Mar
04

Supreme Judicial Court Rejects Two Day Registration Rule For Sex Offenders

The Boston Globe reports today that the Supreme Judicial Court rejected the Sex Offender Registry Board and the Commonwealth’s interpretation that incarcerated sex offenders had to register with their local police departments within two days of their release as having no basis in state law.

The state’s highest court today threw out the conviction of a serial sex offender for failing to register his address with the Boston police within two days of his release from jail. The judges said the state Sex Offender Registry Board did not have the authority to institute the two-day requirement.

The ruling in Malcolm S. Maker’s case came only a few days after the man was arrested again for exposing himself, officials said.

Maker, 52, has been designated a Level 3 sex offender, the class characterized as most likely to reoffend. Maker has a history of convictions for open and gross lewdness and lascivious behavior.

Maker was charged in 2009 with failing to notify the Boston police within two days of his release from jail that he would be living in a homeless shelter in Boston. He was convicted on Nov. 24, 2009, and sentenced to two years in jail.

But the Supreme Judicial Court ruled today that the registry board, set up to identify and monitor sex offenders, had no legal authority to enact the two-day registration requirement, which applied to both Level 2 and Level 3 offenders. Other requirements had already been established by the law creating the board and the board had no authority to go beyond that law, the court ruled.

The law requires that sex offenders mail their future home and work addresses to the board before they are released. The board then sends the information to local police. Offenders must verify their information periodically. Level 2 and Level 3 offenders are required to verify their information in person annually at their local police department. If they are living in a homeless shelter, they must verify the information every 30 days.

The high court said it would not rule on the merits of requiring the two-day registration, saying, “Nothing in the statute authorizes the board to create new registration requirements such as the regulation here at issue.”

“The wisdom or practical advantages of creating new registration obligations is of no relevance when the board lacks the power to do so,” Justice Judith Cowin wrote in a 10-page decision.

While the court was considering the case, Maker was still serving his term. He was released on Friday, according to the Suffolk sheriff’s office.

Just before 8 a.m. Tuesday morning, Maker was arrested again for masturbating in the women’s bathroom room of the Cheesecake Factory restaurant at Boston’s Prudential Center. He was charged with open and gross lewdness in Boston Municipal Court, and was ordered held on $2,500 cash bail. Prosecutors had asked that he be held on $10,000 bail.

The board issued a statement saying it would abide by the court’s ruling and had notified police departments of it. It emphasized that sex offenders still must register before they are released and must notify the board or police of any change to their registration, including address changes.

“Today’s ruling does not change local law enforcement’s authority to arrest any offender who violates registration requirements and the offender still remains subject to severe penalties if convicted of failing to register or to update registration information,” the board said in a statement.

Maker’s attorney, Elizabeth Caddick, did not immediately return a telephone message seeking comment.

This decision is important for many registered sex offenders as this interpretation has led to many failure to register convictions. The failure to register as a sex offender is a serious crime in Massachusetts with devastating consequences. If you have questions regarding your Massachusetts sex offender classification or are already a registered Massachusetts sex offender who wants assistance in reviewing or challenging his or her classification, or to request further information, you need a Boston sex offender attorney. Please contact Attorney Crouch at (617) 441-5111 or email him to set up a free, initial consultation. To request further information please contact us.

Feb
27

Plymouth Rejects Sex Offender Registry Restriction Bylaw

A Town Meeting subcommittee in Plymouth, Massachusetts has thoughtfully rejected a proposal that would have imposed ineffectual but damaging living restrictions on Massachusetts sex offenders living, working, and going to school in the town. As Wicked Local reports:

Unsubstantiated myths, outright misconceptions and “fraught with constitutional complications.” That sums up the conclusions of a committee that was created to review a proposal that Plymouth establish residential restrictions for registered sex offenders.

The Committee to Consider a Sexual Offender Bylaw, a subcommittee of Town Meeting precinct chairs, was initially formed at the end of 2009, following the defeat of an article that argued for new residency and loitering regulations for sex offenders living in Plymouth.

Among the rationales put forth by the regulations’ proponents was that, in light of similar regulations in other communities, Plymouth needed to act to protect itself from becoming a refuge for sex offenders fleeing those other towns.

It was also argued that new restrictions, such as the anti-loitering provision that would apply to all convicted offenders, were needed in order to keep them from spending too much time around playgrounds, school yards and other areas where potential victims might be located.

The report of the committee, submitted to the Board of Selectman this week by Precinct 4 Town Meeting Rep. John Hammond II, confronted all of those arguments head on.

