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SEX OFFENDER
RESIDENCY AND TRAVEL RESTRICTION CASE DISMISSED
The
case of Doe
v. Parish was dismissed under a mutual agreement by both
plaintiffs and defendants during February of 2008. The
lawsuit had been handled by the ACLU of Oklahoma in the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma since September
of 2006.
The ACLU challenged the
enforcement and constitutionality of sex offender residential
restrictions in Tulsa on behalf of four unidentified men and one unidentified
woman. As registered sex offenders, they challenged revised
state statutes that would have rendered almost all of Tulsa off-limits
for them to live, work, attend church or travel. Defendants in
the case included officials with the Department of Corrections,
Governor Brad Henry, Attorney General Drew Edmondson, the Tulsa
County District Attorney, the Tulsa County Sheriff and the Tulsa
Police Chief.
Legislation enacted during the 2006 session of the Oklahoma
Legislature mandated a “zone of safety” around elementary,
junior high and high schools; licensed child care facilities;
playgrounds; and parks. The revision in state law prohibited any
person subject to the sex offender registry from being within
300 feet of a “zone of safety,” severely limited where sex
offenders could live and established punishments. Although several
of the plaintiffs had resided in their homes for a
substantial number of years, they were informed during 2006 for
the first time that they were in violation of the “zone of
safety” and were required to move or would face arrest and prosecution for a
felony.
Various problems with the new restrictions were addressed by the
lawsuit. The complaint in the case asserted that only a small
percentage of urban areas in the state would be available for
the plaintiffs to live, work or travel. In addition, locating
available rural housing that was permissible under the law would
be difficult, if not impossible, for the plaintiffs. Many people
on the sex offender registry would be forced to sleep on the
streets, in their cars, in tents or in trailers in the woods.
The statutes in question applied to everyone subject to the sex
offender registry without any exceptions due to illness,
advanced age, financial hardship or disability. Furthermore, the
statutes did not provide for an individualized determination to
distinguish between people on the registry who were dangerous and
those who were not. By imposing punishment without an
individualized showing of dangerousness or opportunity for an
exemption, the statutes deprived the plaintiffs of their property
and livelihood without due process of law.
Following the filing of the Doe v. Parish lawsuit, the
Oklahoma Legislature further revised the sex offender
residential restrictions during its 2007 session. The
amended restrictions provided more discretion to the defendants
in enforcement and would not make it virtually impossible for
sex offenders to find places to live. Therefore, the
ACLU's clients in the litigation were not forced to move, and
the plaintiffs agreed with the defendants to dismiss the case. |