ACLU Files Lawsuit Challenging Residency Restriction of Sex Offenders
Friday, October 30, 2015
The ACLU of Rhode Island has filed a class action lawsuit to challenge the constitutionality of a newly enacted law which makes it a crime for certain sex offenders to reside within 1,000 feet of as school.
Read a Copy of the Complaint Here
The suit was filed in U.S. District Court by ACLU of RI cooperating attorneys Lynette Labinger and John Macdonald and argues that residency probation placed on all level three sex offenders is unconstitutionally vague, violates due process, retroactively punishes those who have completed their sentences, and interferes with "liberty and privacy while bearing no rational relationship to purpose."
“We believe that this law is unconstitutional on its face and deeply flawed from a public safety standpoint. Numerous empirical studies have consistently shown that these residency restrictions do not prevent crimes but simply increase homelessness and lesson public safety," said Attorney Macdonald.
GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLASTAs part of the lawsuit, the ACLU has requested a restraining order to halt the law's "inconsistent" and "arbitrary" implementation before any more individuals are moved from their homes.
ACLU is Not Alone
Joining the ACLU in the announcement of the lawsuit were the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless, OpenDoors, and House of Hope CDC.
“This new law not only imposes a stronger barrier to overcome to help homeless shelter residents obtain housing, but threatens to increase the number of shelter residents by eliminating the stable housing they have and causing them to enter an already overcrowded homeless shelter system," said Jim Ryczek, executive director of RICH.
The law was approved by the Rhode Island General Assembly in June and signed into law by Governor Gina Raimondo. Previously, level three sex offenders were prohibited from living within 300 feet of a school.
“People affected are being forced out of their apartments; some are homeowners, have families, are sick, disabled, and some live in nursing homes. Some are family caretakers. They have served the sentence imposed for their crimes and are known to law enforcement due to sex offender registry laws. This law will further destabilize this population," said Sol Rodriguez, executive director of OpenDoors.
Editor's note: A previous version had that the Coalition for the Homeless, Open Doors, and House of Hope joined ACLU in filing the suit. The updated story reflects that they were on hand to join the ACLU for the announcment, as only the ACLU filed the suit.
Related Slideshow: Rhode Island Communities with the Most Sex Offenders
The State of Rhode Island Parole Board and Sex Offender Community Notification Unit provides a searchable online database of Level 2 and Level 3 sex offenders, which are "moderate risk" offender and "high risk" offenders, searchable by city and town, zip code, or offender level. Not all towns in the state have registered sex offenders in the database.
In addition, categories include "whereabouts unknown", "moved out of state", "incarcerated out of state", "deported", and "deceased."
Below are the sex offenders registered on the site as of November 2013, ranked accoring to offenders per capita in each community -- which can change daily. The population numbers are taken from Rhode Island DLT 2011 estimates.
Search the site for names, and addresses, here.
Related Articles
- NEW: ACLU Calls for Investigation of Cranston Police Dept. Practices
- TONIGHT: Fund for Community Progress Honors GoLocalProv + ACLU
- NEW: ACLU Files Suit Over Medical Marijuana Discrimination
- NEW: ACLU Sues Providence Police for Violation at Raimondo Fundraiser
- NEW: RI ACLU Announces Racial Disparities Increasing During Motor Vehicle Stops
- RI ACLU Finds Suspension Discrepancy for Black vs. White Students
- NEW: ACLU, Advocacy Groups Battle RIDE Over RI NECAP Scores
- NEW: Rhode Island ACLU Blasts Board of Education NECAP Vote
- NEW: RI ACLU Announces Third Lawsuit Against RI Education Board
- NEW: RI ACLU Files New Motion Against Board of Education
- ACLU: Dept of Ed Admits NECAP Does Not Measure College Readiness
- ACLU Questions Kennedy Plaza Security System
- Racial Disparities Report by RI ACLU Called “Extraordinary” by Community Leaders
- RI ACLU Asks Fung for Full Report on Cranston Police Dept. Investigation
- NEW: Providence Sued by ACLU Over Musician’s Ability to Play in Public
- RI ACLU Asks Cranston City Council to Further Investigate Police Practices
- Homeland Security Test at T.F. Green Opposed by RI ACLU
- NEW: RI ACLU Defends Sex Offenders Against Law Forcing Them to Move
- ACLU of RI Supports Supreme Court Decision On Hotels Giving Police Guest Lists
- ACLU of RI Files Lawsuit That Challenges 106-Year-Old Statute
- ACLU Report: RI Elementary Schools Promote Gender Stereotypes
- ACLU Blasts Motel 6 Agreement To Share Guest List With Warwick PD
- NEW: RI ACLU Questions “Superficial” Motel 6 Guest List Change
- New ACLU Report: Racial Disparities In RI School Suspensions Highest in Decade
- NEW: RI ACLU “Deeply Troubled” by Pawtucket Protests and Arrests