A committee member collected the existing bylaws and ordinances affecting sexual offenders from a number of other Massachusetts municipalities. Statistical studies that looked at the relationship between repeat offenders and residency were gathered and scrutinized. The committee also conducted interviews with Plymouth Police Chief Michael Botieri, the chief probation officer of Plymouth Superior Court, John Healey, and local experts Debra and John Baker

The data they collected, the report says, “were astonishingly uniform in finding that residency had no relationship to offenses, that convicted sex offenders did not re-offend in the neighborhoods where they lived and, indeed, that most convicted sexual offenders did not re-offend, contrary to the general myth.”

Chief Botieri told the committee that his officers visit Level 3 sex offenders three times as often as the state recommends and that, in his opinion, “these visits are an effective control mechanism.”

The Bakers – she is a licensed Mental Health Counselor who specializes in the treatment of sex offenders, and he is the retired administrator of the Massachusetts Sexual Offender Classification Board – offered the opinion that a residency restriction would not be helpful, and that Plymouth is, itself, not attractive to sex offenders.

As of late 2010, there were only four Level 3 offenders living in Plymouth, the committee determined, and of the 351 municipalities in Massachusetts only 11 have residency restrictions (and none of those are immediate neighbors).

“Plymouth is not in danger of attracting convicted offenders,” the committee’s report states, quite bluntly.

It was noted that, at least at the time the report was being put together (October 2010), there were only three Level 3 offenders living in Plymouth.

“The bulletin board (in the entryway of Town Hall) is misleading,” Hammond said. “I don’t know if any of the names and photos of offenders there have ever been taken down.”

The reports also say that while there has been little, if any, research on the effects of anti-loitering legislation on offenders, “there was no information in their experience or research to suggest that a blanket anti-loitering provision would be effective in protecting victims or curbing recidivism.”

The report also reported that Botieri told the committee “stopping unknown persons based upon a third-party complaint as to their criminal history as a sex offender would be easily challengeable.”

Botieri said that enforcing such a loitering bylaw would be unwieldy and would, the report notes, “lead more often than not to confrontations that either get out of hand or were legally indefensible.”

“Unlike offenders that were known to police through the registration system or court probation – for whom a threshold stop to inquire would be easily justified even without a bylaw,” the report detailed, “stopping unknown persons based on a third-party complaint…would be easily challengeable on fourth amendment grounds.”

After stating the report’s conclusion, which was obvious at that point, Hammond added a personal note.

“I am a social worker by profession,” he told selectman, “and I have worked on both sides of this issue, victims and perpetrators. I feel it would be much more effective if we focused on educating the public on how to protect your children, and what they should know to protect themselves.”

This proposed bylaw, Hammond said, might have given people false comfort, but it wouldn’t have accomplished anything.

Selectman Serge Harnais praised the committee for its effort and research, noting that the original article that had been proposed to Town Meeting “didn’t have the benefit of the expertise that this report contains.”

The board then voted unanimously to accept the report, as written.

Read more: Local sex offender bylaw dismissed – Plymouth, MA – Wicked Local Plymouth http://www.wickedlocal.com/plymouth/archive/x1365673337/Local-sex-offender-bylaw-dismissed#ixzz1FCQ5oMNY

PLYMOUTH —

A special committee made up of Town Meeting Precinct Chairs has come out against local sex offender regulations with special residency or loitering restrictions.

The committee’s report – delivered to the Board of Selectman Tuesday night – was prompted by a 2009 town meeting article that argued that without such a regulation Plymouth could become a refuge for sex offenders, and that playgrounds, school yards, and other facilities needed extra protection from predators.

The committee “took no initial position” their final report noted, but sought objective information from as many credible sources as possible.

They reviewed the available literature, consulted Plymouth Police Chief Michael Botieri,and interviewed a number of experts and concluded that the regulation, as written, would offer residences no additional protection and risk a variety of “constitutional complications.”

They further concluded that Plymouth was not the kind of community that offenders would find attractive, that the idea that convicted offenders would be likely to reoffend was based on “myths” about sex offenders, and that – with only a handful of communities adopting local sex offender regulations (and none of which abutted Plymouth) the town was not at all likely to be the preferred destination of sex offenders fleeing those communities.

The eight-member committee unanimously voted against recommending a sex offender bylaw with either a residency or a loitering restriction.

