13 research outputs found

    Sex Offender Residency Restrictions: Government Regulation of Public Health, Safety, and Morality

    Full text link
    Sex offender residency restrictions have proliferated throughout the United States over the past decade. A number of commentators have likened these laws to medieval banishment, when political outcasts and undesirables are exiled to remote areas where they cannot threaten civilized society. This Article argues first that likening modern residency restrictions to “banishment” largely misconstrues this practice as it has been practiced historically. Instead, these statutory initiatives are better understood as an assertion of governments’ police power to protect public health, safety, and morality. Seen through this lens, this Article evaluates the laws’ constitutional sufficiency with attention to their allegedly punitive nature and the effect, if any, of the modern use of quarantine to justify deprivations of liberty in the interest of public safety. It also discusses the relevance of substantive due process in this context, with particular focus on the Supreme Court of California’s groundbreaking March 2015 decision invalidating its sex offender residency statute on this basis. Recognizing the uncertainty inherent in constitutional challenges to sex offender residency laws, this Article concludes with recommendations on how best to implement sensible public policy reform in the present landscape

    Protection and Treatment: The Permissible Civil Detention of Sexual Predators

    Full text link

    The Right to Community Treatment for Mentally Disordered Sex Offenders

    Get PDF

    CRIPA: The Failure of Federal Intervention for Mentally Retarded People

    Get PDF

    Opioid Courts and Judicial Management of the Opioid Crisis

    No full text
    corecore