A Federal Judge Says the DOJ's Sex Offender Registration Rules Violate Due Process by Requiring the Impossible
Justice Department regulations threaten people with prosecution for failing to register even when their state no longer requires it.

A rule that Attorney General Merrick Garland issued in 2021 notionally requires people to do things that are plainly impossible. If they have been convicted of a sex offense, they must register with their state, even when the state neither requires nor allows them to do so. They also must supply the state with all the information required by federal law, even when the state does not collect that information.
Under 18 USC 2250, someone who fails to meet those requirements and who travels outside his state can be charged with a federal crime punishable by up to 10 years in prison. At trial, the defendant has the burden of proving that he was unable to register "as required" by the federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA). That Kafkaesque situation, a federal judge in California ruled yesterday, violates the constitutional right to due process.
The Justice Department, U.S. District Judge Jesus G. Bernal writes, "has done exactly what is forbidden by the Constitution: 'to declare an individual guilty or presumptively guilty of a crime.' In the Rule, the Government disavows any obligation or burden 'to establish that a registration jurisdiction's procedures would have allowed a sex offender to register or keep the registration current in conformity with SORNA' before prosecuting the individual for failure to do what it acknowledges is impossible." That policy, Bernal says, "subverts the procedural safeguards deeply rooted in our history and constitutional framework."
The case, John Doe v. Department of Justice, illustrates the perverse consequences of the federal government's attempt to identify and track sex offenders through detailed registration requirements that often conflict with state law. The plaintiffs, who are represented by the Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF), include California residents whom the state no longer requires to register as sex offenders because it has certified their rehabilitation and expunged their records. The Justice Department said they had to register anyway. It also said they were obligated to supply and update information that California would not collect even if it allowed them to register.
"California requires registrants to provide their current address and a photocopy of an identification or driver's license to their local sheriff," PLF attorney Caleb Kruckenberg explained when the lawsuit was filed last year. "The new rule requires much more. A registrant must include his social security number, his 'remote communication identifiers' (e.g., internet usernames), his work or school information, and information concerning any international travel, passport and vehicle registration, or professional licenses."
The lead plaintiff, identified as John Doe in court documents, enlisted in the Marines at 17. Six years later, according to the original complaint, he had "a consensual but inappropriate encounter" with a 16-year-old girl that "did not involve sexual intercourse." Because the teenager was two years younger than California's age of consent, that encounter resulted in criminal charges. Doe pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor count of sexual battery, which required him to register as a sex offender. He was sentenced to three years of probation.
"Since then," the complaint says, "Mr. Doe has dedicated himself to making amends and becoming a model citizen. He expressed sincere remorse for his crime and voluntarily underwent psychological treatment. And equipped with a healthier perspective, he pursued higher education and has had a rewarding and productive career, became a loving husband and father, and became an active participant in his church. He has done everything one is supposed to do following a criminal conviction."
State courts officially recognized Doe's rehabilitation, clearing his 1996 conviction in 2002 and issuing a certificate recommending an unconditional pardon in 2012. He therefore "is no longer a convicted criminal and has not registered as a sex offender for more than a decade."
In the meantime, however, Congress approved SORNA. That 2006 law made a sex offender's failure to follow state registration requirements, already a crime under state law, a federal felony. Initially, that was not a problem for Doe, since by 2012 California had removed him from the state registry. But in December 2021, the Justice Department published SORNA regulations that required Doe, despite his expungement, to re-register with California, even though the state will not let him do that. The new rule said that "only pardons on the grounds of innocence terminate registration obligations under SORNA."
In addition to Doe, the plaintiffs who challenged that perplexing edict include two other California men who received certificates of rehabilitation and a current California registrant who worried that SORNA would require him to maintain his registration even when that is no longer feasible. The Alliance for Constitutional Sex Offense Laws (ACSOL) joined the lawsuit on behalf of members who face the same dilemma as Doe because their records have been expunged or because they have successfully sought relief from California's registration requirements. Other ACSOL members are still required to register under California law but are not able to supply all the information required by the Justice Department because the state does not collect it.
"For individuals like Plaintiffs, at least some of whom allege a remarkable record of rehabilitation and positive contributions to society following convictions in the distant past, the prospect of being returned to prison for up to 10 years due to circumstances beyond their control is a particularly disturbing one," Bernal notes. That threat, he says, is inconsistent with due process.
