FINAL BILL REPORT
HB 1161



C 99 L 05
Synopsis as Enacted

Brief Description: Adding entities entitled to notification about sex offenders and kidnapping offenders.

Sponsors: By Representatives Buri, O'Brien, Walsh, Ericks, Darneille, McCoy, Clements, Serben, Pearson, Strow, Kristiansen, Moeller, Lovick, Simpson, Campbell, Tom, Morrell, Chase, Ahern, Newhouse, Armstrong, Woods, Sells and Ormsby.

House Committee on Criminal Justice & Corrections
Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections

Background:

The Department of Corrections (DOC), the Juvenile Rehabilitation Administration (JRA), and the Indeterminate Sentence Review Board (ISRB), are required to classify all sex offenders released from their facilities into risk levels I (low-risk), II (moderate-risk), or III (high-risk) for the purposes of public notification. These releasing agencies must issue to appropriate law enforcement agencies narrative notices that contain the identity, criminal history behavior, and the risk level classification for each sex offender being released and, for level II and III offenders, the reasons underlying the classification.

Local law enforcement agencies are required to consider the state classification level when assigning their own level for public notification purposes. When a local jurisdiction assigns a different risk classification level than the one assigned by the releasing agency, the local jurisdiction must notify the releasing agency of its decision and its reasons for doing so.

Kidnapping offenders are not classified into one of the three risk levels unless the underlying kidnapping offense has some type of sexual motivation. The DOC, the JRA, and the ISRB provide the same notifications to the local law enforcement agencies regarding kidnapping offenders as they do for sex offenders.

Notice Dissemination. A public agency may release information to the public regarding a sex or kidnapping offender when the agency has determined that the disclosure is relevant and necessary to protect the public and counteract the danger posed by the offender. The extent of this disclosure must be rationally related to:

A law enforcement agency must consider certain guidelines when determining the extent of the disclosure depending on the risk level of the sex offender:

The county sheriff, with whom an offender is classified as a level III offender, must publish sex offender community notification in at least one legal newspaper with general circulation in the area of the offender's registered address or location. In addition, the sheriff must publish a list of level III offenders in the county twice a year. The list must also be maintained on a publicly accessible web site that must be updated once a month.

Summary:

The statute that regulates the dissemination of community notifications of sex and kidnapping offenders is expanded. In addition to the other specified individuals and organizations as stipulated in statute, local law enforcement agencies may share information regarding level II and III offenders with public libraries.

Votes on Final Passage:

House   87   0
Senate   48   0

Effective: July 24, 2005