State Attorney General Won't Fight Court's Block Of Law Curtailing Sex Offenders' First Amendment Rights
from the well,-at-least-not-directly dept
A California law requiring registered sex offenders to turn over a wealth of information related to their internet use to police will not go into effect, thanks to both a Ninth Circuit Court decision and the state's attorney general, who has decided not to petition the Supreme Court to examine the ruling.Attorney General Kamala Harris says she will not ask the Supreme Court to let California enforce a voter-approved law that would require more than 70,000 sex offenders to disclose their Internet identities to police — a decision that apparently means the law will not take effect.Other portions of the law, mostly dealing with increased sentences for sex trafficking crimes, will still be enforced. But the law's First Amendment implications -- rights even sex offenders are entitled to -- were too much for the courts to ignore. The law would not only clamp down on those currently serving time, but would also require the same disclosure from offenders who were no longer incarcerated, including those whose probation or parole had been completed.
The law was part of Proposition 35, a ballot measure passed by an 81 percent voting majority in November 2012. The challenged provision would require registered sex offenders, who already must disclose their address to police, to also reveal their e-mail addresses, user names and Internet providers.
The requirement “significantly burdens those individuals’ ability and willingness to speak on the Internet,” Judge Jay Bybee, one of the court’s most conservative members, said in the 3-0 ruling.Of course, the law's sponsors, along with law enforcement, see this decision as turning the internet into a giant sex offender playground.
The measure’s chief sponsor, Chris Kelly, a former chief privacy officer for Facebook, criticized Harris’ decision.Prioritizing dislike over guaranteed rights is "misplacing priorities." No disrespect towards California voters, but it's easy selling an idea that takes rights away from sex offenders. Very few people will vote to protect the rights of these criminals, even if it means statutory rapists, and anyone dragged under the wheels of the justice system by law enforcement's bumbling anti-sexting efforts, are treated identically to those who have committed more abhorrent crimes. The assumption that laws like these make is that the internet is only abused by sex offenders and never simply used in the same ways non-criminals use it.
“You cannot promote Internet safety by protecting the anonymity of sex offenders,” Kelly said in a statement. “This is clearly a case of misplaced priorities and indicates a blatant disrespect for California voters.”
The courts have upheld sex offenders' First Amendment rights, much as they would for others charged with lesser crimes. While the state AG may not be willing to petition the Supreme Court (which would presumably result in another "no" answer), the state's legislators will be going back to the drawing board to find some way to infringe on sex offenders' First Amendment rights that might escape the notice of the judicial branch.
[T]he attorney general will ask the Legislature to rewrite the disclosure requirement to meet the court’s objections.Clearly, the state can't take no for an answer, even when it's been told twice that it can't limit the speech of certain people simply because they're universally loathed. Those fighting for these rights have the toughest battle. To guarantee rights for the greater population, they have to fight for those the greater population disdains. If they don't, mission creep is a distinct possibility. Not fighting when its hardest to defend ensures that in the future, it won't just be child molesters and rapists turning over their online identities to the police.
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Filed Under: california, chris kelly, kamala harris, passwords, privacy, sex offenders, social media
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Given Facebooks horrible record on privacy and digging deeper for more information, one could understand how they arrived at this ill-thought out law.
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What's the difference
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If you are convicted of taking a wizz on wall in an alley in the middle of the night, you are considered a sex offender.
If you make the mistake of being a teenager and sleeping with a girl under 18, you are a sex offender.
If you are a teenager, and a teen friend sends you a sext, or you send one, you are a sex offender.
And so on and so on. The law makes no distinction between the monsters who really need to locked up for life, and ordinary people on the other end of the "sex offender" spectrum.
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Re: What's the difference
If you are not in jail then you are either on probation or you are free.
Just accidentally touching someones ass can get you 'legally' labeled a sex offender. If you are okay with someones rights being demolished for your particular taste of justice then you should not have any trouble with the rest of your being removed when someone invents a convincing argument.
As much as it sucks... it is better for criminals to have their privacy than for people to have theirs 'removed' just in case.
