How SCOTUS Promoted Pernicious Myths About Sex Offender Registries
Twenty years ago, the justices deemed registration nonpunitive, accepting unsubstantiated assumptions about its benefits and blithely dismissing its costs.

This Sunday marks the 20th anniversary of Smith v. Doe, a Supreme Court decision that approved the retroactive application of Alaska's sex offender registry, deeming it preventive rather than punitive. That ruling helped propagate several pernicious myths underlying a policy that every state has adopted without regard to its justice or effectiveness.
Writing for the majority in Smith, Justice Anthony Kennedy took it for granted that collecting and disseminating information about people convicted of sex offenses made sense as a public safety measure. But that premise was always doubtful.
The vast majority of sexual assaults, especially against children, are committed by relatives, friends, or acquaintances, and the perpetrators typically do not have prior sex-offense convictions. That means they would not show up on a registry even if someone bothered to check.
It is therefore not surprising that research finds little evidence to support Kennedy's assumption that publicly accessible registries protect potential victims. Summarizing the evidence in a 2016 National Affairs article, Eli Lehrer noted that "virtually no well-controlled study shows any quantifiable benefit from the practice of notifying communities of sex offenders living in their midst."
To reinforce the logic of registries, Kennedy averred that "the risk of recidivism posed by sex offenders is 'frightening and high.'" He was quoting his own opinion in an earlier case, which in turn relied on an unsubstantiated estimate from a source who has publicly and repeatedly disavowed it.
According to Kennedy's paraphrase, "the rate of recidivism of untreated offenders has been estimated to be as high as 80%." By contrast, a 2003 Bureau of Justice Statistics study found that the three-year recidivism rate for sex offenders was 3.5 percent.
Studies covering longer periods find higher recidivism rates but still nothing remotely like 80 percent, even for high-risk offenders. Despite its empirical emptiness, Kennedy's "frightening and high" claim has been quoted again and again in legal briefs and judicial opinions across the country.
Although registries are ostensibly based on the risk of recidivism, they apply indiscriminately to broad classes of people, even when there is little reason to think they pose an ongoing danger. Dissenting in Smith, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted that Alaska's law "applies to all convicted sex offenders, without regard to their future dangerousness."
One of the men who challenged Alaska's law, Ginsburg pointed out, "successfully completed a treatment program" and "gained early release on supervised probation in part because of his compliance with the program's requirements and his apparent low risk of reoffense." A court determined that "he had been successfully rehabilitated," based partly on "psychiatric evaluations" indicating that he had "a very low risk of re-offending" and was "not a pedophile."
That man nevertheless was required to renew his registration four times a year for the rest of his life. The online registry included his name, photograph, criminal record, address, physical description, date of birth, and place of employment, along with the license plate numbers of vehicles he used.
Kennedy minimized the consequences of publicly branding people as presumptively dangerous sex offenders, calling it "less harsh" than revocation of a professional license. But as Justice John Paul Stevens noted in his dissent, there was "significant evidence of onerous practical effects of being listed on a sex offender registry," ranging from "public shunning, picketing, press vigils, ostracism, loss of employment, and eviction" to "threats of violence, physical attacks, and arson."
Those predictable costs, combined with legal restrictions on where registrants may live and which locations they may visit, undermine rehabilitation and continue to punish registrants long after they have completed their sentences. That is why several state and federal courts have concluded, contrary to what the Supreme Court said in Smith, that registration schemes are punitive in effect.
Activists who oppose registration will call attention to that reality during a vigil at the Supreme Court on Tuesday morning. They are clearly right in arguing that the illusory benefits of public registries cannot justify the burdens they impose.
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Why not expand these registries to include misdemeanor domestic violence?
This is the problem with veering away from basic principles. When a sex offender has served his time (incl. probation) etc., he or she is an ordinary citizen just like anyone else. Ordinary citizens don't have to register with the cops; ordinary citizens aren't kept from living where they choose, etc. etc. There are some restrictions (voting, but that's expressly allowed in the Constitution) and guns (traditional), but that's about it (other than restriction on privileges, such as licensing). Serious restrictions on one's freedom is punishment, no matter what the motive.
This isn't hard.
Too many believe serving time, including early release for 'good' behavior, is "Justice". I disagree on behalf of every sex offender's victim(s). If the victim(s) wishes to forgive and forget after 'time served', that's a valid form of restitution. If they don't, there needs to be some sort of compensation paid by the convicted to their victims. It still won't 'be enough' in many cases, but there should be an accounting for ensuring the victims of crimes are made whole again as much as possible.
Another pro-MAP article on Reason, how shocking. If you want to argue retroactive application is wrong, the registry is applied too broadly or the restrictions are too onerous to comply with then fine but don't insult our intelligence with your pedo advocacy.
Shorter form of the post above: "My mind is made up, don't confuse me with the facts."
MAPs are far more common than we would like to admit.
Read this article by Jack Marshall.
http://ethicsalarms.com/2016/05/02/yecchh-the-daily-caller-and-its-commenters-cheer-on-sexual-predator-teachers/
I don't think that's fair. There are plenty of reasons to oppose these registries other than because you like pedophiles. Or at least, let's see some evidence that the policies have actually protected any children.
If someone is so dangerous that they can't be trusted to live near children, then keep them locked up. Otherwise let them get on with their lives. And what does it actually accomplish? Restrictions on residency aren't going to prevent someone from going to where children congregate.
The argument is that it would make it harder.
Not a very strong argument without any evidence to back it up. Have we learned nothing from covid policies? That something seems like it should work is no sound basis for policy.
The registries may just be there to make people feel better and have no real positive effect. In that case, they are counterproductive as they give people a false sense of security.
Again, if someone is so dangerous that they can't be allowed near children, they should stay locked up.
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Civil Ex Post Facto laws are only constitutional because the US Supreme Court decided in 1798 that Article I, Section 9, Clause 3 (No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed) only applied to criminal law. Same for Article I, Section 10 (no State shall pass any ex post facto Law). One can appreciate the humor in this as the constitution was only 9 years old at this time and the people who wrote it were still alive. They Court didn't need to wonder if that is what the founder intended, they could have walked down the street and asked them.
SORNA accomplishes none of its stated goals and even if one could argue it was not punishment when it started (it was), State legislatures have added more onerous requirements to it making it punishment now without a doubt. Laws are passed every day at the State and even Local level (county and city) based on nothing more than getting headlines and re-election mailer material. Not a single new law is based on fact or study that passing it will make one more child safe in exchange for violating registrants constitutional rights. Nor at any time, just like SORNA itself, are these laws reviewed by those law making bodies to ensure the produce the result promised.
The registry needs to be ABOLISHED. Not just reformed. ABOLISHED.
Most sex crimes occur at home by someone the victim knows, and perhaps more importantly, by someone not currently listed on the public registry. But many know that. They just see it as punishment.
Six SCOTUS justices denied what we all know to be true. The registry is indeed punitive! John "Price Club" Roberts and Clarence Thomas were among them.
Now, cue my personal stalker and the QAnon followers false claiming we're "grooming" or "normalizing pedophilia" in 3...2...1...
Doesn't take much to groom an 11-year-old child or normalize French kissing the kid, does it Derek?