Megan's Law - Information on Registered Sex Offenders
A new California law, Assembly
Bill 488 (Nicole Parra), sponsored by the Attorney General now
provides the public with Internet access to detailed information
on registered sex offenders.
This expanded access allows the
public for the first time to use their personal computers to
view information on sex offenders required to register with
local law enforcement under California's Megan's Law. Previously,
the information was available only by personally visiting police
stations and sheriff offices or by calling a 900 toll-number.
The new law was given final passage by the Legislature on August
24, 2004 and signed by the Governor on September 24, 2004.
For more than 50 years, California
has required sex offenders to register with their local law
enforcement agencies. However, information on the whereabouts
of these sex offenders was not available to the public until
the implementation of the Child Molester Identification Line
in July 1995. The information available was further expanded
by California's Megan's Law in 1996 (Chapter 908, Stats. of
1996).
California's Megan's Law provides
the public with certain information on the whereabouts of sex
offenders so that members of our local communities may protect
themselves and their children. Megan's Law is named after seven-year-old
Megan Kanka, a New Jersey girl who was raped and killed by a
known child molester who had moved across the street from the
family without their knowledge. In the wake of the tragedy,
the Kankas sought to have local communities warned about sex
offenders in the area. All states now have a form of Megan's
Law.
The law is not intended to
punish the offender and specifically prohibits using the information
to harass or commit any crime against an offender.
Visit the California Department of Justice's Internet
web site, which lists designated registered sex offenders
in California. (http://www.meganslaw.ca.gov)