You are definitely a part of the problem that plagues this nation.
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HOW is ANYONE -much less convicted felons/etc- supposed to really fit back into society and make a life for themselves if they are stigmatized forever ? ? ?
well, they can hardly do it under the best of circumstances, but then making them wear this dead albatross around their necks is not going to make the rejoin society in any meaningful way, and thus PUSH THEM TO THE MARGINS AGAIN...
WHY should they serve their time and toe the line when they are going to be EXTRA-legally punished and stigmatized ? ? ? no use even trying...
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Re: What's the difference
http://6abc.com/news/3-kids-busted-for-running-child-porn-account/516253/
Do you really feel that under aged kids, even as stupid as these 3 are, should be under surveillance for the rest of their lives?
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If a law requires it, it is not extra-legal.
Actual pedophiles are... pedophiles (or ephebophiles, or habitual rapists), and they don't "get over it". The same way any character with a potentially dangerous problem rather has to stay in contact with the state on some sort of basis, what makes people with these particular criminal problems exempt?
If a person with a problem like this wants to rejoin society in any meaningful way, they need to own their damn problem.
.....
What I do, in fact, believe is that there should be better integration for people with these problems or any ex-criminal into society, less bullshit from law enfarcement, and a dismantling of the prison industry. Specifically regarding sex offenders, the whole scheme seems upside down, where you do in fact get people rammed through the system and onto a registry for having a drunken public piss, people railroaded over extremely thin claims of child pornography or pedophilia, but actual rapes are dramatically under-investigated and victims are treated like shit. Bass-uckfing-ackwards.
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A correction
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Unless the law itself is illegal.
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Constant monitoring is only appropriate when someone is on probation or parole.
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Well, sort of. She appealed it all the way to the Ninth Circuit, so it's not like she didn't fight it.
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There are two issues I have with it:
1) Abuse and restriction of free speech
2) Abuse and restriction of people who have served their time and paid their dues to society.
Seriously, if these people can't be trusted to be on the street again like normal people, why are they released to begin with? Even murderers who end up getting paroled don't have to deal with this.
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THAT fucking Jay Bybee!
I mean, shouldn't it be mandatory to mention "The Torture Memos" and Jay Bybee and every opportunity?
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I am not aware of any physical tests for "paedophilia". Is there a known genetic profile or pathophysiology associated with the behaviors? Is there more than 1 "type" of paedophile? What is really known? Official biopsychiatry, in unambiguous partnership big pharma, tends to represent that most-all deviant (and marketable) behaviors are incurable, genetic diseases, conveniently, best managed primarily with drug treatment. Again, what is really known? (genuine question)
What makes anyone exempt? Everyone is "potentially dangerous" in one way or another. There is also the question of what responsibilities the state is realistically capable of managing appropriately. Along with "terrorism", paedophillia is the standard issue invoked by authoritarian state actors when trying to curtail civil liberties and accumulate more power. Is it currently realistic to have faith in the state's ability to act in the public's interest in matters like this?
Well, yes and no. The problem is society's as well insofar as it is society that is offended and threatened. There is also the possibility that society (whatever that is) bares some responsibility for genesis of the condition, assuming it is not purely genetic. Then there is also the basic problem of many/most in the population probably still being in favor of castration, torture and/or execution for such offenders. We are not quite at the stage of seeing child rape as "an illness like any other". Insofar as "our culture" still believes in "evil", paedophiles are the archetype. How can someone begin to own their problem when it is still widely understood to be a demonological one, not a bio-psycho-social one? To be understood and serously addressed it needs to be understood objectively. Does the nexus of the problem really begin and end within the biopsychology/soul of these damned creatures, or might there be economic, social and cultural factors in the pathogenesis as well? (again, genuine question)
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Re: What's the difference
They live in a state which has a supreme court not made up of absolute morons.
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Re: What's the difference
Just pointing out the stupidity of the general concept here.