"May the Government attempt to imprison California registrants like Plaintiffs for up to a decade for failing to do the impossible, unless they, not the Government, prove impossibility?" Bernal writes. "This Court holds that the answer is no."
The government "presumes that Plaintiffs are guilty of a federal crime unless they prove their lack of culpability at trial," Bernal says. "While the legislative branch may define the elements of an offense, and the Constitution requires the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt those elements, '[i]t is not within the province of a legislature to declare an individual guilty or presumptively guilty of a crime.'"
Bernal notes that "whether a defendant registered 'as required,' and accordingly whether it was possible for him to do so, is an essential element of the offense" created by SORNA. The government "violates due process when it relieves itself of the burden of proving that essential element, i.e. that it was possible to register under state law," he writes. "Because the Rule, in conjunction with 18 U.S.C. § 2250, fails to provide the minimum procedural safeguards required by the Constitution, it violates due process."
Bernal therefore issued a preliminary injunction that bars the Justice Department from prosecuting a California resident under 18 USC 2250 unless it has first verified that "the individual was required to register under California law" or that the state "allows the individual to furnish" information required by SORNA. "With this order," the PLF notes, "the DOJ's SORNA rule is now unenforceable in California and could be vacated nationwide in the judge's final decision."
The plaintiffs also argued that the Justice Department's demand for "remote communication identifiers" has a chilling effect on their freedom of speech, which includes the right to anonymously express opinions online. Bernal concluded that there was not enough evidence at this stage of the case to conclude that the plaintiffs were likely to prevail on that claim. But he says the plaintiffs "raise a substantial question as to whether the Rule imposes an impermissible burden under the First Amendment."
Bernal says he is "concerned that the Rule does not provide any clear explanation of why and how the identifier disclosure provision advances a governmental interest." Judging from SORNA's goals, that requirement is aimed at preventing or detecting inappropriate contact with minors. But Bernal notes that the requirement on its face would apply even in contexts, such as posting or commenting on news stories, where it is "unlikely" that requiring the disclosure of usernames "would help the government protect children."
Another claim in the lawsuit has potentially broad implications. The plaintiffs argued that SORNA violates the separation of powers by improperly delegating legislative authority to the attorney general. The law effectively allows the Justice Department to define criminal offenses by issuing regulations that impose new registration requirements. The plaintiffs say that power runs afoul of the "nondelegation" doctrine.
Bernal thinks that claim is apt to fail under current precedents, which allow the executive branch to "fill in the details" of federal statutes as long as Congress provides an "intelligible principle" to guide that process. But he is sympathetic to complaints about the resulting proliferation of federal crimes tied to regulatory violations.
"The modern rule," Bernal notes, approves "delegations whereby the Executive or an independent agency defines by regulation what conduct will be criminal, so long as Congress makes the violation of regulations a criminal offense and fixes the punishment, and the regulations 'confin[e] themselves within the field covered by the statute.'" Explaining the consequences of that leeway, Bernal quotes Mike Chase's book How to Become a Federal Criminal: "Congress has passed thousands of federal criminal statutes and has allowed federal agencies…to make thousands upon thousands more rules that carry criminal penalties." Those rules "cover everything from how runny ketchup can be to…just how friendly you can get with a pirate."
Bernal notes that "no one, not even the Government, knows how many federal crimes there are," and "the federal government has stopped even trying" to count them. "This Court is sympathetic to arguments challenging such a state of affairs, which has eroded some of 'the most vital procedural protections of individual liberty found in our Constitution,'" he writes. "But the Court is also bound to follow controlling precedent, and until the Supreme Court provides a new directive, Plaintiffs are unlikely to succeed on the merits of their nondelegation claim."
There are signs that the current Court might be prepared to provide "a new directive" by reviving the long-moribund nondelegation doctrine. In the 2019 case Gundy v. United States, the justices considered 34 USC 20913, a SORNA provision that gives the attorney general broad authority to decide whether and which sex offenders convicted before the law was enacted are subject to its registration requirements. The petitioner, Herman Gundy, challenged the Justice Department's retroactive application of SORNA, arguing that the law violated the nondelegation doctrine.
A four-justice plurality avoided that issue by reading 34 USC 20913 as requiring the attorney general to impose registration requirements on previously convicted sex offenders "as soon as feasible." In a separate opinion, Justice Samuel Alito agreed with the result, but not because he embraced the plurality's narrow interpretation of Section 20913. Instead, he said upholding the law was consistent with the Court's longstanding reluctance to invoke the nondelegation doctrine. "Because I cannot say that the statute lacks a discernable standard that is adequate under the approach this Court has taken for many years," he wrote, "I vote to affirm."
