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Federal Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006

The Adam Walsh Child Protection Act (AWA) of 2006 was signed into law on July 27, 2006. Section 124 of the AWA specifically requires that all jurisdictions implement the SORNA requirements within 3 years: July 27, 2009. Section 125(a) allows for a 10 percent Bryne Justice Assistance Grant fund reduction for any state, the District of Columbia, or territory that fails to substantially implement the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA - Title 1 of the AWA). Failure to substantially implement will be considered on an individual basis by the Attorney General. Section 124(b) provides for the Attorney General to authorize up to two 1-year extensions of the implementation deadline. Requests for extensions will be considered on a case by case basis.
 
According to §126(a) of the AWA, the Attorney General shall establish and implement a Sex Offender Management program (SOMA) under which the Attorney General may award a grant to a jurisdiction to offset the costs of implementing SORNA. Section 126(c) allows for bonus payments to states, the District of Columbia, territories, and federally recognized Indian Tribes that promptly comply and implement the SORNA standards. The bonus award shall be 10 percent of the total received by the jurisdiction under SOMA program for the preceding fiscal year if the implementation is not later than July 27, 2007 or 5 percent if the implementation is not later than July 27, 2008.
 

Proposed Guidelines

Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and Tracking (SMART)

 

Frequently Asked Questions: The Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA) Proposed Guidelines 

 

Title I: Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act

Title I establishes the National Sex Offender Registry. 
 
The national registry will include the following for each sex offender:
   • name
   • social security number
   • address
   • employment
   • vehicle – license plate and description
   • driver’s license
   • identification information – physical description
   • fingerprints
   • a DNA sample
   • complete criminal history
   • a recent photo
   • name and address of any place the offender will be a student
 
The public will not have access to the detailed National Sex Offender Registry; instead, a national public website will be available that will include relevant information about sex offenders. The public website will permit retrieval of information by a single query for any given zip code or geographic radius. In addition to a central national public website, each individual jurisdiction is required to establish its own Internet registry, which shall be accessible to the public.
 
The Act mandates that a sex offender shall register and keep the registration current in each jurisdiction where he resides, is an employee, and is a student. Initial registration shall be completed in the jurisdiction of conviction, and any subsequent in-person update shall be completed in the offender’s jurisdiction of residence.
 
Under the Act, sex offenders are required to register prior to their release from prison, or within three days of being sentenced if there is no term of imprisonment. Thereafter, sex offenders must verify their information in person at regular intervals, depending on the severity of the sex offense they committed.
 
This severity is determined by the sex offender’s placement in a three-tier system.
 
The least serious offenders are placed in Tier I, are required to appear in person once a year, and remain on the registry for 15 years.
 
Tier II offenders must appear in person every six months and remain on the registry for 25 years.
 
The most serious offenders, placed in Tier III, remain on the registry for life and are required to appear in person every three months to verify their information.
 
Pursuant to this Act, any sex offender who knowingly fails to register or update his information faces up to ten years in prison. If an unregistered sex offender commits a crime of violence, he will receive a five-year mandatory prison sentence, in addition to any other sentence imposed.
 
The Act requires the Department of Justice to create and distribute software to jurisdictions to establish and operate uniform registries and Internet sites. The software will allow for immediate information-sharing among jurisdictions, Internet access by the public, and communication to certain community notification participants who choose to opt-in to receiving notice.
 

Title II: Federal Criminal Law Enhancements 

The Act creates a number of increased penalties for federal sex offenses and violent crimes against children. Offenses for which penalties are increased include:
   • sexual abuse
   • child sex-trafficking
   • coercion or enticement to engage in criminal sexual activity or cause child prostitution
 
Additionally, the Act creates new penalties for the sale of date-rape drugs via the Internet.
 
Increased penalties for existing offenses include:
   • 30 years to life—and in some cases death—for the murder of a child
   • 30 year mandatory minimum for raping a child
   • 10 year mandatory minimum for child sex trafficking or prostitution
 
Title II also suspends the statute of limitations for all federal felony offenses of sexual abuse, sex trafficking, or child pornography.
 
