Tag: registry harassment


  • The Registry Turns One Bad Decision Into a Lifetime of Punishment

    The sex offender registry was presented to the public as a measured response to serious sexual predation. In practice, it turns one bad decision into a lifetime of punishment. A single poor choice — even from years or decades ago — triggers lifetime public registration, internet shaming, residency restrictions, endless reporting requirements, and the constant…

  • How the Registry Creates More Crime Than It Prevents

    The sex offender registry was sold to the public as a tough, no-nonsense measure that would make communities safer by tracking and shaming dangerous offenders. Politicians promised it would deter crime and protect families. In reality, the registry has become a machine that creates more crime than it prevents. The government’s own data already shows…

  • Children as Young as 12 on the Registry — The System’s Hidden Targets

    The sex offender registry was sold to the public as a tool aimed at dangerous adult predators. Yet in practice, children as young as 12 — and in some states even younger — have been placed on the same public list used for the worst offenders. Their names, photos, addresses, and “offenses” are posted online…

  • The “Public Safety” Myth Behind the Sex Offender Registry

    Politicians and supporters of the sex offender registry have one go-to justification that they repeat like a mantra: “public safety.” Every expansion of the registry, every new reporting requirement, every residency ban, and every piece of public shaming is sold to the public as necessary to keep communities safe. The phrase has become so automatic…

  • The Sex Offender Registry Doesn’t Reduce Sex Crimes — DOJ Data Proves It

    The sex offender registry was sold to the American public as a simple, common-sense tool to protect children and communities from dangerous predators. Politicians and lawmakers promised it would reduce sex crimes by alerting the public and keeping tabs on “high-risk” individuals. Decades later, the hard data from the very agencies tasked with tracking crime…