You could say it started with three small-town Minnesota boys riding
their bikes to a convenience store on an October night in 1989. As they
were returning home on a dark stretch of road, a man stepped out of the
darkness holding a gun. He told them to lie face down on the ground and
then directed two of them -- Trevor Wetterling, age 10, and Aaron
Larson, 11, to run into the woods and not look back or he'd shoot them.
That was the last that they, or anyone, would see of 11-year-old Jacob
Wetterling.
The subsequent fruitless search led President Bill Clinton to sign a
law in September 1994 designed to help police quickly locate potential
perpetrators of sex offenses. The Jacob Wetterling Act required states
to create sex-offender registries accessible to police, though not to
the public. But that same year, 7-year-old Megan Kanka of Hamilton
Township, New Jersey, was lured across the street, then raped and
murdered by a neighbor who -- unbeknownst to her parents -- had served
six years in prison for aggravated assault and attempted sexual assault
on another child. The Kankas maintained that, had they known a convicted
sex offender lived nearby, they could have protected their daughter. So
in 1996, Clinton signed Megan's Law, which required states to open up
their sex-offender registries to the public.
Megan's Law launched America's practice of notifying neighborhoods of
where sex offenders live. Though the law is well intentioned, it's not
clear whether it has reduced the number of sex offenses; rather, public
notification appears to destabilize offenders' lives, increasing the
risk they'll commit another crime. There is also ample evidence that
since the law passed, vigilantes have used sex-offender registries to
threaten, harass, and inflict violence on hundreds of offenders and
their families.
In the decade and a half since Megan's Law was passed, public-policy
researchers, corrections officials, and treatment professionals have
begun to recognize the faulty premises and poor outcomes the law has
created. A few states, recognizing the problems with public registries,
have tried to develop legal solutions that both protect offenders from
abuse and reduce sexual violence. But a new federal law -- the Adam
Walsh Act, signed by President George W. Bush in 2006 and set to take
effect this summer -- threatens to shut down those innovations; states
not found in compliance by July 26 will lose critical federal
crime-fighting funds. At a time when criminal-justice policies are
increasingly adopting a "smart on crime" approach grounded in research
on what works, the legal treatment of sexual offenders is moving in the
opposite direction.
***
"Jeff" isn't his real name. When he talks about the June day in 2005
that the beer bottle shattered his front window, his voice quavers.
"I'm sorry -- all of this just makes me so angry," he says. He was
convicted in 1995, as a 23-year-old, for having what he says was
consensual sex with a 15-year-old girl he met in a bar. That onetime
liaison came to light, Jeff says, when the girl became pregnant (he says
DNA later showed he wasn't the father) and her parents reported the
episode to the police, with the girl as a cooperating witness. He spent
five years in prison, but even after his 2000 release, state law
required that he be placed -- for life -- on the state registry, which
shows his photo, address, and the details of his conviction.
Jeff says the bottle thrower on that June day was a neighbor --
someone with whom he'd been friendly -- who had found Jeff on the
registry and appeared on his lawn with two biker buddies, shouting
threats. When Jeff went out to talk to the group, the men formed a
semicircle, pushing and spitting on him. He retaliated with punches, and
the resulting fight ended with both sides bloodied and a hole in a wall
when they pursued him as he retreated into the house.
A month later, Jeff recalls, his tool shed was broken into and the
equipment for his logging business stolen. Not long after, a second
neighbor plugged a culvert they shared so that Jeff's basement flooded
in the next storm; Jeff says the man told him he'd done it "to get the
sex offender out of my neighborhood." Jeff has changed his phone number a
dozen times after repeated threatening calls.
In 2003, Jeff married a lifelong acquaintance who knew his history.
She worked as a nurse at a hospital, and shortly after their marriage, a
manager told her that she had to choose between her job and her
husband. Jeff attributes their 2005 divorce to his status on the
sex-offender registry: "We were looking at each other, and it was like,
'I'm destroying your life.'" Even the two girls he parents, ages 13 and
14 (one from a previous partner and the other for whom he serves as
guardian), started being teased in school and were excluded from social,
school, and church events. "What have my kids ever done to anybody?"
Jeff says. "In reality, sometimes I wonder if maybe killing myself may
not be the best thing I can do for them."
About 700,000 sex offenders appear on registries in the 50 states and
other U.S. jurisdictions. But their crimes vary widely, from chronic
violent sexual predation down to voyeurism and even public urination.
Researchers estimate that the vast majority of these offenders are at
low-risk for repeating their crimes. Nonetheless, the public is
overwhelmingly concerned: In a 2005 Gallup poll, 66 percent of
respondents said they were "very concerned" about sex offenders, while
36 percent said the same about terrorism.
