Res Ipsa wrote:With respect to number 2, where is your evidence that says that sex offender registries cause parents to be less careful about child abuse caused by folks not on the registry? Is there a study that says that there is a higher rate of child abuse by family members, etc. in families whose parents consulted a sex offender registry?
Here is a study
"A popular misconception among the general public is that sex offenders most often victimize strangers. To better understand these misconceptions about sex offenders, this study determines the frequency of misperception in the general public and establishes if the misconceptions are related to the policy of sex offender registration. Using a self-administered mail survey, it is found that on average,
3 out of 10 respondents indicate more worry about a child being sexually abused by a stranger than a child being sexually abused by someone known to them."
Craun, Sarah W., and Matthew T. Theriot. "Misperceptions of sex offender perpetration:
Considering the impact of sex offender registration." Journal of interpersonal violence 24.12 (2009): 2057-2072.
Res Ipsa wrote:With respect to number 3, do you have any data supporting the notion that people on sex offender registries reoffend at higher rates than those that are not?
"Several studies suggest that making it harder for sex offenders to find a home or a job makes them more likely to reoffend. Gwenda Willis and Randolph Grace of the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, for example, found that the lack of a place to live was “significantly related to sexual recidivism”. Candace Kruttschnitt and Christopher Uggen of the University of Minnesota and Kelly Shelton of the Minnesota Department of Corrections tracked 556 sex offenders on probation and found
less recidivism among those with a
history of stable employment."
Georgia Harlem, “Unjust and Ineffective,” Economist, August 8, 2009
Res Ipsa wrote:With respect to number one, what is your evidence that we can predict which offenders will repeat the crime after serving their sentences with an acceptable rate of accuracy?
It is my opinion the sex offender registry should only be for rapists and child abusers. Why?
"waste valuable resources on sex offenders who are unlikely to reoffend, while leaving a deficit of treatment, supervision, and focus on offenders who we know should be receiving more intense scrutiny" CALCASA, “Proposition 83 CALCASA Position Paper.”
New York times reports, "a large majority is registered for conviction on first offenses involving neither violence nor coercion" can't possibly be a good thing to fight rape and child abuse. Can you explain how can a large list of non-violent offenders helps?