Senator Westerfield on Criminal Justice Reform: Solution Lies in “Data and Not the Emotions”

Kentucky Senator Westerfield says that lawmakers “need to rely on data to form big-picture policy decisions instead of forming policy based on knee-jerk reactions.”  He pointed out that we cannot keep making these same knee-jerk decisions that have made us the country with the highest incarceration rate in the world.  These bad decisions have cost our society a lot of

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Sex Offenders: Fear vs. Fact on Halloween By Derek W. Logue

Media fearmongering over “Registered Sex Offenders” in the community has become an annual Halloween tradition in the same way as razor blades and poison in candy. Wendy Murphy (who famously stated she “never met a false rape claim” during the Duke Lacrosse case) declared in the Boston Herald that “Halloween is like Christmas for sex offenders,” and local news outlets

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Sheriff’s office gives registrants tips on how to not fall victim to phone scams that target them

FAC continues to hear from people who have been victims of scams simply because they are forced to have their personal information on a public registry.  There is a sheriff’s office that wants registrants to know tips to protect themselves from scams TIPS: Scammers pretend to be someone you trust. Don’t send money or give out personal information for unexpected

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Here we go again: “He is going to offend again; it is only a matter of time.”

Some people are determined to let words flow from their mouths that are contrary to the actual facts.  Here are the facts: An individual that committed a past sex offense has opened a tattoo shop in Loogootee, Indiana. Because it is relatively close to a preschool, a Ms. Wagoner wants the tattoo shop to relocate. Indiana does not restrict a

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CTMirror calls out Patch

CTMirror is correct in calling out Patch.com for its Halloween fear-mongering practice of printing personal information for people who have a past sex offense.  Patch.com never publishes such information for released murders, armed robbers, etc. CTMirror tells it like it is:  “…the public mapping of sex offenders in this way not only fails to serve any salutary purpose but also

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The Dobbs Wire: Five minutes!

The Dobbs Wire:  Do we need the sex offense registry?  Counting registrants, family members and significant others, the number of people directly impacted by sex offense registration laws in the U.S. is estimated at several million.  Every state has had a registry for at least 25 years and politicians continually push for  harsher registration requirements.  These are all good reasons

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Opinion piece from Boulder, CO: “Forward thinking on encampments”

Lately, Colorado has been having a conversation on how the registry needs to be changed using research-based policies, and now we see that Boulder is attempting to look not only at solutions for the homeless but have included people on the registry in the discussion. Yes, registrants are not eligible for housing assistance or supportive housing, but I am focusing

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