The Act also extends several of the guarantees of the 2004 Crime Victims’ Rights Act (CVRA) to federal habeas corpus review of state criminal convictions.
 
Because such cases involve federal courts (but state prosecutors), this extension is limited to those provisions of CVRA that are enforced by a court (Congress cannot compel state prosecutors to enforce a federal statute). The victims’ rights extended by this Act to federal habeas proceedings are:
   • the right to be present at proceedings
   • the right to be heard at proceedings involving release, plea, sentencing, or parole
   • the right to proceedings free from unreasonable delay
   • the right to be treated with fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy
 

Title III: Civil Commitment of Dangerous Sex Offenders

The Act provides for civil commitment (defined in the bill, and involves secure civil confinement with appropriate care and treatment) procedures for sex offenders who, while incarcerated, show that they cannot conform their behavior once released.
 
This title authorizes grants to states to operate civil commitment programs for sexually dangerous persons.
 
Additionally, it authorizes civil commitment of certain sex offenders who are dangerous to others due to serious mental illness, abnormality, or disorder.
 

Title IV: Immigration Law Reforms to Prevent Sex Offenders from Abusing Children

This title provides that any alien convicted of the federal crime of failing to register as a sex offender is deportable. Additionally, the Act provides that a citizen convicted of a specified offense against a minor is not eligible to petition for a family-based visa. 
 
That bar, however, may be waived if the Secretary of Homeland Security determines that the citizen poses no risk to the alien with respect to whom the petition is filed.
 

Title V: Child Pornography Prevention

This title strengthens existing pornography record-keeping and labeling requirements for persons who produce materials containing simulated sexual conduct. The purpose of these provisions is to ensure universal age verification and record-keeping in order to protect children and teenagers from being exploited by pornographers.
 
Under the Act, these records may be inspected on demand by the Department of Justice.
 

Title VI: Grants, Studies, and Programs for Children and Community Safety

The Act provides for a number of pilot programs, grants, and studies to address child and community safety issues.
 
Such programs include:
   • a pilot program for the electronic monitoring of sex offenders
   • funding for Big Brothers and Big Sisters
   • grants to allow parents to obtain fingerprint records for their children.
 
The Act also instructs the Department of Health and Human Services to create a national registry of persons who have been found to have abused or neglected a child. The information will be gathered from state databases of child abuse or neglect. It will be made available to state child-protective-services and law-enforcement agencies “for purposes of carrying out their responsibilities under the law to protect children from abuse and neglect.”
 
The national database will allow states to track the past history of parents and guardians who are suspected of abusing their children. When child-abusing parents come to the attention of authorities (for example, when teachers begin to ask about bruises), these parents often will move to a different jurisdiction. A national database will give the state to which these parents move the ability to know the parents’ history. It will let a child-protective-services worker know, for example, whether he should prioritize investigation of a particular case because the parent has been found to have committed substantiated cases of abuse in the past in other states.
 
Such a database also will allow a state that is evaluating a prospective foster parent or adoptive parent to learn about past incidents of child abuse that the person has committed in other states.
 

Title VII: Internet Safety Act

This title creates new penalties for child-exploitation enterprises—defined as a violation of at least one in a list of enumerated sex crimes against children as part of a series of felony violations constituting three or more separate incidents and more than one victim, and committed in concert with three or more other persons—providing a mandatory-minimum of 20 years imprisonment for that offense.
 
The title also adds a mandatory 10-year enhancement for registered sex offenders who commit one in a list of federal felonies involving a minor.
 
Additionally, this title creates a new crime for embedding words or digital images into the source code of a website with the intent to deceive a person into viewing obscenity.
 
The Internet safety provisions also enhance federal prosecution resources needed for the investigation and prosecution of child sex offenses. Those enhancements include funding the hiring of at least 200 additional Assistant United States Attorneys, the addition of at least 10 Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Forces, and the addition of 45 forensic examiners within the Regional Computer Forensic Laboratories and Cyber Crimes Center.
 
Additionally, the Internet Safety provisions expand the civil remedy available to children who have been sexually abused or exploited.