But Alito also said that "if a majority of this Court were willing to reconsider the
approach we have taken for the past 84 years, I would support that effort." That caveat is potentially important given the current makeup of the Court. Three justices dissented in Gundy, saying it was clear that SORNA violated the separation of powers.
"The Constitution promises that only the people's elected representatives may adopt new federal laws restricting liberty," Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in an opinion joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Clarence Thomas. "Yet the statute before us scrambles that design. It purports to endow the nation's chief prosecutor with the power to write his own criminal code governing the lives of a half-million citizens. Yes, those affected are some of the least popular among us. But if a single executive branch official can write laws restricting the liberty of this group of persons, what does that mean for the next?"
Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who was confirmed in October 2018, did not participate in Gundy, and he has since been joined by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who replaced Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 2020. If Kavanaugh or Barrett is open to the reconsideration that Alito suggested in 2019, there may well now be a majority in favor of constraining the executive branch's authority to create crimes by administrative decree.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
A law enforcement official make demands that someone cannot possibly comply with?
Now I've heard everything!
I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I’d be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I’ve been doing..
HERE====)> http://WWW.NETPAYFAST.COM
It boggles my mind that people continue to take the charade of what we call “government” seriously.
Take the worst parts of bureaucratic corporate America, lower their IQ 50 points, give them guns and badges and the power to throw people in cages, and you have a government.
Government's core competence is violence, and yet government is competent at nothing, not even violence. That should tell people a whole lot about how well they do everything else, yet people continue to clap their hands.
I've made 64,000 Dollars so far this year working online and I'm a full time student. Im using an online business opportunity I heard about and I've made such great money. It's really user friendly and I'm just so happy that I found out about it. Heres what I do. 🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:)
More information→→→→→ https://WWW.DAILYPRO7.COM
Federal law really needs to catch up on things like this, marijuana drug classification, and hobby distilling. The Congress doesn’t care because none are really wedge issues any more.
When buttplug heard about lists of sex offenders, it made him want to get off.
He thought they were shopping lists.
I figured Groomer Jeffy would want to ‘weigh in’ on this subject.
Fat chance he’d want to miss out on this.
I see what you did there.
The discussion might get into some heavy issues.
The fattest chance of all.
At trial, the defendant has the burden of proving that he was unable to register "as required" by the federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA).
Regardless of what one may think of these persons, this is just wrong. The onus should be on the state to prove, not the defendant.
This needs to be the State's burden, not the accused. Imagine the fuckery possible for baseless arrests with full press coverage.
In this situation it should be an easy burden to prove for the feds if true since every state has a hardon for compiling lists of registered sex offenders. Not currently on the state's list, no problems.
At least in this case they chose to highlight someone fairly sympathetic. The offense appears mostly innocuous as far as it went and is long in the past.
Reason simping for child molesters, meanwhile
https://twitter.com/Breaking911/status/1616152487773208605?t=t-ugrXDDKO6LL2Y8tVDjBw&s=19
Siemens AG Chairman Jim Hagemann at WEF: "If a billion people stop eating meat, I tell you, it has a big impact. Not only does it have a big impact on the current food system, but it will also inspire innovation of food systems..."
[Video]
There ar probably a billion leftists worldwide. They should prove the strength of their convictions and commit mass suicide. If they won’t, fuck them.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jFqhjaGh30
This is clearly one of those states' rights cases where the states are right and the Feds are wrong.
In other news, I just finished two of messiest, greasiest, wonderfullest Reuben sandwiches and now I think I'm going to puke. I had to tamp the last couple of bites down with a stick, but those bastards were deeeeelicious. Damn, I make a good Reuben.
If there's ever a market for human foie gras, you can be a donor 🙂
RIP David Crosby
Apparently it was covid, and not the decades of drug abuse and liver damage.
The dude was 81--and everybody dies, sooner or later.
If you were looking for a way to earn some extra income every week... Look no more!!!! Here is a great opportunity for everyone to make $95/per hour by working in your free time on your computer from home... I've been doing this for 6 months now and last month i've earned my first five-figure paycheck ever!!!!
Learn more about it on following link.........>>> http://www.smartcash1.com
How far does the propaganda state go?
