SC: Victory in the South Carolina Senate!
Fellow Warriors for Justice,
It is with great pleasure that I send this report tonight. Late this afternoon, the Senate passed our registry reform bill by a vote of 42 to 0! While the bill certainly isn’t perfect, it is a great step forward, and for the first time, will offer registrants a possible path off the registry. I was astounded at how smoothly it went, particularly after enduring almost two hours of debate on a bill prohibiting transgender students from participation in athletic leagues for their adopted gender. Kudos to Sen. Brad Hutto from Orangeburg for his excellent presentation of the bill, as well as his efforts to bring it to fruition.
In the end, the two original bills that had been introduced got dropped, but the contents were incorporated by amendment into another bill that had already passed the House and made it to the Senate. Now the bill must go back to the House for acceptance of the amendment. With only four days left for processing bills in the legislative session, that should now happen the beginning of next week, unless they add it to the House calendar during their floor session tomorrow.
Barring any significant amendment in the House, which probably can’t happen at this point, here is what the bill contains. First, it codifies the definitions of the registry tiers, assigning each registrable offense to a tier. In formulating these assignments, several offenses are moving down one tier from the current assignments that are being used by SLED. It is likely that several thousand people will move to a lower tier once these are implemented. Now, no one under 12 years old can be placed on the registry and any 13 or 14 year-old will be put on only if the Family Court judge handling their case determines that they pose a significant risk. I haven’t seen the text of the amendment yet, but I believe that we finally achieved the long sought-after judicial discretion on registration of any juvenile processed by the Family Court.
Now, the part that many of you have been waiting for – everyone has the possibility of being removed from the registry after a tier-dependent time period if they meet the following conditions: offense-free for the duration of the time, completed any sentence and supervision successfully, completed any required treatment program successfully. For Tier 1 registrants, the time period is 15 years, for Tier II, 20 years, and for Tier III, 30 years. For Tier I and Tier II, SLED will trigger the removal process automatically, but they will notify any victims and the Solicitor of the convicting county, who can oppose the de-registration with cause. That will cause the matter to become a court petition, and both sides will be able to present any evidence for or against removal. The judge will determine, by the preponderance of the evidence, whether the person is of a high enough risk to warrant continued registration. All Tier III registrants will have to go through the court process.
So, the bill to watch is H 4075. I expect the House to add it to their calendar early in tomorrow’s session, which starts at 10 a.m. In addition to tomorrow’s session, I expect them to meet Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday next week. That’s the end, without some special modifications of the rules. If you want to watch the House in action, you can find their video broadcasts at https://scstatehouse.gov. Click on the “House” link in the Chamber Video box at the upper left part of the page. And by all means, call and/or email your own representatives ASAP, to ask for their support for H 4075! Let’s hope and pray that the path through the House is as smooth as it was in the Senate today.
Thank you for your interest and support.
Don Thurber
NARSOL State Advocate
SCRSOL Legislative Director
https://www.wspa.com/news/state-news/sled-begins-receiving-applications-for-sex-offenders-to-get-off-south-carolina-registry/amp/
Do you know if registrants who were juveniles get the process automatically started by SLED/they have to register for a shorter time before the process starts?
Asking as a juvenile registrant in SC. My info isn’t public, but I do have to wear an ankle monitor while I have to register.
BW
Dang man. It is hard enough being on the registry as an adult. If I was on it when I was a teen, I am not sure I would have had the strength to get through it.
Having said that, stay strong and someday something good will come. Don’t give up, they can only take our joy if we allow them to.
It isn’t truly a victory unless it is actually law.
Speakin of law, can FAC summarize any major changes to the laws in FL? Did that stupid “part of a day” definition pass?
I’d like to update my book info.
That is great news. In Florida, if you even make it to the point of petitioning to get off, you have to use a lawyer and those lawyers are not cheap. For those of us who are poor and or do not work, that is almost impossible. And if you lose, even if you got another shot at it later, where will that money come from.
Having said that, one day we all pray or daydream about it being our turn to get a path to justice. Not sure if Florida is in the same court system as South Carolina. I can never find the maps that show what states share a court with Florida.
Finally, the fact that it was a 42-0 in favor of reform is un-heard of. Think of the 2nd chances at life if all of us were just granted ONE chance to prove ourselves. 🙁
Woulda, coulda, Shoulda
Again congrats on the win, I am truly happy that at least some can finally start life anew.
I am ready to petition to get off here in florida and have no clue where to start. Never been on a public list until i came here and ended up staying because of it. It was federal and 25 years of a good life off any registry until i ended up here. Got taken in for a few hours but the state itself filed a no information and did nothing. Have it listed on paper as no residency restrictions either.
Just need some direction as to where to start
If you have been arrested in the last 25 years in Fl, the state will tell you that you don’t qualify for removal. But if your going to file for removal in Fl your gonna need abiut 10k for a lawyer. Speaking from expierence here. I’d try to find an attourney that has connections in the district your going to have to file the petition in.
Got some no information filed ( means they did not pursue any case) for a ftr but again never went to court they literally on their own filed a no information and no charges. Odd situation but no charges filed at all. Was never on a public registry (no. Published lvl 1 and only because after a few years they came up with an actual level thing) was federal no time and tines out of my home state anyway. Just a weird ride here in fl….
JM- 20 or 25 years from what?
End of all sanctions it was 1996.
Having just got off the registry in January I can tell you that it is more likely you will be removed from it today than you would have been even a year ago. Yes it is not cheap, but if you somehow find the money to pay an attorney (FAC knows a good one) then there is a much higher chance your petition for removal will succeed. So
for those of you who would meet the requirements for removal, after 20 or 25 years, there is now precedent in Florida for hope.
First off, congratulations on removal from the registry and “thank you” for remaining a part of this community. May I ask if you the attorney that came via a recommendation from FAC? We are at the point where this is going to be an option and want to hire someone with experience, and more importantly, success in this area.
Cherokee, you wrote: “. I can never find the maps that show what states share a court with Florida.” If you mean the federal appellate court system, the only states that are shared are Georgia and Alabama. Here’s a link that has a map for anyone who interested:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_courts_of_appeals
Just sayin
yes thanks. I guess I was wanting to see if the SC win could be under our district as well. Some wins in another state can affect us as well.
Thanks for sharing
CherokeeJack:
If you’re talking about federal circuits, Florida is in the 11th along with Georgia and Alabama. Not sure which one South Carolina is in (maybe the 4th), but it’s not the same as Florida.