FAC President Gail Colletta Interviewed

FROM NARSOL: Just completed an interview with Gail Colletta of Florida Action Committee, one of our great affiliate organizations! I think she very eloquently articulated some advocacy goals that we can all aspire to! If you’d like to hear the interview, here it is: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/registryreport/2019/04/30/episode-9-gail-colletta–president-florida-action-committee  

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AL: Proposed Bill Would Give Discretion to Judges on Whether to Register Juveniles as Sex offenders

Tomorrow, a senate committee in Alabama will consider Alabama Senate Bill 125, sponsored by Senator Cam Ward. Among other things, the bill would give Courts discretion as to whether or not a child should be subject to registration or notification as a sex offender under certain conditions. Sen. Ward suggested that the bill is intended to “get those kids back

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What Giving Felons the Right to Vote Says About Us

At the bottom of this post are excerpts from this article, which talks about restoration of voting rights and disenfranchisement in general. This issue is particularly pressing in Florida, which is one of the few states that has automatic disenfranchisement of Felons combined with an arduous process for getting their rights restored. Even though the state passed Amendment 4, which

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Opinion: Abolish the Registry

This is an article from The Northern Light Newspaper, in Alaska, that examines the issues that the registry creates. It’s not easy to come to the defense of nonviolent sex offenders. Any lawmaker that considers reforming the excessively-punitive registry will start out on the losing side of the public’s perception. For starters, there is an erroneous assumption that the registry

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7th Circuit rules DOC sex offender program violates Constitution

Finding the disclosures provide information that any law enforcement agent “would love to have,” the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled Indiana’s requirement that sex offender inmates give detailed accounts of their past actions violates the Constitution’s protections against self-incrimination. The 7th Circuit found the INSOMM workbooks asked for detailed and specific information. Offenders are required to reveal the

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