Antifa had declared an "autonomous zone" in a park south of Atlanta. Members organized on Twitter and threatened violence. The Georgia state patrol went in to clear the park. A dude with "they" pronouns shot a cop and was killed by police.
Seven were arrested and charged with domestic terrorism.
https://thepostmillennial.com/andy-ngo-reports-four-charged-with-domestic-terrorism-following-deadly-shooting-at-atlanta-autonomous-zone
This isn't in mainstream news at this point.
With all of the tens of millions our federal government spends across multiple federal agencies to monitor supposed terrorism by Americans on social media, they were all operating on identifiable accounts on social media platforms where they still call for retaliatory murders of police today.
No FBI were apparently present, even though this is a multistate organization and none of the terrorists involved are from in-state.
Antifa is just an idea. This never happened. It’s common knowledge that the only terrorists are straight, white, Christian cis-males.
Do you have certified membership forms of each arrested to prove it was antifa?
Thankfully, none of the antifa terrorists were armed with fire extinguishers.
Atlanta paper’s coverage.
https://www.ajc.com/neighborhoods/dekalb/gbi-charges-five-more-with-domestic-terrorism/M5GKMOE2HJHPHHWMTTUIW7B2A4/
Thankfully it wasn’t some rural white guy that saved the day or the AJC would have published that it was staged as some sort or hero complex fantasy.
"Teresa Yue Shen, 31, faces an additional charge of criminal trespass" so according to Jeff this means they're good to execute her anytime they feel like.
Real question: did the FBI contact Twitter about this group?
After Andy Ngo reported about their threats online, their Twitter page was taken down.
Did the FBI say anything about this violent group who had already taken control of public land with an armed group prior to today's action? Did they even know?
We recently learned that the FBI alone is spending at least $35 million per year monitoring US citizens on social media, supposedly for the purpose of stopping this very thing. Andy Ngo seems to be able to find these groups all by himself for the price of a box of Ramen and a bottle of mountain dew.
Is anyone in the press even going to ask about this?
Check back in two years and sarc will give us an update.
This reminds me of a court case I read about in China a couple hundred years ago. A woman was in trouble for testifying against her husband in court. Apparently it was illegal for members of a household to testify against its head, because that showed insufficient filial piety. However, it was also illegal for her to refuse to testify, because that showed contempt for the court. It was impossible for her to not break the law.
At the time I read about it I felt grateful that I lived under a legal system where the laws were not so contradictory that it was literally impossible to not break the law. But apparently I was wrong about that.
I am very impressed that you could read Chinese 200 years ago.
This situation -- being required to "register" even when there is no way to do it -- is comparable to problems with a firearms initiative approved by Oregon voters (by less than 1% margin) last November. Along with other stupid stuff, part of the bill requires "hands-on" training by police before taking possession of a firearm. Unfortunately, there is nowhere such "training" can take place, and nobody to provide it. Kafkaesque, indeed. Apparently, there are several tens of thousands of gun purchasers, who have bought and paid for their firearms, passed a background check, but are still unable to take possession of them. Note: the number of folks involved may be exaggerated, since the source isn't necessarily reliable. On the other hand, the actual number doesn't matter.
Luckily, most of the the bill is on hold due to lawsuits filed in both State and Federal courts.
This is why I'm glad Merrick Garland is not a SCOTUS justice. Obama tried to appoint this clown to appease Moscow Mitch and the right wing nuts. And Garland is wasiting his time on pandering to the pearl-clutching Karens and QTards while failing to prosecute REAL crimes.
Real crimes like 22 year old men getting sexual with 11 year old children?
I earned $50000 last month by the use of operating on-line most effective for five to eight hours on my pc and this was so that i in my opinion could not accept as authentic with earlier than running in this website. if you too want toclean earn this type of huge coins then come and be a part of us. do this internet-website on line .
More information→→→→→ https://WWW.DAILYPRO7.COM
I can't imagine what is like to be such a loser like you, spending a month reading articles just in hopes I make a comment just to make such a weak, pathetic comment like this. You should just commit seppuku and do the world a favor.
This sounds like the kind of thing SORNA was passed to prevent.
Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit.. ???? AND GOOD LUCK.:)
https://WWW.APPRICHS.com
I am making a good salary from home $6580-$7065/week , which is amazing under a year ago I was jobless in a horrible economy. I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now it’s my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:)
Here is I started.……......>> http://WWW.SALARYBEZ.COM
Oops--I accidentally flagged your comment.
A thousand pardons.