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HISTORY OF MEGAN'S
LAW
Ohio's Sex Offender
Registration and Notification law (SORN) is also administered within the
Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation's (BCI&I)
Identification Division.
"Megan's
Law" was the first of these types of statutes. It was passed
by the New Jersey Legislature in 1994. The law was named after
7-year-old Megan Kanka, who was abducted, raped, and murdered by an
ex-convict who had two prior convictions for sex crimes against young
girls. All 50 states now have sex offender registration laws; 49 -
including Ohio - require some form of notification.
The Ohio Version of
Megan's Law (SORN) was passed as House Bill 180 in 1996, and went into
effect in two stages in 1997. Beginning January 1, 1997, all sex
offenders, including those already incarcerated, were required to be
classified by their individual sentencing judges into one of three
categories, each of which dictates the registration and notification
requirements to which the offender is subject. From July 1 of that
year forward, all convicted sex offenders are subject to the
registration requirements of the law. Sexual predators and some
habitual sex offenders are subject to the notification aspects.
All sex offenders
are required to register with the sheriff of the county in which they
reside within seven days of release from prison or moving to a new
county.
The law requires
information about certain sexual offenders to be distributed to people
who are potentially at risk. Upon sentencing, the trial judge
places sex offenders into one of three categories - sexual predator,
habitual sex offender, of sexually oriented offender. In the more
serious circumstances, community notification is made.
Among the entities
that are to be notified are: school superintendents, police
chiefs, neighbors (defined as those immediately adjacent to the
offender's property, or in the case of apartment dwellers, neighbors
sharing common hallway), as well as day care operators and others in the
area.
Offenders must
provide the county sheriff with their name and address, declare their
classification, declare the offense(s) for which they were convicted,
and be finger-printed. A federal grant awarded in 1999 will create
an electronic SORN network. Workstations will be provided to each
county sheriff and Ohio prison to facilitate the registration and
notification of sex offenders.
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