“Sex-offender ghettos”
The title of this post is the headline on this effective article from my local Columbus Dispatch discussing the reality of sex offender residency restrictions in Ohio. The article’s subtitle highlights its main theme: “Get-tough laws force predators to move but do little to make kids safer.” Here are some snippets from a long article that should be read in full:
Ohio is among 22 states with laws restricting where sex offenders may live. A 2003 law prohibits sex offenders from living within 1,000 feet of schools, and a new state law effective July 1 adds preschools and day cares.
Newark is among nine central Ohio communities with additional restrictions. There, sex offenders may not live within 1,000 feet of city parks and the municipal swimming pool, either. The Licking County seat is among a growing number of communities in central Ohio and across the state that have exceeded state law in the past two years by approving local ordinances further restricting where registered sex offenders may live.
One visible consequence is that when sex offenders cannot live in some places, they cluster in others. Newark resident Elizabeth Chandler lives in an enclave of registered sex offenders in a neighborhood north of downtown. Clinton Street, in particular, has become something of a sex-offenders row. They are strung all along the street, and one homeless sex offender even listed his address as beneath a Clinton Street bridge. As the mother of three young girls, Chandler tries to keep track of the registered sex offenders living in her neighborhood. It’s difficult. More keep moving in….
Last month, a federal judge ruled that the Ohio residence-restriction law could not be applied retroactively to a sex offender whose crime preceded the law’s effective date of July 31, 2003. A sex-offender homeowner has filed the constitutional challenge that the Ohio Supreme Court will hear this week. Both cases turn on the same issue: Does the state constitution permit the retroactive application of residence restrictions to pre-2003 sex offenders?
The state Supreme Court case is significant because it’s the first time the high court has agreed to address the constitutionality of any aspect of the state’s residence-restriction law, said David A. Singleton, executive director of the Ohio Justice and Policy Center. “This will be a landmark case, however it turns out,” he said.
Some related posts on sex offender residency restrictions: