Anonymous wrote:WTF?!? Oh, hell no!
Please say something if you are sure that this person is a registered offender. Print out the sheet from the database, make a thousand copies at Kinkos and hand them out to parents at drop-off and pickup.
If he is a parent, he needs to make other arrangements for his child to get home from school.
Anonymous wrote:You can't get on the sex offender registry unless you've been convicted of the crime (simple charge wouldn't get you there). Most sex offenders in most states (notice I say most) have a requirement that keeps you certain distance from a school.
Even IF he was the parent and he was a sex offender of a certain type in a state with that requirement, he would not be allowed to pick his child up from school.
Be sure you visit the DOJ sex offender registry at www.nsopw.gov.
Anonymous wrote:There are laws about how many feet away they must stay from schools and playgrounds aren't there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know the rules on this? There is a registered sex offender that lives on my street, a few weeks ago I noticed him picking up a child from the elementry school up the street (I'm not sure if its his or not, I would assume so though). What is the rules and regulations on this and would you want to know as a parent if there was a sex offender around? I have not said anything to parents around me yet and I'm not sure if I should.
http://definitions.uslegal.com/i/indecent-liberties/
Based on one state's definition of the crime, it is indecent liberties ranging from exposure to fondling (but does not extend to rape or intercourse) of a teen (the given example is more than 14, no more than 16).
In this case, while I think the person needs to be observed, I don't think this person is a severe offender that is a significant threat at an elementary school picking up his child. Probably checking in with the principal to ensure that they are aware of his background and that there is a staff member of the school that is around during pickup is probably sufficient.
Anonymous wrote:How do you know he doesn't have a bedridden father with the same name living in his home? Or a cousin? Or an uncle?
That said, I would go to the police first to figure this out rather than the school. If you go straight to the school you could damage an innocent man's reputation.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know the rules on this? There is a registered sex offender that lives on my street, a few weeks ago I noticed him picking up a child from the elementry school up the street (I'm not sure if its his or not, I would assume so though). What is the rules and regulations on this and would you want to know as a parent if there was a sex offender around? I have not said anything to parents around me yet and I'm not sure if I should.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always make sure you know why first. You can end up on that list for many reasons.Anonymous wrote:WTF?!? Oh, hell no!
Please say something if you are sure that this person is a registered offender. Print out the sheet from the database, make a thousand copies at Kinkos and hand them out to parents at drop-off and pickup.
If he is a parent, he needs to make other arrangements for his child to get home from school.
+1
If it's for statutory rape, I don't care nor should someone be on a list for that.
Sorry, totally disagree.
That's fine. You can disagree. Statatory rape isn't rape though in the actual sense of the word, that's all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always make sure you know why first. You can end up on that list for many reasons.Anonymous wrote:WTF?!? Oh, hell no!
Please say something if you are sure that this person is a registered offender. Print out the sheet from the database, make a thousand copies at Kinkos and hand them out to parents at drop-off and pickup.
If he is a parent, he needs to make other arrangements for his child to get home from school.
+1
If it's for statutory rape, I don't care nor should someone be on a list for that.
Sorry, totally disagree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always make sure you know why first. You can end up on that list for many reasons.Anonymous wrote:WTF?!? Oh, hell no!
Please say something if you are sure that this person is a registered offender. Print out the sheet from the database, make a thousand copies at Kinkos and hand them out to parents at drop-off and pickup.
If he is a parent, he needs to make other arrangements for his child to get home from school.
+1
If it's for statutory rape, I don't care nor should someone be on a list for that.
Sorry, totally disagree.
Anonymous wrote:
You seem like a very reasonable person, and your response is well-thought-out and not hysterical in any way. As you point out, his offence might have been very minor. The thing is, from what I know of sex offender laws, it probably is illegal for him to be anywhere near a school, even to pick up his own children. My question is, who will benefit from this call to the police? Will neighborhood children be somehow safer? Will his own children, whose life has already been affected in many adverse ways from having a father on the registry, be better off if he can no longer pick them up? Even in the worst case scenario, if he is abusing his own kids, presumably the daylight walk from school to home in full view of the neighbors isn't where the crime takes place. So what would be your motivation for calling?