "We just need to know that information for criminal investigation purposes." ..News Source.. by Linda Thomson

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July 1, 2008

UT- Sex-registry law on hold

7-1-2008 Utah:

Sex offender exempted from new rule to reveal online passwords

A federal judge has barred Utah from enforcing a new sex-offender law against a Weber County man whose lawsuit against the state could be a test case that decides whether the law is constitutional.

House Bill 43, which is to go into effect today, requires registered sex offenders to hand over to the Department of Corrections all passwords to online social networking sites, such as MySpace and Facebook.

During a hearing Monday, U.S. District Judge Tena Campbell found that the enforcement of the law against "John Doe" would cause him "irreparable harm" before the court had a chance to review the constitutionality of the state law.

The decision deals a small legal blow to the state. At one point, however, Campbell considered enjoining the state from enforcing the new law altogether instead of just applying her ruling to one sex offender.

The man, who court documents only identify as "John Doe," claims the new law violates his Fourth Amendment right against unlawful search and seizure.

According to a federal suit filed last week, Doe says he was found guilty of carnal knowledge and sodomy on a minor in a military court in 2005 and sentenced to 18 months confinement. In addition to a bad conduct discharge from the Air Force, Doe served 13 months in the military corrections system and was released early for good behavior.

Doe says he has never been under the jurisdiction of the Utah Department of Corrections, which manages Utah's sex-offender registry, but was forced to register as a lifelong sex offender. Specifically, Doe claims the new provision unconstitutionally requires registered offenders to hand over online identifiers and passwords to social networking and blogging sites. He argues that although the state claims the purpose is to "monitor" offenders, the state can also gain access to sites and plant evidence against people.

In court, assistant Utah attorney general Sharel Reber said the information gathered will be kept in a database by the state and will not be made public, but rather used for law enforcement purposes only. Reber said the new law will not violate the Fourth Amendment because law enforcement requesting access to the database must first seek a warrant from a judge. The state already gathers other personal information from offenders, such as home addresses and Social Security numbers.

-This doesn't make sense, why should RSOs TURN OVER INFORMATION FIRST if the state has to get a warrant anyway, someone isn't truthful here, or- this is one crafty egregious law to get anything (evidence) that can be construed and used as a basis for the warrant.

Campbell said the suit presented "thorny and complex issues," which needed to be fully studied. Because she saw the enforcement of the law against Doe as doing potential "irreparable harm," Campbell ordered that Doe be registered as a sex offender under the old law for now.

Wanting to give time for each side to fully study the constitutional issues, Campbell has asked that Doe's attorneys file a comprehensive legal brief outlining their case by July 21, with the state filing its opposition brief by Aug. 11. A hearing date of Aug. 28 has been set for legal arguments and to determine what further legal action may be needed.

Rep. Jim Bird, R-West Jordan, and sponsor of HB34, said the bill was drafted after a similar law in New Jersey. The states of Florida and Kentucky also have such laws. Bird said he did not know if there had been any legal challenges in those states but was confident Utah's law will stand up to a legal challenge.

"We are very confident that we won't have any problems with this law," Bird said.

University of Utah law professor Paul Cassell, formerly a federal judge, said the case will hinge on whether the new password requirement is viewed as being in the interest of public safety or as punishment against the person.

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled the state cannot go back and change the terms of a person's punishment. "If this is viewed as punishment, under the Constitution, you cannot impose ex post facto punishment," Cassell said.

It is likely Doe and his attorneys will argue that the requirements under the Utah Sex Offender Registry are punitive against people who have fully paid their debt to society.

Cassell said the state is likely to argue that the registry is in the interest of public safety and that forcing registered offenders to hand over their passwords to online accounts will protect children.

-Obviously they haven't yet understood what the 4th amendment means, or cases that flow from it.

This is the second similar suit this year to challenge the constitutionality of the sex-offender registry. Steven Arthur Briggs, another convicted sex offender, sued the state claiming the registry violates his right to due process by imposing new requirements on offenders without court review.

Briggs also argues the registry holds people out to public shame and should be considered punishment beyond an offender's sentence. His case is pending a ruling from the Utah Supreme Court.

Campbell ruled that Doe will be allowed to pursue his case without using his real name. Any documents filed with his real name will be filed under seal. ..News Source.. by Geoffrey Fattah, Deseret News



Man's case may affect fate of Web sex registry

4-3-2008 Utah

A convicted sex offender says the Utah Sex Offender Registry violates his due process rights and if the Utah Supreme Court agrees with him, the state's highest court could strike down the policies governing the registry as unconstitutional.

Supreme Court justices heard arguments Wednesday in a key case that could hold sway over the fate of a registry that the public can use to access information, such as names and addresses, of thousands of convicted sex offenders over the Internet.

The case involves Steven Arthur Briggs, who was convicted of sexually abusing a 9-year-old girl in 1986 and sentenced to serve 15 years in prison. Before being released from prison in 2002, Briggs was told by prison staff that he had to fill out paperwork to register as a sex offender. Despite being told that it was the law, Briggs refused to sign the paperwork, which included telling prison officials where he would be living.

"You'll have to file charges against me, if you can find me," Briggs was quoted in court documents as telling prison officials.

Briggs was later charged with failing to register as a sex offender between 2003 and 2005. The court sentenced Briggs to two consecutive years in jail with all but 61 days credit for time served. Briggs appealed and argues that the Utah Sex Offender Registry stigmatizes all sex offenders as sexual predators, even those who have no history of repeat offenses. People on the registry are then subjected to public ridicule and humiliation, even after they have fully served their sentence and fulfilled their debt to society.

During oral arguments, Briggs' attorney, Lori Seppi, told justices the sex offender registry lumps all sex offenders in the same category and implies that they are all predators. This includes a 17-year-old male convicted of having consensual sex with his 15-year-old girlfriend as well as others with no history of repeat abuse. This information is then published on the Internet without giving the person a chance to argue before a judge that they are not a danger to the community.

Seppi said this violates the Constitution's guaranteed right to due process, adding if these people are going to be held out for public shame, they have a right to challenge it in court and prove that they are not a danger.

Justice Michael Wilkins asked if it's true that the sex offender is a predator, shouldn't he or she be on the registry?

Seppi said she was not arguing that everyone should be taken off and said some people should be on the registry as dangerous, but she argued Utah's laws do not make a distinction.

Chief Justice Christine Durham said she was troubled by this. She noted that children who send cell phone pictures of themselves nude to each other or children charged with acts of lewdness could wind up on the registry alongside adult rapists and violent sex offenders.

Durham suggested that the implication of being on the registry could be far more egregious than the original offense.

Assistant Utah Attorney general Laura Dupaix said all the state does is publish truthful information about sex offenders on the registry, including the crime of which they were convicted. The stigma doesn't come from the state but rather from what the public decides to do with the information, she said.

Dupaix said she would not trust a registered sex offender to be alone with her children, based on their past conduct. The registry gives the community the ability to use the information to make those choices.

Justice Matthew Durrant said he doubted the framers of the Constitution could have anticipated something like the sex offender registry or Internet publication.

Dupaix said the registry is not much different than word circulated about the abuse of a child among colonial townsfolk or of the public humiliation from time spent in the town stockade.

The justices will consider the arguments and issue a written opinion in the coming months. ..News Source. by Geoffrey Fattah, Deseret Morning News

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