The Sex Offender Registry Board’s streamlining can come at a disadvantage for individuals facing sex offender classification in Massachusetts as it significantly reduces the amount of time you have to prepare for a hearing. If you are a facing sex offender classification in Massachusetts and have questions regarding your Massachusetts sex offender classification or want assistance in reviewing or seeking sex offender reclassification, you need a Boston sex offender attorney. Please contact Attorney Crouch at (617) 441-5111 or email him to set up a free, initial consultation. To request further information please contact us.

Feb
24

Audit Finds Streamlined Sex Offender Registry Board Classification Process

A new report from the State Auditor’s office finds that the state’s Sex Offender Registry Board has dramatically improved the sex offender classification process in Massachusetts over the past five years but is still failing to consistently collect registration fees.

The audit noted that the Sex Offender Registry Board had reduced 71% of the backlog in classifying sex offenders by streamlining the classification process and increasing the amount of hearing sites in the state from 7 to 38. The SORB also cut the average time it takes to classify an offender from one year to 180 days and now re-registers 95% of classified offenders in the database.

“The Sex Offender Registry Board has made substantial strides in helping to protect communities by registering sex offenders quicker,” said Auditor Bump. “But SORB must continue to refine its systems and procedures to ensure better performance of this important public safety function,” said Auditor Suzanne Bump.

The audit found that the registry was currently not collecting the required $75 registration fee from more than 40 percent of offenders. But the report notes that five years ago virtually no money was being collected because the registry’s authority to collect the fees was in dispute.

The Sex Offender Registry Board’s streamlining can come at a disadvantage for individuals facing sex offender classification in Massachusetts as it significantly reduces the amount of time you have to prepare for a hearing. If you are a facing sex offender classification in Massachusetts and have questions regarding your Massachusetts sex offender classification or want assistance in reviewing or seeking sex offender reclassification, you need a Boston sex offender attorney. Please contact Attorney Crouch at (617) 441-5111 or email him to set up a free, initial consultation. To request further information please contact us.

Feb
23

Former State Senator James Marzilli Takes A Plea

A judge today sentenced former state Sen. Joseph “Jim” Marzilli to three months in the Billerica House of Correction for his 2008 accosting four women in one day while on official business. Marzilli had been charged with several counts of attempt to commit the crime of indecent assault and battery. Attorney Crouch filed an amicus brief in the case, which was heard by the Supreme Judicial Court, arguing that the Commonwealth sought to prosecute Marzilli for an offense that is not provided for under Massachusetts law. The Boston Herald reports of the case:

Former state Sen. George Bachrach, a longtime friend of Marzilli’s who came to court to support the legislator, said, “Jim Marzilli made a mistake. He’s going to pay for it. Clearly, he became unglued. How else do you explain what happened?”

Kennedy predicted the Arlington Democrat, who is being treated for bipolar disorder and anxiety, will serve less than 55 days of the punishment superior court Judge Paul Chernoff handed down after Marzilli pleaded guilty to the accosting charges, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.

With his wife looking on in tears, Marzilli also admitted there were sufficient facts for a jury to find him guilty of the felony charge of attempted indecent assault and battery for reaching for the crotch of a nurse’s assistant waiting on a bench for a patient.

That charge threatened up to five years in state prison, but because Chernoff continued it without a finding for one year — rather than declare Marzilli guilty, as assistant Middlesex District Attorney Elizabeth Dunigan pushed for — the disgraced pol will not have to register as a sex offender.

He is, however, on probation for five years effective immediately. Upon his release from jail, Chernoff ordered that Marzilli’s first year of release be spent on a GPS bracelet subject to exclusionary zones to be determined by prosecutors. He must also perform 200 hours of community service.

Unable to secure work for the past three years — “Look him up on the Internet. That’s the end of it,” Kennedy said of his employment possibilities — Marzilli has been doing volunteer work with at-risk Somali children and botanical gardening.

On Kennedy’s advice, Marzilli elected not to address Chernoff. Had he, Kennedy said, “I think he would have apologized — to everybody.”

None of the victims came to court, either, though Chernoff stressed each “should be recognized for courageously coming forward.” Authorities said Marzilli said to one victim: “The sex is sweet, the sex is sweet, you want it and you want to go with me.”

In the city on June 3, 2008, for a function at Federal Fabrics-Fibers, Marzilli approached the women both on foot and in a car over the course of four hours, making lewd remarks about their bodies. They, in return, called him a pervert and told him to spend $20 on a hooker.

The charge of indecent assault and battery is a serious crime in Massachusetts with devastating consequences. If you have questions regarding your case or are already a registered Massachusetts sex offender who wants assistance in reviewing or challenging his or her classification, or to request further information, you need a Boston sex offender attorney. Please contact Attorney Crouch at (617) 441-5111 or email him to set up a free, initial consultation. To request further information please contact us.

