Sex offender registry rules upheld by Supreme Court
by John Bailey
2 months ago | 2297 views | 7 7 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
The Georgia Supreme Court has rejected a Calhoun man’s challenge of the sex offender registry law as unconstitutional.

In 1996, Derrick Todd Dunn was convicted of statutory rape, and on Jan. 17 of this year, he moved temporarily into a motel before moving on Jan. 23 into a new permanent home.

Three days later, he went to the Gordon County Sheriff’s Office to register his new address and was arrested for failing to register the motel address, where he remained less than a week.

Under state law, convicted sex offenders must register with the local sheriff within 72 hours of changing their address.

In addition, Dunn had also failed once before to obtain prior permission from his probation officer before moving.

The state subsequently filed a motion to revoke his probation and return him to prison.

In response, Dunn’s lawyer filed a motion to strike down the registry law as unconstitutional “as applied to registered sex offenders living at a temporary address.” The trial court rejected Dunn’s motion and revoked his probation.

Dunn appealed, and his lawyer argued that the law violates Dunn’s due process rights because the requirements for notification of a change of address are vague. However, the high court disagreed stating the law specifically requires the registration of any “change of residence address” and states that the information required includes “any current temporary residence.”

He also put forth another argument that state law violates the right to equal protection by requiring a Georgia sex offender to register a change of address within 72 hours, while giving an offender from another state 14 days to register after moving to the state.

Justices disagreed, stating the argument is based on a “misreading of the statute” which defines a “non resident sexual offender” as one who comes to Georgia for 14 days or longer. However, a non-resident offender is also required to register within 72 hours of a change of address, the opinion stated.

“The facts in this case clearly established that Dunn, after departing his prior domicile, took up temporary residency in the motel but failed to register his address change with the Gordon County Sheriff’s Office within 72 hours,” Chief Justice Carol Hunstein state in a concurrence.

comments (7)
« ROMEBOY wrote on Wednesday, Nov 25 at 05:52 PM »
shelomith_stow - the person in the above article,

was arrested for not reporting his address, as the law in the state of georgia state's he must do. whatever he done to get on the stste's sex

offender list,statuary rape or whatever it might

have been, the fact remain's that he was convicted of a sex crime.and yes i'm writing from a position of knowlege. i read the article above.and i do in fact know what "statuary rape"

mean's. the person convicted of the sex crime in

the article is on the sex offender's list.period

he knew what he had to do to stay out of jail,and

he chose not to do it.are those enough fact's.
« shelomith_stow wrote on Wednesday, Nov 25 at 05:37 PM »
Romeboy, no one has to be a family member to know that statuary rape is a euphemism for consensual sex when one partner is under age. Consensual sex is non-violent, non-predatory, and does NOT deserve the same punishment and requirements that are appropriate when a prepubescent child is involved or a woman is raped. Consensual underage sex is just one of the many so-called "sex" crimes that are non-violent, often victimless situations that keep the registries so bloated with people who pose no risk that law enforcement doesn't have time to adequately deal with the ones who do. Please, sir, do a little research and get the facts, and then when you write, it will be from a position of knowledge.
« shelomith_stow wrote on Wednesday, Nov 25 at 05:20 PM »
« ROMEBOY wrote on Wednesday, Nov 25 at 04:44 AM »
pistolpackinpete- unless you are a family member

how do you know the fact's? the fact's of his crime are not mentioned in the article?for all you know he might have been 50 and his 'so called

gilfrien was 6 year's old.and by the way i will

keep my butt in georgia.still say if they don't

like the law,castrate them,and give them something to really cry about
« pistolpackinpete wrote on Tuesday, Nov 24 at 10:33 PM »
Do you two even know what Statutory means?For all you know the guy was 18 and his gf 16.And you want to castrate him.Please stay in Georgia.
« ROMEBOY wrote on Tuesday, Nov 24 at 08:23 PM »
if these sub-humans do not like what they must do

here's an option,just castrate the sucker. and then let them scream about how unfair they are being treated.i'll bet after 15 to 20 castration's, this nonsence would stop.
« anonymous wrote on Tuesday, Nov 24 at 08:11 PM »
Here is a way to avoid getting into trouble after a misunderstandings with the sex offender registry laws: DON'T BECOME A SEXUAL OFFENDER IN THE FIRST PLACE.