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That could be considered a crime in another more free thinking country to even make said law
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* That regulations don't contradict the law
* That laws don't contradict the constitution
It's usually left to the legislative bodies to ensure this. But they realized thy don't have to, hence some jerk can override laws with "National Security Letters", and hence some congress can override the constitution with some "PATRIOT act".
And this is not US-specific, we have this problem in Switzerland as well (although we have some remedy, in the form that if we can gather enough signatures, we can force a public vote on a law. Not on regulations, though...).
What's really needed is a court of law, where everyone can submit laws or regulations and say "I think this contradicts another law or the constitution", and logically everyone has "standing", because it obviously effects everyone. And the court must be able to enforce its judgements.
This is somewhat implemented in Germany with the constitutional court ("Verfassungsgericht"), but I think that one only covers laws, and neither treaties nor regulations, and furthermore, it lacks any means to really enforce its decisions. So what they've got is a judgement against pre-emptive data retention, but hundreds of politicians still trying to write it into law.
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"disrespect for California voters."
The U.S. is a Constitutional Republic. There are processes in place for amending the constitution. They have very high barriers and controls. "California voters" don't pass that threshold and get to make decisions about the constitution, and they are probably happy that neither do the Missouri voters. This is what allows U.S. citizens from all states to move through the U.S.A. without losing their constitutional rights.
A politician who doesn't get this should be dismissed from a job for which he is obviously missing the necessary qualification and knowledge.
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Well that's the entire point: Nobody wants to reduce recidivism
Lawmakers and judges are elected based on hysteric campaigns about pedophile terrorists hiding behind every corner and committing a home invasion every 0.2 seconds. Their entire schtick is that good, god-fearing Americans are besieged by criminal scum on all sides (which probably says more about the electorate than the elected) and therefore only the most drastic measures are appropriate. That these measures don't work isn't a problem, it's an added boon -- the siege mentality turns into a perpetual war
So more and more people and up with ever more drastic sentences. And where do they serve those sentences? Even when the facility is not run by a for-profit corporation which considers falling recidivism rates a business risk, in many communities the local prison complex is what the auto industry was to Detroit. They'll certainly do their very best to put themselves out of business...
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Re: What's the difference
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Re: Re: What's the difference
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Re: Registry
A couple years ago, prosecutors there wanted to put a habitual thief on the sex offender registry. His lawyer, quite reasonably, objected, pointing out that stealing TVs and cash and jewelry has nothing to do with sex.
The Georgia Supreme Court said that doesn't matter. The state can put you on the sex offender registry for anything crime it likes and you have no legal recourse.
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> so it's not like she didn't fight it.
"All the way"? You make it sound like a long and involved journey. It's just the next step up from the bottom. After the district (trial) court, you appeal to the circuit court of appeals, in this case the 9th Circuit.
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Re: Re: Re: What's the difference
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"Pedophile" doesn't mean "rapist".
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Translation
You cannot make fearful people feel better by allowing people who have already served their sentence to enjoy the rights guaranteed by the US Constitution.
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CA AG office has many issues
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Why is there such a need to punish sex offenders extra?
How many people get arrested for robbery, are put in jail, serve their time, but they don't have to go on a "violent robber registry". How come they're not branded as robbers for the rest of their life, like sex offenders are?
When was the last time a robber went door-to-door telling everyone in the neighborhood that he had just been released from prison for holding up a 7-11? Yet that's what sex offenders have to do.
You might say, "Oh, but sex offenders will keep doing it so we need to keep track of them."
Okay, then, prove that sex offenders have a higher recidivism rate than other violent crimes, including robbery.
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Re: Why is there such a need to punish sex offenders extra?
And yes, I understand that over-labeling is a problem that can not be denied. Nonetheless, if one of those dangerous rapey types (not a sexting teen or a hapless drunk who peed up a wall late at night and was caught) was let loose in your neighborhood and you knew what he'd done would you let him babysit your kids? I think not.
It's not about the rate, it's about the risk.
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Re: Re: Why is there such a need to punish sex offenders extra?
That argument is an appeal to emotion and straw man rolled up into one.
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