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Bill > A3852


NJ A3852

NJ A3852
Conforms Megan's law to requirements of federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act.


summary

Introduced
05/07/2018
In Committee
05/07/2018
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/08/2020

Introduced Session

2018-2019 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill revises New Jersey's Megan's Law in response to requirements of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA), enacted as part of the federal "Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006." SORNA created standards for state sex offender registration and community notification. In response to SORNA, this bill revises the scope, manner, and format of the disclosure to the general public of information pertaining to the identity, specific and general whereabouts, physical characteristics, and criminal history of persons found to have committed a sex offense. Under the SORNA scheme, information about adult sex offenders would be made available to the public through the Internet for the duration of the person's registration obligations under the law. In consideration of the circumstances of juvenile sex offenders and the interest in their rehabilitation, this bill requires them to register but does not include their information on the Internet registry unless the juvenile was tried as an adult. Under the bill's provisions, the offender will be classified as a 15-year, 25-year, or lifetime registrant based upon the offense committed. This bill, as does current law, requires sex offenders to verify their addresses with the appropriate law enforcement agency. The SORNA verification requirements implemented under this bill are based upon the offender's classification as a 15-year, 25-year, or lifetime registrant. A 15-year registrant will be required to verify his or her address with the appropriate law enforcement agency every 365 days; a 25-year registrant, every 180 days. A lifetime registrant is required to verify his or her address every 90 days. Under current law, New Jersey uses a risk-based tier classification process. The county prosecutors conduct a risk assessment for each convicted sex offender to determine the offender's risk of committing future offenses; the offender's tier classification for purposes of registration and the type of notification to the community are based upon the risk assessment. SORNA, however, bases the offender's obligation to register upon the sex offense committed, which allows a more expedient process. This bill requires that the offender be classified at the time of sentencing, which eliminates a potential gap in time between a registrant's release from custody or relocation and actual notification while awaiting completion of the risk-based tier classification process. The bill also requires the information to be provided to the National Sex Offender Registry and to be exchanged with other states when registered sex offenders relocate to or from or travel to this State. Utilizing a system of offense-based classification also permits New Jersey to avoid a 10 percent reduction annually in the State allocated share of federal Edward Byrne law enforcement grant funding. The Internet publication scheme envisioned by SORNA, which this bill implements, provides the public with information about a greater number of sex offenders than the information provided under current law. SORNA employs geographically-based Internet searches and electronic notification rather than the cumbersome and resource-intensive process of hand-delivery of notification fliers. This bill provides for a more efficient, uniform, and fiscally prudent system of registration and notification that promotes public safety by: (1) providing access to relevant information about sex offenders, and (2) enabling responsible organizations and individuals to take appropriate precautions to protect themselves and those in their care from the risk posed by sex offenders. The bill requires offenders to notify law enforcement of any international travel at least 21 days in advance. Any offender who fails to notify law enforcement or provides false information concerning international travel is guilty of a crime of the third degree. In 2007, the Legislature noted questions concerning whether Megan's Law is consistently applied in the 21 counties. The system of registration and notification created in this bill provides for a more uniform and consistent classification scheme, regardless of the registrant's county of residence. Sex offender registration and notification will be more effective in today's mobile society if laws are consistent among the states and other jurisdictions and cannot be evaded by moving between jurisdictions to take advantage of potential time gaps and loopholes.

AI Summary

This bill conforms New Jersey's Megan's Law to the requirements of the federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA). The key provisions include: - Classifying offenders as 15-year, 25-year, or lifetime registrants based on the offense committed, rather than a risk-based system. This allows a more expedient process and ensures consistency across the state. - Requiring offenders to verify their addresses with law enforcement more frequently based on their classification (15-year - annually, 25-year - every 6 months, lifetime - every 3 months). - Providing the public with more information about registered sex offenders through an Internet registry, while still protecting juvenile offenders unless they were tried as adults. - Establishing procedures for offenders to challenge their registration classification and for notification to current registrants about the changes. - Requiring offenders to notify law enforcement at least 21 days in advance of any international travel. The goal is to promote public safety through a more efficient, uniform, and consistent system of sex offender registration and notification that complies with the federal standards.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Law and Public Safety Committee (on 05/07/2018)

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