No evidence registries increase public safety

By NOAH BERLATSKY . . . “He is a lifetime sex registrant. That doesn’t expire. Just like what he did to me doesn’t expire, doesn’t just go away after a set number of years.” In a statement released to Buzzfeed, the victim of rapist Brock Turner found a small sliver of justice in the fact that Turner, a former Stanford student, would have to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life, just as she would have to live with the effects of the assault for the rest of hers.

Turner was only sentenced to six months in jail; the leniency of the sentence has led to an effort to recall the judge. Being placed on a list seems like a small punishment in comparison to a prison term. But sex offender registries were never meant to be a punishment—and since they were introduced in the mid-1990s, they have proven to be both ineffective and often unjust.

The original goal of registries was not to provide restitution, but to protect communities. Reading the victim’s statement, it’s easy to see why sex offender registries seem like a reasonable and necessary response to crimes like Turner’s. Following a party, Turner dragged the victim behind a dumpster and penetrated her with his fingers. He was only stopped when two Swedish students physically chased him away, and then captured him. In response to his conviction, he has blamed a culture of drinking and partying on campus, rather than taking responsibility for his own violence.

Given the horrific nature of his actions, and his effort to shift blame, some might argue there’s a risk he could victimize others. Placing him on the sex offender registry, in theory, should warn communities of a potential threat. As one recent pro-registry editorial argued, “the rights of the victims, and the protection thereof, outweigh any perceived infringement of the rights of the criminals.”

The truth, though, is that there’s very little evidence that sex offender registries increase safety in any material way. A 2014 study conducted by Purdue University economics professor Jillian B. Carr of people on the North Carolina sex offender registry found that being on the registry had no effect on recidivism. That’s consistent with a 2007 report by Human Rights Watch, which looked at various studies and concluded that sex offender registries did little to prevent sexual violence. (Read the rest of the article online at Quartz)

One thought on “No evidence registries increase public safety

  • June 29, 2016 at 8:53 am
    Permalink

    The Supreme Court recently made a momentous decision concerning abortion rights for women that eased the restraints placed against them unlawfully concerning the constitutional right for women to have an abortion. They decided that the “restraint” of not having an ambulatory style facility for them to go to “burdened their right to” a constitutional right to have an abortion. The pro-lifers used the tactic of introducing a law that effectively shut down these facilities for women because of the lack of an ambulatory care style of building which would facilitate emergent care during a surgical procedure. Women as citizens have a constitutional right, free from burden, to seek out and have an abortion. You could argue that the law preventing them from having an abortion because of the restraints placed upon the facilities served as a form of punishment for seeking out such a procedure. We, as Americans have a constitutional right to freedom of speech. We have a constitutional right to live where we want or not have restrictions placed upon us on where we can visit. I think we should have a constitutional right to be employed where we want to work based upon our merits and accomplishments and our skills and not what mistakes we, and we ALL have, made in the past. The laws enacted against people on the registry “burden our rights” to social media. they “burden our right” to live or visit where we want. The laws enacted serve as a form of post-offense and retroactive punishment against us as it “burdens our rights”. I cannot see anything more transparent or black and white in the efforts to punish now law-abiding citizens disguised as an effort to protect children.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Bat Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *