Showing posts with label Parks - Dumb Laws.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parks - Dumb Laws.. Show all posts

April 14, 2012

Miami creates pop-up park to stanch flow of sex offenders to Shorecrest sidewalk

These pop-up parks were specifically designed to BANISH former sex offenders. Is banishment legal, years after the sentence, and retroactively applied?
4-14-2012 Florida:

With sex offenders on a Shorecrest sidewalk, Miami opened a new park just a few hundred feet away to stop more from showing up.

Only a few hundred feet from the latest encampment of sexual offenders, who were banished to a sidewalk in Miami’s Shorecrest neighborhood, is a little piece of mostly barren city-owned land, about 100-by-40 feet, filled with a couple of old rusted toys and a metal carport frame.

Welcome to Miami’s new “Little River Pocket Park,’’ a sod-challenged pop-up park never envisioned in any master plan, but created by City Commissioner Marc Sarnoff in a clever bid to keep more offenders from moving to the area.

“I can’t dislodge those who are there,’’ Sarnoff, who represents the district, told The Miami Herald. “But this is to prevent any further sexual offenders from being put there by the state.”

Sarnoff learned of the vacant land from nearby homeowners concerned about at least 13 sexual offenders who have set up camp nearby. County and state law prohibit sex offenders from living near parks where children gather, though the state allows offenders already living somewhere to stay if the park is created after they’ve moved in, the city said.

The new park, at the southern end of Northeast 10th Avenue on the Little River, is about 300 feet from the relatively new encampment of sex offenders, who gather at 10 every night on a small piece of sidewalk just north of the park near 79th Street, and who generally leave before dawn.

The restrictive county law doesn’t allow offenders within 2,500 feet of schools or any place children might gather, leaving the men few places in Miami-Dade County where they can spend evenings.

Several of the men told The Miami Herald that their probation officers handed them pieces of paper suggesting they go to Shorecrest after they were released from prison. State correction officials deny that, saying they can only tell released inmates where they are not allowed to live.

Either way, the group has been at the spot for several months now, prompting Sarnoff to take action.

In March, commissioners voted to take legal action demanding that corrections stop the men from congregating in Shorecrest, a neighborhood in the city’s northeast corner. Nothing has been filed yet.

The city seems to have met the minimum requirements to create a park. Deputy City Attorney Maria Chiaro said the city has to declare the spot a park, then maintain it. At Sarnoff’s request, City Manager Johnny Martinez wrote Maria DiBernardo, the state corrections circuit administrator, two weeks ago to inform her of the new park.

“This new park should necessarily preclude the placement of any sex offenders in the area of 79th Street and 10th Avenue,’’ the letter said. ..For the rest of this story: by CHARLES RABIN

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May 11, 2011

Crackdown on sex offenders met with caution

5-11-2011 California:

IRVINE – It's rare that tough rules on sex offenders aren't welcomed wholeheartedly. But as District Attorney Tony Rackauckas implores local cities to crack down, feedback has been notably subdued, at least so far.

After county supervisors last month barred registered sex offenders from entering county parks, Rackauckas sent a letter to every O.C. town, asking them to follow suit.

Irvine's City Council on Tuesday was the first to take up the matter, but was split in its enthusiasm, with some members asking if a new layer of restrictions on sex offenders is the best use of police resources.

"Our parks are the safest places in the safest city in the United States of America," Councilman Larry Agran said. "I want us to keep our eye on the ball," he added.

Councilwoman Beth Krom echoed that, wondering aloud "whether we are simply doing something which creates a perception of safety."

Westminster has also scheduled discussion of new rules on sex offenders, but no feedback has been received from other cities in Orange County, Rackauckas said in an interview.

Nonetheless, with county parks now off-limits, the district attorney told the council it would be wise to take action. “You don’t want to have it be legal in your city,” Rackauckas said.

Councilman Jeff Lalloway, who is spearheading Irvine's consideration of the law, backed that sentiment: "The further we delay on this ... the more potentially we could drive sex offenders to our parks."

California law prohibits registered sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet of parks, something that may account for Irvine's relatively small population of offenders. The city has more than 50 parks and has 45 registered sex offenders, city officials say.

Orange County has 1,800 sex offenders listed on the state Megan's Law database; additional offenders are not publicly disclosed but are known to law enforcement.

The impact of the county's action, and any similar moves by cities, might be limited. The California Attorney General's website says most victims know their attackers, and that the idea "most child sexual abusers find their victims by frequenting such places as schoolyards and playgrounds" is "false."

Some local towns already have related restrictions; Tustin and Fullerton, for example, have laws prohibiting sex offenders from loitering near parks and day cares.

Sheriff Sandra Hutchens spoke briefly at Tuesday's meeting, declining to "tell the council what to do" but saying she feels the rules will be valuable at the county level.

Todd Spitzer, a supervisor candidate and former assemblyman who helped put the Megan's Law database online, called the proposal a "shining opportunity" to protect children.

Mayor Sukhee Kang and Councilman Steven Choi both signaled at least tentative support for additional steps.

Ultimately, Irvine officials voted to draft a law on the matter and requested a recommendation from staff in 45 days on whether they should adopt it.

"I want to hear from the city manager, and I want to hear from the (police) chief, if this is indeed a problem," Agran said. Not seeking such a recommendation, he added, would be "failing to do our jobs." ..Source.. by JEFF OVERLEY, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

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May 4, 2010

Sex offender public park ban bill goes to governor

Further proof that lawmakers refuse to look at the circumstances of the case they use to support a law. Notice, the man they cite has NEVER BEEN CONVICTED of any sex offense. Accordingly, how can lawmakers use such a case to support this law? Lawmakers make connections that are plain dumb and do not care who they hurt in the process. Also notice the date of the crime they cite: 1960 48 years ago!
5-4-2010 Illinois:

Passed by state lawmakers, legislation that would ban convicted sex offenders from stepping foot in any public Illinois parks now awaits Gov. Pat Quinn's signature.

The legislation, sponsored by State Sen. Kirk Dillard, R-Hinsdale, prevents all sexual predators and child sex offenders from being in or loitering within 500 feet of a public park.

Illinois currently prohibits sex offenders from being in or loitering within 500 feet of public recreational areas when children are present. The new legislation would keep make it a crime to be near or enter a park at any time.

"Sexual offenders don't need to be hanging around public parks where there are lots of kids and lots of people walking or running alone," Dillard said recently in a press release. "Unfortunately, we've seen some terrible tragedies in public parks. We need to keep these individuals out of areas where there is often limited oversight by law enforcement officers, as well as surroundings that offer seclusion."

In the release, Dillard referred to the March 14, 1960, attack and murder of three Riverside women in Starved Rock State Park, calling the crime a "sexual assault."

Chester Weger (Note: Is this man innocent? [2004 article]) , the man convicted of one of the murders and now serving a life prison sentence, has never been charged or brought to court on any sex offense.

If signed by the governor, the new law would make the violation a Class A misdemeanor and boost any subsequent violation to a Class 4 felony. ..Source.. The Times

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