Feb
14

Massachusetts Considering Adding Level 2 Sex Offenders To Internet Registry

The Lowell Sun is reporting about a proposed Massachusetts law that would greatly expand the community notification requirements for Level 2 sex offenders in Massachusetts.

In August 2009, a Level-2 sex offender was accused of sexually assaulting a 16-year-old girl at Westford’s town beach.

The man, who moved from Florida to Westford, was listed on Florida’s online sex-offender registry, but not on Massachusetts’. The reason: Only Level-3 sex offenders are listed online in Massachusetts.

Some believe it is time to put the names, photos and addresses of Level-2 sex offenders on the Internet, as well. They say it is a simple, common-sense step to creating safer communities.

Leading the cause in the Legislature is state Rep. Jim Arciero, a Westford Democrat. Arciero recently filed a bill to put Level-2 sex offenders on the state’s Internet sex-offender database.

Arciero said he was contacted by dozens of Westford residents in the aftermath of the incident at the town beach who were outraged they did not have access to the same information about sex offenders as other states.

“This simple act will move us forward in protecting families and children in our neighborhoods,” said Arciero. “Level-2 offenders are dangerous people, and we need to have the tools to protect our communities.”

Information about Level-2 sex offenders is available to the public, but anyone interested in getting it must fill out a form and make the request to the state Sex Offender Registry Board or their local police department. Arciero calls this “cumbersome,” and many other lawmakers and public-safety officials agree.

Arciero’s bill has been co-sponsored by 36 fellow legislators in the House and Senate. It has also been endorsed by police chiefs in Littleton, Chelmsford and Westford, as well as Middlesex Sheriff Peter Koutoujian and Worcester County Sheriff Lew Evangelidis.

Littleton Police Chief John Kelly said the bill will help protect children who may be “victimized by sexually deviant perpetrators.

“The foremost proactive manner in which to do this is through information and education, and this proposed legislation will do just that,” said Kelly.

While state officials consider the crime when labeling sex offenders as Level 1, 2 or 3, the Sex Offender Registry Board decides how to classify offenders based on the likelihood that they will commit more sex crimes. That means those who have committed the most egregious crimes aren’t always categorized as Level-3 offenders.

Laurie Myers, a child-protection advocate from Chelmsford, has been pushing for more transparency within the sex-offender registry for years. She said offenders classified as Level 2 have been convicted of crimes such as rape of a child with force and indecent assault and battery on a child under 14.

“Because they are in a stable living environment or receiving counseling, these offenders are classified as Level 2,” said Myers. “Level-3 offenders are typically those who abuse alcohol or drugs or are homeless.”

Myers, a former rape-crisis counselor in Lowell and co-founder of Community Voices, a Chelmsford-based watch-dog group, said putting Level-2 sex offenders online will help parents keep their children safe.

To illustrate this, she uses a hypothetical example of a mother whose daughter is invited to a sleep-over party where the mother of her daughter’s friend has a live-in boyfriend who is a Level-2 sex offender. The mother could use the online database to decide whether to allow her daughter to spend the night at her friend’s house, said Myers.

“That’s what this tool is for,” said Myers. “When people go and see who these guys are, at least they can make an informed decision.”

Arciero is not the first legislator to get behind this cause. Several lawmakers, including Evangelidis before he was elected sheriff, filed a bill last year to change the law, but it was not enacted. During last year’s gubernatorial campaign, Republican Charlie Baker made it a campaign issue.

Arciero hopes the cause will be helped this year by the fact that if Massachusetts does not meet minimum sex-offender registration standards established by the federal Adam Walsh Act, it risks losing $600,000 in public-safety funding.

“I think we can get the necessary votes to make this happen,” he said.

Expanding the dissemination of information of Massachusetts Level 2 sex offenders would be devastating for many registered offenders. It would vastly expand the number of Massachusetts sex offenders whose home, work, and educational information is splashed across the Internet and will reduce the utility of the site run by the Sex Offender Registry Board, which presently only lists the highest risk Massachusetts Level 3 sex offenders.

If you are a Level 2 sex offender in Massachusetts a have questions regarding your Massachusetts sex offender classification or wants assistance in reviewing or seeking sex offender reclassification, you need a Boston sex offender attorney. Please contact Attorney Crouch at (617) 441-5111 or email him to set up a free, initial consultation. To request further information please contact us.

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