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For
Immediate Release
December 7, 2005 |
Media
Contact:
Kevin Enright
410-576-6357
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CURRAN
ANNOUNCES LEADERSHIP PROPOSAL TO REFORM MARYLAND’S
SEXUAL PREDATOR LAWS
Maryland Attorney General J. Joseph Curran, along with Maryland
Senate President Mike Miller and Speaker of the House Michael Busch,
submitted today their Leadership Proposal to increase supervision
of sex offenders and broaden community notification once these
offenders are released into Maryland neighborhoods.
Attorney General Curran’s leadership in preparing this legislation
builds upon many years of concern about the danger of sex offenders
and his extensive research into how Maryland can better protect
children and communities from victimization. To assess other states’ approaches,
Curran traveled in 1999 to Kansas to get a first-hand look at its
civil commitment program, he went to Chicago this year to meet
with Attorney General Lisa Madigan on Illinois’ recent passage
of stronger sex offender legislation, and he has spoken with dozens
of other Attorneys General on sexual predator reforms. In addition,
General Curran has met personally with police officers from the
Baltimore City Sex Offense Unit, former and current Maryland Parole
Commissioners, executive members of the Maryland Sheriffs Association,
and state legislators.
“Before I am the Attorney General, I’m a father and
grandfather. Protecting your children and mine is one of my most
important jobs,” says Curran.
The legislative package, which contains a lifetime
supervision and community notification bill, fills several gaps
in Maryland’s
sex offenders laws. First, it creates extended parole supervision
for the most dangerous violent and child sex offenders for as long
as necessary, from three years to lifetime. Under current law,
sex offenders are released from parole or probation regardless
of whether or not they are still dangerous. The Leadership Proposal
requires that extended supervision continue unless and until an
offender no longer poses an unacceptable risk to community safety.
The bill also creates specially-trained Sex Offender Management
teams to conduct the supervision, with the Maryland Parole Commission
setting special conditions for each offender, like GPS electronic
monitoring and restrictions on employment.
“The most important thing is this: an offender should never
be let go from supervision without a risk assessment showing he
is no longer dangerous,” Curran emphasized. “Every
sex offender is different, and we need the flexibility to tailor
the length and manner of supervision to each individual offender.“
The second bill substantially broadens notification requirements
when sex offenders are released into the community. It requires
affirmative notice to neighborhood police officers, schools, day
care centers, and other places which serve children, and it requires
community meetings to inform people directly about convicted sex
offenders. It also enables people to provide information about
convicted offenders to authorities directly through the Sex Offender
Registry website, and to receive email notification when offenders
are released into their counties. Finally, it increases penalties
for non-compliance with sex offender registration requirements.
“Busy moms and dads should not have to check the Internet
every day to see whether a sex offender has moved in down the block,” Curran
said. “Other states do a lot better job of making sure people
are informed, and Maryland should follow suit. A more informed
public is a better protected public.”
Aware that this legislation deals only with known, convicted sex
offenders who have already committed crimes, Attorney General Curran
is also promoting better community education as the key to preventing
future tragedies by the majority of sex offenders who are never
caught. To this end, Attorney General Curran has created a booklet,
Protection from Sex Offenders, which has been sent to all 24 Maryland
County School Superintendents and is also available on his website,
www.oag.state.md.us. The
booklet contains facts and statistics
about sexual offending, advice from professionals on how to protect
children from unidentified sex offenders, guidance on how to use
the Sex Offender Registry, and explanations in plain language of
many of the terms used in the Registry.
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