Giving a nervous public instant access to the addresses and photos of
sex offenders produces none-too-surprising results. Though no reliable
national statistics exist on vigilante violence against sex offenders, a
few studies indicate widespread abuses. In a 2005 study by University
of Louisville criminologist Richard Tewksbury in the Journal of
Contemporary Criminal Justice, 47 percent of 121 sex offenders reported
they'd been harassed as a result of being on a state registry, and 16
percent said that they'd been assaulted; among nearly 600 immediate
family members of offenders that Tewksbury and Lynn University
researcher Jill Levenson surveyed, 44 percent said they'd been
threatened or harassed by neighbors as a result of their relative's
sex-offender status, 27 percent that their property had been damaged,
and 7 percent that they'd been physically assaulted or injured. A 2005
study in the same journal by Levenson and Leo Cotter, who directs a
Florida sex-offender outpatient program, reported that 21 percent of 183
offenders had their property damaged by a person who found out about
their status.
Recent incidents illustrate those findings. In April 2010, a man used
a printout from California's sex-offender registry to try to rob the
homes of two registered sex offenders in Grover Beach. In November, a
registered sex offender from Orlando was assaulted in front of his home
by three teens who told him they knew he was a sex offender; they
punched and kicked him repeatedly and stomped his dog to death before
running off. That same month in the Virginia town of Hopewell, police
charged 19-year-old Daniel Narron with attempted murder for using his
SUV to try to run down 52-year-old Rudolph Ellis, who is on Virginia's
sex-offender list. Since 2005, at least six sex offenders nationwide
have been murdered by people who used a state registry to track their
victims.
The problems with the sex-registry laws are myriad, starting from
their very premises. One of the basic assumptions behind Megan's Law is
that parents who know that a sex offender lives nearby will take
precautions; after a decade and a half, however, there's little research
to show that's happened. A second premise is that sex offenders are
somehow different from other criminals and can't change, but a 2003
study found that sex offenders had a three-year recidivism rate of 5
percent for another sex crime; that compares with a 47 percent rate for
other criminals committing another crime. Finally, the law assumes sex
offenders will be less likely to commit another crime if they know
they're being watched. Again, the research is weak: In 2009, analysts at
the Washington State Institute for Public Policy looked at seven
studies on recidivism by registered sex offenders that had been
conducted since the first registry law was passed. Two showed that being
on a registry decreased recidivism, one showed an increase, three
indicated no effect, and one didn't measure the effect. "Though the
research differs somewhat from state to state and study to study,
overall it does not appear that registries have resulted in a
significant decline in sex crimes in general or in recidivistic sex
crimes more specifically," says Levenson, perhaps the leading researcher
on the effects of sex-offender registries.
Still, probably the biggest issue with registries is who gets on
them and what happens to those who do. As originally conceived in the
Wetterling Act, registries were to be accessible only to law
enforcement. It was raw public pressure, rather than criminological
research results, that turned those lists over to the public. And, like
many policies driven by public furor, the enabling laws overreached.
Today, most registries include offenders busted for a range of acts,
from offensive or vulgar behavior to heinous crimes. A 2007 Human Rights
Watch study reported that at least five states required those convicted
of offenses related to adult prostitution to be registered, 11 states
did the same for those guilty of public urination, and 25 did so for
public exhibitionism. "Most people assume that a registered sex offender
is someone who has sexually abused a child or engaged in a violent
sexual assault of an adult," noted the study's authors. Registries, that
is, create the impression that neighborhoods are thick with recidivist
sexual predators, making it impossible for parents to discern who
actually is dangerous.
Sex-offender registries also now include people who have committed no
sexual crime: Forty-one states put those convicted of falsely
imprisoning or kidnapping a minor on their sex-offender registries --
whether or not the crime was related to sex. Last March, for example,
the Wisconsin Supreme Court upheld a ruling that a 17-year-old boy who
forced another 17-year-old to go with him to collect a drug debt could
be made to register as a sex offender, though the crime involved nothing
sexual. The court majority argued for the wider net because
"Wisconsin's sex offender registration statute 'reflect[s] an intent to
protect the public and assist law enforcement.'" As the dissenting
justices noted, under that reasoning, convictions for violating most
provisions of Wisconsin law could trigger mandatory sex-offender
registration.
Sweeping everyone onto a single list produces some absurd outcomes.
Fred Berlin, who founded the Sexual Behaviors Consultation Unit at
Baltimore's Johns Hopkins Hospital, worked with a patient in his 80s who
had Alzheimer's and was living in a nursing home. The man also was on
the sex-offender registry for fondling a child in his family. Berlin
says the man's offense probably was related to the onset of his
dementia. But that didn't stop the nursing home's neighbors, who found
his name on the registry, from successfully demanding he be moved to
another facility.
A raft of research shows